A small group of LGBT+ campaigners held a Pride rally in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi on Monday, weeks after they were forced to call off a march following a wave of political unrest.
Organisers said several dozen campaigners held a half-hour gathering in front of the ministry of internal affairs after being forced to change plans due to fear of reprisals from the far right.
โVisibility is important,โ co-organiser Giorgi Tabagari told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by telephone from Georgia.
โWhat this Pride has done in the past four months has been very significant and it will change the whole discourse about LGBT+ rights in this country.โ
The march was initially planned for several weeks ago but was cancelled at the eleventh hour after a wave of political unrest led to violent clashes between police and protesters.
Organisers had also faced threats from extreme right-wing groups and opposition from the influential Orthodox Church, while the government had warned against the march going ahead, saying participantsโ safety could not be guaranteed.
They had vowed to reschedule, but Tabagari said they were once again forced to change their plans at the last minute after details of the new event leaked to media yesterday, putting them at risk from counter-protests.
He said while leaving the event their car had been chased for several blocks by another vehicle.
โThere would probably be many more people going in the normal circumstances if we didnโt have the counter-demonstrations happening,โ he said.
โIt changed a lot in terms of (the) amount of people who went out, but it didnโt change the messages we had to say and it didnโt change the spirit and it didnโt change the visibility.โ
The Caucasian nation has witnessed a cultural clash between liberal forces and religious conservatives over the past decade as it has modernised and introduced radical reforms.
The influential Georgian Orthodox Patriarchate had urged the government to ban the rally, describing it as an unacceptable provocation aimed at promoting โthe sin of Sodomโ, while far-right groups threatened to form vigilante units to stop it.
REUTERS