Serbian Gay Rally Banned for Third Straight Year

By DUSAN STOJANOVIC
Associated Press
BELGRADE, Serbia
Serbian authorities banned a gay pride march in Belgrade for a third consecutive year because of threats made by right-wing groups, officials said Friday.

Prime Minister Ivica Dacic said top security and state officials decided to ban Saturday’s event because they feared a repeat of violence in 2010, when extremists attacked a gay pride march in the Serbian capital. That triggered daylong clashes with the police which injured more than 100 people.

Protesting the ban, about 100 gay pride activists marched past the downtown Serbian government headquarters late Friday. The march passed without incidents.

Gay pride marches in 2011 and 2012 were also banned. Serbia, which is seeking European Union membership, has pledged to respect human rights, and whether or not they allowed the march this year was regarded as a test of that vow.

In addition to banning the gay pride march, Dacic said the government was banning a gathering of right-wing groups that planned to attack the event. Authorities also rescheduled several soccer matches in Belgrade from Saturday to Sunday, because they are attended by hooligans aligned with extremists.

Several right-wing groups, allied with similar anti-gay groups in Russia, have issued open threats against the gay marchers.

Patriarch Irinej, the head of Serbia’s Christian Orthodox church, has spoken out against the gay pride march. He said such a “parade of shame” would cast a “moral shadow” on the conservative Balkan country.

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