MOSCOW, May 27, 2007 – Gay
human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell gave the opening keynote speech at
the Moscow Pride conference in the Swissotel, Moscow, yesterday. This is the
full text of what he said:
Greetings!
I bring you a message of
comradeship and solidarity from the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and
intersex [LGBTI] human rights organizations OutRage! in London.
Your struggle is our struggle.
The quest for queer freedom is an
international quest, in Russia and in all countries.
Gay and lesbian liberation is for
all peoples everywhere, not just for some. We cannot accept dignity and
rights for queers in Western Europe to the exclusion of queers in Eastern
Europe and Russia.
We are in this fight for freedom
together.
As long as gay people in Russia are
not accepted and respected, then we are all diminished in all parts of the
world. We are diminished regardless of whether we are gay or straight. An
attack on one is an attack on all.
When gay rights are suppressed, it
is a loss to the whole democratic and human rights movement. Conversely,
when lesbian and gay people win victories, it is a victory for all lovers of
freedom and liberty.
The advance of LGBTI human rights
strengthens every struggle for freedom, justice and equality. It expands
the democratic space for us all.
This is why it is so important that
the LGBTI human rights movement is not separate from the broader human
rights movement — but part of it.
It is sad to see some human rights
activists here in Russia distance themselves from the LGBTI human rights
campaign — and from this weekend’s bid to stage the Moscow Pride march.
When human rights activists pick
and choose which freedoms to defend, they undermine and compromise the whole
human rights agenda.
Human rights are universal and
indivisible.
That is why I stand
shoulder-to-shoulder not only with the Russian LGBTI movement and the
organizers of Moscow Pride, but also shoulder-to-shoulder with the human
rights activists campaigning to bring justice to the killers of Anna
Politkovskaya and other murdered journalists; those campaigning to end the
war and torture in Chechnya; and with campaigners against the harassment of
environmental activists and the victimisation of democracy activists, like
Garry Kasparov.
These different struggles are
essentially all the same—they all concern the defence of democracy and human
rights against an increasingly authoritarian Russian State and Moscow City
Government.
The ban on Moscow Pride is one
aspect of a much wider attack on civil society and human rights. In this
context of generalised repression, unity and solidarity are the key to
winning all these different freedom struggles.
Alone and divided we are weak.
Together and united we are strong.
The ban on Moscow Pride is evidence
of a flawed and failed transition from communism to democracy.
Russia’s President and Moscow’s
Mayor are dragging the country back to autocracy. The right to hold a
Moscow Pride march is not just an issue of gay rights, it is an defence of
freedom of expression for all Russians—gay and straight.
The fundamental issue is the right
to protest.
Together with others, LGBTI people
are in the frontline of the struggle to defend the right to freedom of
speech and assembly.
We carry the torch of freedom for
every Russian of whatever sexuality. Here, this weekend in Moscow, we carry
freedom’s torch today and we will carry it in the streets of Moscow tomorrow
— and beyond — until the rights of LGBTI Russians are won and respected.
My message to President Putin and
Mayor Luzhkov is this: Queer freedom has been long delayed but it cannot be
denied.
Spacibo — thank you.
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Posted: 27 May 2007 at
12:00 (UK time) |