The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Bosnians march in first Gay Pride under tight police protection

- DARIA SITO-SUCIC

SARAJEVO – Several thousand people marched in Bosnia’s first Gay Pride on Sunday, protected by a major security operation including anti-sniper units after some conservati­ve Muslim groups organized counter-rallies.

The parade in the capital Sarajevo ended peacefully despite fears of violence prompted by aggressive hate speech online in a country where anti-gay sentiment can often be heard in public.

“I have always thought that basic human rights should exist for all and when I saw all those hate comments against the Pride march, I felt it was my obligation to come and show support,” said Sanja, 54, from Sarajevo, who joined the march with her husband.

More than 1,000 police officers secured the event, shielding the walking area with fences and concrete blocks. Anti-sniper units were placed on the roofs of buildings along the main route in the city center.

Bosnia is the last Balkan country to hold a Pride parade, seen as a test of tolerance of minority rights as it seeks to join the European Union. EU diplomats and the U.S Ambassador to Bosnia, who is gay, joined the march in support of LGBT people.

“This is an important step in the protection of the fundamenta­l rights of all citizens in Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, including of LGBTI persons, who have the right to live their lives free from discrimina­tion, abuse and threats...,” Johannes Hahn, the EU enlargemen­t commission­er, said in a tweet.

BIG STEP FORWARD

Organizers from across the ethnic divide - in a country that went through a devastatin­g war in the 1990s - carried a pink banner with the slogan ‘Ima Izac’ or ‘I Want Out’ in both Latin and Cyrillic scripts.

Activists carried placards reading “Love is not a Privilege” and “Queer Resistance”, waving rainbow flags and singing anti-fascist songs. “We, LGBTIQ persons, fight every day for our existence, identity and love,” said Branko Culibrk, an organizer, adding that passivity of institutio­ns in Bosnia, where discrimina­tion against minority groups is legally banned, had encouraged violence from homophobic groups.

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