It's gay pride day in Paris and Berlin

Jun 28, 2009 00:32




Liza Minnelli enchants Paris gay pride march

PARIS (AFP) - Hundreds of thousands on Saturday marched through Paris and Berlin in flamboyant Gay Pride parades with US showbiz diva and gay icon Liza Minnelli mesmerising crowds in the French capital.

Minnelli, who takes to the stage later Saturday in the French capital, a city which also holds fond memories for the star of her film director father, dazzled with a brief dance routine.

"Freedom," she cried, dancing on a float festooned with multi-coloured balloons in the gay movement's symbolic rainbow hues.

Organisers said about 700,000 people attended the event but police put the number at some 200,000.

"We knew that she had a concert this evening in Paris but when her agent told us that she could come, we thought it was a joke," said Philippe Castel, the spokesman for an umbrella grouping of some 50 gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender bodies.

"It's really an honour and a great pleasure to have her with us, she's an icon," he said.

"This will bring greater visibility to our fight."

But Castel said several things including marriage and adoption rights continued to elude gays and lesbians in France.

The vibrant procession included two floats blasting pop and techno music.

The event paid tribute to Stonewall -- a spontaneous New York uprising which erupted exactly 40 years ago and launched the US homosexual rights movement.

The event took its name from a New York bar, called the Stonewall Inn, which shot to global attention when its gay clientele staged a revolt against police harassment, sparking clashes for five days.

"It's been a long march. The progress accomplished has been great and gives us confidence," said Jack Lang, who as culture minister took one of the first Gay Pride marches in France in 1982.

"But we have to think very seriously about all the homosexuals in Iran, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere who are being persecuted."

Berlin's 31st Gay Pride march drew about 550,000 participants and spectators, according to local media estimates.

The parade featured floats led by one emblazoned with the slogan "Step by step towards Gay Pride. Equal rights for all."
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In related matters:
German activists push for constitutional amendment for gay rights
Forty years after the landmark "Stonewall uprising," German politicians and gay rights activists are demanding changes to the constitution to include equal rights for gay people.

This weekend, gay and lesbian rights' activists will celebrate the 40th anniversary of the "Stonewall" uprising -- named after a gay bar on Christopher Street in New York, where homosexuals fought back against police brutality in 1969.

Public gay pride demonstrations, known as Christopher Street Day, are held every summer in cities around the world to commemorate the event.

Klaus Jetz, head of the Lesbian and Gay Federation in Germany (LSVD), told Deutsche Welle that the political focus of this year's Christopher Street Day parades, which will begin this weekend in Berlin, will be on amending Article 3 of the German constitution.

"The anti-discrimination law passed has been an important topic for the organization since our founding in 1990," he said. "It is great that we have finally managed to rally support for this topic beyond our own community, within the political sphere."

This week, the German parliament voted to push for a federal initiative to make additions to Article 3 of the constitution, which protects citizens against discrimination based on gender, race, or religion. They want, among other things, to add sexual orientation to that list.

Social Democrat Klaus Wowereit, Berlin's openly homosexual mayor, spoke out in favor of the amendment. In an interview with the German news agency dpa, Wowereit said he whole-heartedly supported the initiative.

He called the laws passed to allow homosexual civil partnerships a "milestone,"but said that there was still judicial room for improvement.

Same responsibilities, different rights

Wowereit took the lead from his party colleague, Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries.

In an interview with the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper, Zypries said that changing Article 3 and Article 6 of the constitution -- which protects the institution of marriage and the family -- would send "a clear signal" to society.

While German federal law gives homosexuals the right to enter a civil partnership, they don't enjoy the same rights as heterosexual married couples when it comes to taxes, retirement, civil servant benefits, or adoption law.

Zypries said that homosexual couples have the same responsibilities, but not the same rights as heterosexuals. "I find this to be incredibly unjust, both on human and on judicial grounds," the newspaper quoted Zypries as saying.

Taking a stand

Klaus Jetz from the Lesbian and Gay Federation in Germany (LSVD) said that although both the European Parliament and the European Commission have taken a clear stance against discrimination based on sexual orientation, enshrining the same in the German constitution would have tangible advantages for the gay and lesbian community.

"Homosexual couples are not able to adopt children in Germany. And 'rainbow families' - gay and lesbian couples with biological children - don't get the same tax breaks as heterosexual couples," Jetz said.

Support in society growing

Article 3 of the constitution was amended for the last time in 1995, to protect the disabled from discrimination. At the time, there was not enough political backing to include sexual orientation to the list.

But that seems to be changing. On their Web site, the Lesbian and Gay Federation in Germany lists a slew of supporters, from all walks of life - actors, politicians, even a rabbi.

Three major parties - the Social Democrats, the Greens, and the Left Party - are in favor of an amendment. But a two-thirds majority will be necessary to change the constitution and will need to include members of the conservative parties as well.

"We have to get the Christian Democrats (CDU) on board," Jetz said.

But the interior minister of the southern state of Bavaria, Joachim Herrmann, has spoken out against the proposal. The minister who belongs to the arch-conservative CSU party, the sister Bavarian party of the CDU, says he sees no reason to extend the constitutional protection of the family.

Gay rights activists accuse the conservatives of blocking legislation that would give homosexuals more rights.

"We need the conservatives to understand that this is about protecting a minority in the population," Jetz said. "Giving us more rights won't change anything for them."

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eta:
Some photos from Berlin:
Berlin's gay mayor Klaus Wowereit






















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