Moldovan capital refuses gays to assemble
On 28 April 2006, the Chisinau Mayor refused a request by the Moldovan lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) organisation GenderDoc-M to organise a manifestation by the Moldovan Parliament on 5 May 2006 during the fifth Moldovan LGBT Pride festival. The Chisinau Mayor refused similar request also last year.
ILGA-Europe condemns such decision of the Chisinau Mayor and calls upon the Moldovan capital’s mayor to immediately reconsider his decision and urges the European Union, the Council of Europe and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe to intervene and upheld the right to assembly for the Moldovan LGBT people.
Instances of denying or hindering LGBT people the right to assemble and demonstrate by the municipal authorities have occurred during the last couple of years also in other European countries. LGBT people in those countries have experienced violence, threats and appalling expressions of hate during the marches and demonstrations. These breaches of basic human right to free assembly and homophobic attitudes have been condemned by the European Parliament’s Resolution on Homophobia in Europe earlier this year.
Deborah Lambillotte, Co-Chair of ILGA-Europe Executive Board, said:
“We are seriously concerned with the decision of the Chisinau Mayor to deny LGBT people a right to assembly. We would like to remind the Chisinau city authorities about Article 40 of the Moldovan Constitution which guarantees everyone a right to peaceful demonstration.
We also want to stress that such arguments against LGBT demonstration as religious objections and plans for counter-demonstrations cannot legitimise serious breach of a right to assembly as confirmed by the European Court of Human Rights.
We also hope that the European organisations and institutions will express their outrage by such lawless actions of the Chisinau Mayor.”
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For more information please contact Juris Lavrikovs at + 32 2 609 54 16 / + 32 496 708 375
Notes for editors:
(1) ILGA-Europe is the European region of the International Lesbian and Gay Association and works for equality and human rights for LGBT people in Europe.
(2) LGBT marches and demonstrations have been hindered, banned or experienced violent protests in such cities as Belgrade, Chisinau, Bucharest, Zagreb, Warsaw, Riga, Krakow, and Poznan.
(3) Bans on LGBT pride marches have been already successfully challenged in courts in Riga and Poznan. Also the European Court of Human Rights confirmed that there are positive duties on a state to protect those exercising their rights of freedom of peaceful assembly from violent disturbance by counter-demonstrators. Because both sides may claim to be exercising their right, initially this may be a duty to hold the ring between rival meetings or processions, but if one of them is aimed at disruption of the activities of the other, the obligation of the authorities is to protect those exercising their right of peaceful assembly, case of Platform Artze fur das Leben v Austria, No 10126/82, 44 DR 65 (1985).