It’s the only Balkan country to have an openly gay prime minister – so why are some of Serbia’s LGBT activists determined to keep PM Ana Brnabic away from Gay Pride?
When Ms Brnabic was appointed last year, hopes were high in the LGBT community: not only was she the first woman to head the Serbian cabinet, she was also the first LGBT politician to hold such high office in the Balkans.
She marched in the 2017 Pride parade in Belgrade, surrounded by posters reading “Ana is here,” and took selfies with dozens of people.
But one year on, progress is scant: LGBT rights have not improved, new laws are still far from being adopted and there has been no fall in the number of attacks on gay people.
In largely conservative Orthodox Christian Serbia, a candidate for EU membership, discrimination and violence against the LGBT community are widespread.
Two gay Prides, one gay PM and no end to problems
Ahead of 2018 Pride, a group of activists disappointed with the slow pace of reforms launched a campaign called “Say no”. Its main goal is to prevent politicians from attending Pride marches, as campaigners believe they have done little to strengthen LGBT rights.
Speaking at the 2017 parade, Ms Brnabic said that LGBT rights would be addressed only after important problems such as inflation, pensions and the standard of living had been resolved.
“It was a scandalous statement,” Predrag Azdejkovic, the head of GLIC, told the BBC.
Unhappy with the efforts of other gay activists, Mr Azdejkovic started another parade in June. Its goal is to “bring the gay march back to ordinary people and away from politicians”.
“They say: ‘You have a gay prime minister, two parades, you should be content’. But it’s all just made up,” said Mr Azdejkovic.
For Serbia’s LGBT community, everyday life is still marred by widespread homophobia: a survey by the regional ERA organisation showed that every fifth gay couple in Belgrade gets rejected when trying to rent a flat.
The situation is even gloomier outside the capital, activists say.
The government has adopted the Law against Discrimination but cases rarely come to justice. Another survey done by ERA showed that 90% of people in Serbia are against giving LGBT couples the right to adopt, while about 70% are against gay couples inheriting a partner’s belongings after death.
Same-sex marriage is still illegal in Serbia.
Serbia’s first Pride parade in 2001 ended in violence when hundreds of hooligans and extremists attacked a peaceful march despite a heavy police presence.
And in 2010, about 100 people were injured when that year’s march was also attacked in central Belgrade.
In the years that followed, the interior ministry refused security clearance for the parade to take place. Only in 2014 did the marchers return to the streets, again with considerable police presence.
Make-up and LGBT rights
Four years later, the LGBT flag welcomes visitors to the Pride Info Centre that opened its doors to the public in central Belgrade.
“If we had opened the centre 10 years ago, I am sure it would have been demolished,” said Goran Miletic from Civil Rights Defenders, the organiser of Belgrade Pride.
“Some of the people passing by stop and comment. They say, ‘faggots’ and then they leave. That is a step forward – some people don’t like what they see, but we are still here. It is a small, but a significant step forward.”
by Slobodan Maricic & Petra Zivic – BBC Serbian
Source – BBC News