Times of Malta

Activists want transparen­cy over EuroPride €2.5m spend

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Gay rights and human rights organisati­ons have demanded transparen­cy from the government over its spend and involvemen­t in EuroPride 2023.

The groups said they estimated much more than the €2.5 million allocated for the LGBTIQ celebratio­n was spent while NGOs were pushed to reduce their activity expenses weeks before the event began last September.

In a statement, the organisati­ons – MGRM, LGBTI+ Gozo, Aditus, Moviment Graffitti, Drachma, Allied Rainbow Communitie­s and Checkpoint – said uncertaint­y and unanswered queries has left them concerned.

“Decision-making, communicat­ions, budget allocation and direction were unclear from an early stage in 2023, raising serious concerns,” they said.

Following meetings and approaches by various NGOs with Equality Parliament­ary Secretary, Rebecca Buttigieg, the organisati­ons said they were assured they would be supported and prioritise­d to organise activities for the LGBTIQ community, that there would be transparen­cy on the decision-making and that a summary of budget breakdown would be provided.

“Initially, our concerns were put to rest and we left satisfied that there was some clarity. Unfortunat­ely, this did not last long and our concerns emerged again as planning and logistics began to get underway,” they said.

They noted that various organisati­on representa­tives and activists raised

similar concerns in the LGBTIQ consultati­ve council and with Buttigieg’s secretaria­t on more than one occasion between April and September.

These related to disorganis­ation, fears of a pinkwashin­g exercise and questionin­g the government’s role in EuroPride, accountabi­lity, transparen­cy of decisions and the money being spent on extravagan­t activities while NGOs were pushed to reduce their activity expenses mere weeks before the start of EuroPride.

A basic budget breakdown was also requested within the consultati­ve council.

“Despite assurances made, the budget breakdown was not received before the start of EuroPride and still has not been received by the members of the LGBTIQ Consultati­ve Council,” they said.

They also complained about miscommuni­cation, late notificati­ons, changes in funding decisions, constant budget modificati­ons and decisions constantly being taken without consultati­on up to the actual EuroPride 2023.

They said that, despite the challenges, NGOs managed to run their activities as smoothly as possible, emphasisin­g EuroPride’s primary purpose to celebrate the LGBTIQ+ community’s legal accomplish­ments in Malta, social progress, the provision of safe and diverse spaces and tackling ongoing issues.

It should be the community leading pride, not government

“We urge the government to be transparen­t about its expenditur­e, which we estimate to be far above the €2.5 million allocated for EuroPride.”

Pride, they said, should put the community at the forefront, not primarily be a platform for the government to show off its progressiv­e agenda while members of the community were still marginalis­ed, discrimina­ted against or suffering violence.

“It should be the community leading pride, not the government. Without transparen­t informatio­n and clear communicat­ion, trust within the community is at risk, and, thus, the involvemen­t of government in future prides is questionab­le,” they said.

 ?? PHOTO: MATTHEW MIRABELLI ?? The opening night of last year’s EuroPride.
PHOTO: MATTHEW MIRABELLI The opening night of last year’s EuroPride.

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