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Dear all,
Please find enclosed an URGENT ACTION issued today on the Baltic Pride together with a press release in relation to the most recent developments regarding the Baltic Pride. Please write as many emails as possible and help us spread the world. The cancellation of the Baltic Pride (and thus the violation of the right of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression) is the most recent example how much there is still to do in the EU for achieving equal rights!
Amnesty International condemns
the suspension by a Lithuanian court of the 2010 Baltic Pride march, which
was set to take place in the capital Vilnius on 8 May.
The city’s administrative
court today agreed to an application by the Lithuanian Interim Attorney
General to temporarily suspend the march on public security grounds despite
police assurances that they are able to protect participants from attacks
from counter-demonstrators.
“The authorities in Lithuania
must ensure that the march goes ahead unobstructed and safely as they are
obliged under international law to guarantee the rights to freedom to expression
and assembly. Anything less will amount to discrimination,” said John
Dalhuisen, Amnesty International’s expert on discrimination in Europe.
“The Attorney General’s
application is an abuse of the legal process and will result in the violation
of human rights.”
The court agreed to temporarily
suspend the march pending a full hearing expected only after the march
is scheduled to take place.
The march is Lithuania’s
first in support of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people.
The organizers of the march,
the LithuanianGay League, Tolerant Youth Organisation (Lithuania),
the Latvian organization Mozaika, and the Estonian Gay Youth,
are appealing against the suspension.
Amnesty International is calling
for the appeal to be considered in time to lift the suspension before the
march is due to take place.
Lithuanian President Dalia
Grybauskaite said today that if groups or organizations are not banned
by law, they have the right to express their opinion as guaranteed by the
Constitution of the country.
Amnesty International activists
from over 20 countries will take part in the events in Vilnius together
with LGBT activists from Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia to protest against
the discrimination and abuse LGBT people face and to assert their right
to express themselves in public.
They will be calling on the
governments of the three Baltic countries to tackle widespread intolerance
and exclusion LGBT people.
“Diversity and tolerance,
equality before the law for all, no discrimination on sexual orientation
and gender identity grounds are the messages that LGBT rights activists
will take to the streets,” said John Dalhuisen.
“They must be able to do so without
fear of threats and verbal or physical abuse. They must have the support
of their authorities who are obliged by international law to protect the
rights of the LGBT community.”
During the course of the Baltic
Pride 2010, Amnesty International is planning to take part in the following
events:
Friday 7 May
10.00 - 17.00 International
conference “Human Rights Combating Fear and Prejudice” in Conti Hotel
with the participation of Amnesty International representatives.
13.00 – 13.30 Baltic Pride
press conference in Conti Hotel.
Saturday 8 May 12.00 -14.30 Baltic Pride
March for Equality in Central Vilnius.
Amnesty International delegates
will be available for interviews throughout the Baltic Pride 2010.