Global Times

Serbia’s gay prime minister participat­es in Belgrade Pride march

-

Serbia’s lesbian prime minister on Sunday joined hundreds of activists with rainbow flags for Belgrade’s annual gay march, an event held under heavy security in the conservati­ve country.

Ana Brnabic, 41, became one of the first openly gay government leaders in the world when she came to power in June, but activists say homophobia remains a widespread problem in Serbia.

“The Serbian government is there for all citizens, both majority and minority, to show that it respects diversity,” Brnabic said before joining the Pride parade, Beta news agency reported.

In 2010, the parade descended into clashes between anti-gay protesters and police, injuring more than 100 people and prompting the event to be banned for three years.

This is the fourth consecutiv­e year the march has gone ahead under a large security presence, and the first time a prime minister has attended.

A helicopter buzzed overhead as marchers walked through the cordonedof­f city center. About 2,000 police officers were deployed.

“You can see the borders of freedom are shifting and, in this respect, our society has made great progress in recent years,” Brnabic said in an interview published Sunday in the newspaper Politika.

Brnabic was selected to be premier by her predecesso­r, Aleksandar Vucic, after he was elected president. She entered politics less than a year earlier as public administra­tion minister.

The surprise move made internatio­nal headlines, but skeptics suspected an attempt at “pinkwashin­g,” with Brnabic used as a puppet by Vucic to improve Serbia’s image as it campaigns to join the European Union.

Critics accuse Vucic, who remains the country’s most powerful politician, of being a populist authoritar­ian who has clamped down on media freedom.

At a conference on hate speech on Friday, Brnabic dismissed as “nonsense” the accusation that she had been chosen merely because of her sexual orientatio­n.

A technocrat with a business background, Brnabic has expressed hope in interviews that people will look beyond her sexual orientatio­n, distancing herself from LGBT issues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China