Thousands march in Cyprus's first gay pride parade, seeking equal rights

More than 3,500 people waved rainbow flags and marched peacefully through the streets of capital Nicosia. Earlier, a much smaller anti-gay group clashed with police.

People take part in a gay pride parade in Nicosia, May 31. Thousands of people marched in Cyprus' first gay pride parade on Saturday, calling for equal rights in a country where homosexuality is still vehemently opposed by an influential Orthodox Church.

Andreas Manolis/Reuters

May 31, 2014

Thousands of people marched in Cyprus' first gay pride parade on Saturday, calling for equal rights in a country where homosexuality is still vehemently opposed by an influential Orthodox Church.

Waving rainbow flags, more than 3,500 people of all ages marched peacefully through the streets of the Cypriot capital where earlier a much smaller, anti-gay group clashed with police.

"I'm here because I support the right of everyone to be who they are," said activist Magda Zenon. "I want to live in a society where everyone has equal access to resources and the law."

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Cyprus decriminalize homosexuality in 1998, five years after a lone activist won a damning judgment against the country from the European Court of Human Rights.

Sixteen years on, activists say Cyprus still lags far behind its European Union peers in terms of rights for gay people, and has been slow in pursuing legislation on civil partnerships.

Gay couples in Cyprus do not have the same rights to social housing and other benefits as heterosexuals and miss out on other entitlements such as being consulted over medical treatment if a partner is ill.

"There is one love, and our love deserves equal recognition before the law," said Gabi Calleja of ILGA Europe, an advocacy group for lesbians and gays.

Shortly before the gay pride started, about 200 people, including clerics, held a noisy protest outside the island's parliament. Some scuffles broke out.

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The island's conservative Orthodox Church had denounced the gay pride, calling homosexuality an "illness".

A pamphlet issued by organizers of the counter-demonstration, a religious group, described homosexuality as a mortal sin. One placard said acceptance of homosexuality would turn Cyprus, once known as an "island of saints" into an "island of savages".

The gay pride was one of the largest marches seen in Cyprus in several years, bigger than protest gatherings over Cyprus's tumultuous financial bailout in 2013.

Several ambassadors accredited to the island showed their support by attending. Austria's ambassador Karl Mueller turned up with painted sideburns to resemble drag artist Conchita, the 2014 winner of the Eurovision song contest.

"This is part of a person's rights to express themselves freely and I think its high time to emphasis the rights for these groups," Ambassador Mueller told Reuters.

(Editing by Rosalind Russell)