The Asian Age

NYC Pride march: Anti-Trump but also pro-fun

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New York, June 26: Tens of thousands of marchers paraded through New York streets on Sunday in a huge Gay Pride parade, with many proudly carrying rainbow flags or waving virulently anti-Trump signs.

On foot, astride motorcycle­s or riding on flatbed trucks, participan­ts slowly covered the 3-km route from Midtown Manhattan to Greenwich Village, where the movement for homosexual rights was born after the so-called Stonewall riots of 1969.

New York’s Gay Pride march has spawned copycat demonstrat­ions in almost every corner of the world. But while the police in Istanbul fired rubber bullets at participan­ts to disperse marchers, the parade in New York is a long-accepted institutio­n.

Under a brilliant sun, hundreds of police officers and some of New York’s most prominent politician­s, mayor Bill de Blasio, governor Andrew Cuomo and senator Chuck Schumer, all Democrats, marched cheerfully alongside participan­ts, some of the latter in the scantiest of outfits.

The 2015 edition of the march celebrated the nationwide legalisati­on of gay marriage. Last year, the mood was somber, coming after a shooting massacre at an Orlando, Florida gay nightclub left 49 people dead. This year, many marcher carried “Resist” posters, expressing their disdain for President Donald Trump’s policies and priorities, notably the effort to roll back the Obamacare health reforms, as well as moves to curtail the rights of transsexua­ls. Mr Trump, many others said they did not want the march to become a politicize­d event.

“It’s not political, its social,” said Cara Lee Sparry, who has taken part in a dozen such marches.

 ?? — AFP ?? A general view during the New York City Gay Pride 2017 march on Sunday in New York City.
— AFP A general view during the New York City Gay Pride 2017 march on Sunday in New York City.

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