---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: conta...@gayrussia.ru
Date: Wed, 11 Mar 2009 15:50:11 +0300
Subject: 155 Banned Moscow Gay Pride Marches Appealed to European Court of
Human Rights

Compensation of 1.7 million Euros sought

Organisers of Moscow Pride have this morning submitted appeals to the
European Court of Human Rights following the bans on 'marches' that were
banned by the Moscow authorities in May last year.

In all, the organisers of Moscow Pride applied to City's Mayor, Yuri
Luzhkov, for 155 marches, five each day during May 2008. All were dismissed
by Moscow authorities due to the threat for security of the participants and
possible violations of public order.

The application against Russia sent to the European Court includes 50 pages
with 178 documentary attachments on more than 500 pages.

All 155 bans of Gay Pride marches were held lawful by Tverskoi District
Court of Moscow and Moscow City Court.

In their new application to Strasbourg-based court, Russian gay activists
insist that by banning the marches Moscow authorities breached a number of
European Convention articles, particularly Article 11 (right to freedom of
assembly), Article 13 (right to court protection) and Article 14 (right to
non-discrimination).

They are asking for 11,000 Euros compensation for each march banned.

Public action during the third Moscow Gay Pride did take place, but without
the permission of the authorities, on Sunday June 1.

Activists gathered next to the monument of famous Russian composer Peter
Tchaikovsky on Bolshaya Nikitskaya street in the city centre, where they
conducted a picket. Then, after a very short 'march' down a nearby street,
they unveiled a huge banner of Moscow Pride from the windows of a flat on
Tverskaya Street in front of Moscow City Hall that they remted.

The banner read "Rights to Gays and Lesbians! Homophobia of Mayor Luzhkov
should be prosecuted!"

"The case that we sent to the European Court [today] is a unique and
unprecedented one," commented Nikolai Alekseev, one of the Gay Pride
organisers.

"No one has ever appealed the bans of so many public events. Additionally,
not a single member-state of the Council of Europe has ever faced complaints
about the bans of three Gay Prides in a row. This, as well as other
complaints that we sent to Strasbourg, vividly demonstrate that the breaches
of the right to freedom of assembly for homosexual people in Russia are now
systematic".

A month ago, Moscow Pride organisers asked the European Court to give
priority treatment to their applications concerning the bans of Gay Prides
in 2006 and 2007.

"We haven't received any reply yet but we hope that the legal dispute about
the banned Moscow Prides will soon be fully resolved," Mr. Alekseev said.

"We are absolutely sure that we will win our cases in Strasbourg."

On May 16 - the day of Eurovision Song Contest final in Moscow and the
weekend of International Day Against Homophobia, Russian and Belarusian gay
activists are planning first Slavic Gay Pride in Moscow.

City Mayor Yuri Luzhkov and the head of Moscow police Vladimir Pronin have
already hinted that they will ban the staging of the Gay Pride in Moscow for
the forth consecutive year.

"Irrespective of Moscow authorities' recent statements that they will again
ban the Gay Pride, we are again going to officially apply for permission in
full accordance with the Russian law, which is on our side," Mr. Alekseev
vowed.

"If there is a ban again, we will once again take the case though the courts
and, if necessary to Strasbourg," he said.

"But we will go on the streets on May 16. The Eurovision Song contest in
Moscow gives us a unique chance to shout all around the world even louder
about the breaches of the rights of sexual minorities in Russia and
Belarus."

And he promised "new surprises" for the Moscow May gay festival. "As in
previous years, we will not repeat ourselves," he added.

Last year, the Pride organisers outwitted both the Moscow police and the
ОМОН (OMON) security force with secret plans that included bussing
participants and the media to the monument of Tchaikovsky, who is considered
by many to have been gay, by today's standards.

GayRussia.Ru, UkGayNews.Org.Uk

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