LGBT Pride Activists Protest in Paris Against Racial Discrimination

The organizers of the Pride parade decided to hold a march they said should be more politically driven and support the "Black Lives Matter" movement

A pared-down LGBT Pride march drew thousands of people to the Paris Streets on Saturday, July 4 without the colorful trucks blasting out techno music. The parade included powerful slogans demanding racial equality and protesting against police brutality.

The French capital's official Pride parade was postponed to November due to the Coronavirus pandemic, but organizers decided to hold a march they said should be more politically driven and support the "Black Lives Matter" movement.

Rainbow flag (LGBT)
LGBT Community Wikimedia Commons

"Because of COVID, the normal Pride parade had to be cancelled, but we managed to organise a Pride that is more political," a drag king and illustrator who gave her name as Saint Eugene told Reuters TV.

'Everyone Hates The Police'

Marchers, who chanted slogans such as "Everyone hates the police", made their way peacefully from the Moulin Rouge cabaret in the Pigalle neighbourhood to Place de la Republique on the city's Right Bank, many of them wearing face masks.

Some waved "Black Lives Matter" placards in support of protests ignited by the death of George Floyd, a Black man whose death in police custody in Minneapolis in the United States triggered worldwide protests.

More than 200 LGBT rights marches have been postponed or cancelled due to the spread of the coronavirus, according to the European Pride Organisers Association, which estimates that up to 22 million people attend at least one Pride in Europe every year.

"It's not just a month of Pride, we have to fight every day, it's a battle every day, to get across a message around the world," said teacher Ahmed Madkouri.

(With inputs from agency)

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