Russian rightwingers disrupt Gay Pride rally, activists arrested

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27 May 2007Yahoo! NewsKarim Talbi

Punches and kicks flew, eggs and insults were hurled, and several global gay rights supporters were arrested Sunday as activists defied a state ban and briefly staged Moscow's second ever Gay Pride march.

Police detained Russian gay community leader Nikolai Alexeyev and several European lawmakers in central Moscow at the start of the demonstration by dozens of homosexual rights activists campaigning for an end to sexual discrimination.

Dozens of Russian right-wing extremists converged on the group, shouting insults like "fags," and "perverts," throwing eggs and punching and kicking gay demonstrators in front of riot police who intervened much later.

The police also systematically arrested both the attackers and the assaulted.

The gay rights activists were also assaulted by ultra-nationalists and Orthodox Church hardliners.

Russian news agencies, citing police, said eight to 10 people had been arrested for participating in the rally.

The demonstrators were trying to march on Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov's office to hand over a memorandum signed by more than 40 members of the European Parliament -- requesting permission to hold a march in central Moscow.

Luzhkov had earlier described Gay Pride marches as a "work of Satan."

Also detained were Volker Beck, a member of Germany's parliament; Marco Cappato, an Italian member of the European Parliament, and veteran British gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell.

Tatchell and Beck were punched in the face in full view of police and dozens of journalists. Another activist was seen bleeding from his face after being attacked.

Tatchell took a punch in the eye from an ultra right-wing nationalist counter-demonstrator, witnesses said. Riot police eventually detained several far-right members.

The crackdown on the gay rights marchers drew quick condemnation from around Europe.

The mayor of Rome along with cabinet ministers and Italian lawmakers deplored the violence.

"What happened in Moscow, leaves you speechless: to use or even tolerate violence against those who are demonstrating in a peaceful manner for the recognition of their human and civil rights is a sad sign," said Mayor Walter Veltroni.

Cappato was later released after being held for about five hours at a police station with the help of the Italian embassy, officials said.

Beck, who was beaten during Moscow's first Gay Pride march last year, was attacked again by ultra-nationalists and detained by police who then released him after an apology, the russiagay.ru website reported.

Transsexual Italian deputy Vladimir Luxuria, who was pelted with eggs, was clearly shocked after the attack.

"I will put pressure on our parliament to ensure that the Italian president brings up this very serious matter during his next meeting with (Russian President) Vladimir Putin."

That view was echoed by the Liberal Democrat leader in the European Parliament, Graham Watson, who said European leaders must raise with Putin at the Group of Eight summit next month "the question of whether Russia still adheres to the values of the Council of Europe, of which it is a member."

The violence also was condemned by the mayor of another European capital, Bertrand Delanoe of Paris, who slammed it as "clearly inappropriate."

"I would like to denounce the unacceptable violence perpetrated once again by extremists on people peacefully participating in a rally in the Russian capital for the equality of homosexuals," he wrote in a statement.

The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Centre in Paris, concerned that Russian demonstrators could be sentenced to jail, said that all those arrested in Moscow Sunday must be freed.

"They have been told (by the authorities) that they will not be released and that they will be brought to justice," centre chief Christine Le Doare told AFP.

She called on the French foreign ministry to put pressure on Russian authorities to release all march participants.

Supporting Sunday's demonstration were Austrian, German and Italian lawmakers, Richard Fairbrass of the British pop group Right Said Fred, and the Russian pop duo Tatu.

Tatu singer Yuliya Katina said she was angered "when someone forbids someone else from loving in the way they want to love," the Interfax news agency reported.

Far-right Russian parliamentary deputy Alexei Mitrofanov was also present in support of the march, despite the opposition of many in the legislature to sexual minority rights.

Igor Miroshnichenko, a deputy leader of a hardline Orthodox Church group, told Interfax that gays were "perverts who violate the will of God," Interfax reported.