Thousands to join Budapest Pride march in protest over new anti-LGBT law
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[July 24, 2021]
By Gergely Szakacs
BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Thousands of
Hungarians planned to join the annual Budapest Pride march on Saturday
in a show of support for LGBT people and to protest against a law
banning the use of materials in schools seen as promoting homosexuality
and gender reassignment.
Hungary's nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban, in power since 2010,
has grown increasingly radical on social policy in what he portrays as a
fight to safeguard traditional Christian values from Western liberalism.
The European Commission has launched legal action against Orban's
government over the new law, which came into force this month, saying it
is discriminatory and contravenes European values of tolerance and
individual freedom.
Orban's government, which faces a tough election next year, says matters
such as LGBT rights are for national governments to decide and says it
will call a referendum on the reform. It says the law is not about
targeting homosexuals but about protecting Hungary's children.
Organisers of Saturdays' march have called on supporters to stand up
against hatred and resist attempts by what they called "power-hungry
politicians" to intimidate LGBT people.
"The recent past has been very demanding, distressing and frightening
for the LGBTQ community," they said in a statement.
"Instead of protecting minorities, the Fidesz-Christian
Democrat government is using laws to make members of the LGBTQ community
outcasts in their own country."
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People gather in front of a huge rainbow balloon put up by members
of Amnesty International and Hatter, an NGO promoting LGBT rights,
at Hungary's parliament in Budapest, Hungary, July 8, 2021. REUTERS/Marton
Monus
Several civil rights groups have criticised Orban's reforms and a
survey last month by the Ipsos polling organisation found that 46%
of Hungarians support same-sex marriage.
On Monday, more than 40 foreign cultural institutions and embassies
in Hungary, including those of the United States, Britain and
Germany, published a joint statement in support of the Budapest
Pride Festival.
"Concerned by recent developments that threaten the principle of
non-discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation or gender
identity, we encourage steps in every country to ensure the equality
and dignity of all human beings irrespective of their sexual
orientation or gender identity," they said.
(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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