Anti-gay riots rock Belgrade

By Aleksandar Vasovic, Reuters

Last Updated: October 10, 2010 1:56pm

Description: A riot policeman stands beside a protester injured during clashes 
in Belgrade October 10, 2010. A huge force of about 5,000 Serbian police 
clashed repeatedly with anti-gay protesters on Sunday, leading to arrests and 
many injuries as Belgrade hosted its first gay rights rally in nearly a decade. 
REUTERS/Djordje Kojadinovic 

A riot policeman stands beside a protester injured during clashes in Belgrade 
October 10, 2010. A huge force of about 5,000 Serbian police clashed repeatedly 
with anti-gay protesters on Sunday, leading to arrests and many injuries as 
Belgrade hosted its first gay rights rally in nearly a decade. REUTERS/Djordje 
Kojadinovic 

BELGRADE - A gay rights parade in Belgrade erupted in violence on Sunday as 
thousands of police deployed to protect marchers clashed with anti-gay 
protesters, who rioted and attacked the headquarters of the ruling parties.

In the worst violence in the Serbian capital in over two years, more than 110 
police were injured in pitched battles with gangs of nationalists and 
skinheads, and one of the 1,500 marchers was badly beaten as he arrived home in 
a nearby suburb, police and officials said.

Pushed back from the parade area by 5,000 police in riot gear, protesters 
turned to other targets, breaking into the lobby of the state television 
network, scaling scaffolding to try to enter parliament, smashing windows at 
the Austrian embassy and burning a car in front of the French embassy.

Firefighters extinguished a blaze at the headquarters of the Democratic Party 
of President Boris Tadic and the premises of their coalition partner, the 
Socialist Party, were also attacked before calm was restored by early evening.

Defence Minister Dragan Sutanovac called it a “really sad day for Serbia””and 
Tadic vowed to bring the people behind the violence to justice.

“Serbia will secure human rights for all its citizens regardless of their 
diversity. No one will tolerate attempts to threaten them,” said Tadic, who 
like other top government officials did not attend the march.

The clashes highlighted the intolerance that still pervades Serbian society a 
decade after the country ousted strongman Slobodan Milosevic, ending the pariah 
status that dogged it during the Balkan wars of the 1990s.

The parade, the first of its kind in Belgrade in nearly a decade, had been seen 
as a test of Serbia’s readiness to become a more modern, open society after 
years of conflict fuelled by ethnic hatred.

The violence occured just two days before a planned visit of U.S. Secretary of 
State Hillary Clinton, who wants to highlight Washington’s support for 
Belgrade’s EU aspirations.

BLOODIED POLICE

Gangs of tough-looking youths threw stones, crowbars, wooden planks, bottles 
and other objects at police, smashed windows of cars and buses and looted 
several central shops including that of Italian retailer Benetton. Some sang 
nationalist songs.

Rioters were injured by charging police, backed by armoured vehicles, who 
wielded clubs and shields and used teargas and stun grenades against their 
attackers.

Police said they had detained 101 people as of late afternoon and kept 53 in 
custody. Debris lay scattered across the main streets of central Belgrade and 
clouds of teargas rose from the ground.

“It was more like death march. The atmosphere was terrible,” said Susanne 
Simon-Paunovic, a German married to a Serb who attended the rally.

Milena, a 36-year old lesbian activist said: “It is a shame for me to march, to 
stand for what I am, and to have thousands of cops protect me from hysterical 
nationalists.”

Traditionally conservative Balkan societies have been slow to adjust to open 
homosexuality, and last year a Serbian gay parade was cancelled because of 
threats.

“This government wants to protect a deviant, wicked and non-Christian minority 
against the good, law-abiding majority,” said Milija, 28, a construction 
engineer who described himself as a religious nationalist.

http://www.torontosun.com/news/world/2010/10/10/15645861.html

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