MOSCOW
JUNE 1 2008 20:50h
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Two years ago police, militant Orthodox Christians and neo-fascists attacked and violently broke up the 1st ever gay rights march in Moscow.
About 20 people gathered in front of a monument to Russian 19th century composer Pyotr Tchaikovsky near the Moscow Conservatory. Many held rainbow flags.
"We have gathered in a very symbolic place to pay tribute to a person who was gay himself and at the same time had to conceal it because of repressive laws and disapproval in society," Nikolai Alexeyev, a protest organiser, told journalists.
Tchaikovsky, a Romantic-era composer and the author of Swan Lake and Romeo and Juliet, is believed by most of his biographers to have been homosexual.
Moscow's influential Mayor Yuri Luzhkov had repeatedly banned this year's "Gay Pride" parade proposed by Russian gays and lesbians, who had originally planned to march along the central Tverskaya Street to demand their rights.
"Luzhkov has always stressed that Russian society does not accept such things," Interfax news agency quoted a senior Moscow municipal official as saying. "A gay parade is primarily dangerous to the participants themselves."
Homosexuality was decriminalised in Russia in 1993, and although some gay clubs exist in big cities, same-sex couples almost never make a public display of their affection.
Two years ago police, militant Orthodox Christians and neo-fascists attacked and violently broke up the first ever gay rights march in Moscow.
In Tverskaya, a lonely splashy slogan hung from the windows of one of the buildings, reading: "Rights for gays and lesbians!"
Down in the street, a crowd of ultra-nationalists and Orthodox Christians booed at the slogan. "Russia without faggots," screamed a neo-fascist, throwing an egg at the slogan.
Moscow police said they had detained a dozen protesters and would "lecture them on morality".
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