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Family Purity Day

Tbilisi marks International Day Against Homophobia with a single rainbow flag

Tbilisi marks International Day Against Homophobia with a single rainbow flag
(Tbilisi Pride)

Queer rights activists abstained from holding a demonstration in Tbilisi for this year’s International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia, and Biphobia over safety concerns. Next month, Tbilisi is expected to host its first ever queer pride event.

After warnings from far-right groups that anti-homophobic demonstrations would be met with violence, the Equality Movement, Women’s Initiatives Supporting Group, and other queer rights groups decided to limit themselves to online campaigns only on Friday.

On 17 May hundreds of people, including priests, churchgoers and far-right groups took to the streets to protest ‘sodomy’.

Some of them came out to celebrate Family Purity Day, a holiday created by the Georgian Orthodox Church in 2014, a year after thousands of people led by priests attacked several dozen queer rights demonstrators in the city.

[Read on OC Media: 16–18 May 2013: the days of human tragedies]

One poster held by a child at the rally read ‘May God not burn Tbilisi like Sodom and Gomorrah’, while other posters called for the protection of ‘family purity and morality’.

Priests held prayers in Tbilisi’s central First Republic Square, where churchgoers kissed icons before marching to the Holy Trinity Cathedral.

In a sermon at the Cathedral, the head of the Church, Ilia II, told those gathered to ‘remember that a family is happy only if it’s a lawful family. And a lawful family consists of a man and a woman’.

Conservative groups march to the Holy Trinity Cathedral. (Mari Nikuradze / OC Media)

The rally was organised by the Georgian Orthodox Church, however, several days earlier, the Church issued a statement denouncing violence.

‘We’d like to remark that this is a peaceful event and has nothing to do with aggression. It is a reflection of our society’s support for traditional values. We will reiterate that the Church opposes all kinds of violence, whomever it comes from’, said a statement issued by the Church on 15 May.

LGBT flag on a bridge

Despite the decision by activists to abstain from a public demonstration, queer rights activist Nino Bolkvadze hung a rainbow flag over the central Baratashvili Bridge.

The day before, the Women’s Initiatives Support Group (WISG) posted stickers throughout the city with QR codes that directed visitors to a website called ‘I am here’.

‘I am your son. And you don’t want to believe this. 60% of us lives with our families and at least 84.4% have experienced domestic violence at least once. We are under permanent psychological pressure’, says one of the many messages published on the website.

Several days earlier, WISG reported that their Facebook page had been blocked as well as links to their website posted on Facebook, allegedly after an organised campaign by anti-queer groups to report the page as abusive.

The Equality Movement had made plans to mark the day before eventually deciding not to campaign publicly.

The group had planned to put up pro-equality advertisements on the billboards, however, the advertising company they had a contract with pulled out at the last moment.

‘Our lives are in danger. Because the government won’t ensure our safety, we are forced to refuse our constitutional rights to gather. With this poster, we are trying to make our voices heard: 17 May is the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia. Rethink what happened on 17 May’, one of the posters the Equality Movement wanted to display read.

[Read more about the ad company on OC Media: Ad company pulls out of deal to display anti-homophobia posters in Tbilisi]

International support

Several Western embassies expressed solidarity towards Georgia’s queer community, reminding state officials Georgia has adopted anti-discrimination law and ratified core international human rights conventions that bar discrimination against queer people.

The US embassy to Georgia issued a statement noting that while some progress had been made, the ‘everyday reality for the LGBTQI+ community in Georgia is that these guarantees largely remain on paper’.

‘We thus urge Georgian leaders to take resolute action to ensure that the equality guaranteed in law is realised in practice, so that every person in the country, including LGBTQI+ persons, can exercise their rights. In this context, we note that cultural, religious and moral beliefs — even if held by a majority — can never be an excuse for tolerating human rights violations’, the joint statement said, written on behalf of the United Nations Resident Coordinator; the Ambassadors of the European Union (EU), Austria, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Slovenia, Sweden, and the United Kingdom; the Head of Mission of the United States; and the Head of the Council of Europe Office in Georgia.

The Public Defender of Georgia noted that it was unfortunate that ‘the rights situation of LGBT people has not changed substantially in the country’.

The influence of anti-gender groups and homophobia are still strong in society, which is why LGBT people suffer from oppression, discrimination, and often become victims of violence. In addition, due to the homophobic and transphobic sentiments of a significant part of society, enjoyment of the right to education, work, healthcare, and social protection remains a problem for LGBT+ persons’, said the statement.

It elaborated that measures taken by the state for the protection of LGBT+ people are inadequate and cannot respond to real challenges. It criticised the government for not having a systemic vision about how to improve the rights situation of LGBT people.

Prominent human rights groups united in the Coalition for Equality also criticised the government for not recognising violence against queer people, which they said, ‘hinders the transformation of the homophobic political and social environment’.

Moreover, they said, ‘by inefficient policies, the state indirectly supports violence and discrimination’.

How officials react on homophobia

In 2017, the Human Rights and Civil Integration Committee of Georgia’s Parliament pledged to mark International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia on every 17 May. The pledge was contained in the committee’s 2017–2018 Action Plan, which was unveiled on 1 September by the head of the committee, Sopo Kiladze, alongside representatives from the EU delegation to Georgia and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

However, in 2018, Liberali asked Kiladze several days prior to the date whether the committee intended to mark the day as they pledged, to which she said they would not because they did not want to. Since then, several demonstrations were held in which queer activists and human rights organisations demanded her resignation.

The police regularly issues statements prior to 17 May pledging safety guarantees for protesters, and 2019 was no different.

Police on Family Purity demonstration. (Mari Nikuradze / OC Media)

On 16 May, the Interior Ministry said in a statement that ‘the ministry protects the freedom of expression of people regardless of their political and other views, gender, religious belonging, sexual orientation, gender identity and other characteristics’.

However, the ministry failed to protect freedom of gathering and expression of several dozen queer activists in 2013, when a homophobic mob led by priests attacked demonstrators on 17 May. Despite numerous videos depicting the acts of violence, none of the attackers were held responsible.

The creation of a human rights department in the Interior Ministry in 2018 has been praised by several rights groups. According to the statement published on 17 May, in 2018, the number of people charged for the crimes committed based on discrimination tripled compared to the previous year.

‘In order to protect the interests of victims and witnesses, also to avoid re-victimisation, the Victim/Witness Coordination Service was established. The coordinator prioritises communication with victims of crimes committed based on discrimination’, said a statement by the ministry.

Queer rights in Georgia

However, the Public Defender’s 2018 report said they had received numerous complaints regarding homophobic attitudes from law enforcement officials.

The report said that violence against queer people, whether in the family or in public spaces, was a serious problem, and that the government had been unable to respond to this challenge.

‘In some cases, complainants withdrew cases and refused to cooperate with the general inspection or the Prosecutor’s Office because they didn’t believe an investigation into their cases would be timely’, the report read.

A National Democratic Institute poll from June 2018 suggested that only 23% of Georgia’s population think that protecting the rights of queer people is important.

Women brandishing nettles in a homophobic rally on 17 May 2013 (Mari Nikuradze /DF Watch)

This was a 2% gain in support compared to 2015, when 21% said the protection of their rights was important.

The results suggested that 44% think the protection of queer rights was not important, while 26% have a neutral attitude.

[Read more about queer rights activism in Tbilisi: Georgian activists protest for human rights committee head to resign]

Queer people in Georgia are ‘completely defenceless’ against domestic violence, a recent study conducted by the Georgian rights group Human Rights Education and Monitoring Centre (EMC) found. The study said this frequently resulted in victims being forced to leave their homes and which impacted their education and careers, contributing to homelessness.

[Read more about the study: Queer people in Georgia ‘completely defenceless’ against domestic violence]

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