
Arrested,
Beaten, Threatened, Jailed and Sent for Trial Just for Taking Part in Slavic Gay
Pride
… Yet PROUD of what we all
accomplished in Minsk
By Sergey Yenin
(probably the most dramatic 1,000 words written about a Gay
Pride event
anywhere in the world this year)
MINSK, May 19, 2010 –
This is an account of the most dramatic 48 hours in my life as a gay
activist in Belarus.
There were four of us in the taxi.
Myself, Logan (and Australian filmmaker), Jack (his boyfriend) and
Chad (a photographer working on a project
Walk with Pride).
I couldn’t help shivering in
anticipation of the upcoming Pride march and the possible extreme few hours
that I would probably face. But
I couldn’t let my friends worry as well. The
taxi driver noticed that something was really wrong with the place he had to
drop us off.
“What’s going on here? Who are you?” – the taxi driver asked me.
“Just tourists going to the hotel” –
I responded. It was the place
where the Pride was going to take place and was situated near a hotel.
Logan prepared his camera and Jack took a paper notebook and a pen into his
hands: “I hope I will look like a journalist,” he remarked.
Seven taxies stopped in the immediate area and participants of the Slavic
Pride got out of the cars. The place
was full of journalists ready for the action.
Everything looked like a flash mob:
we all walked along the street a bit and suddenly one of us took out a
12-meter rainbow flag out of his bag. Later,
events passed by very quickly.
A group of Russian guys took out smaller flags and posters, I grabbed the
huge flag and everyone rushed ahead shouting out slogans: “Homophobia is a
disease”, “Belarus free of homophobia” etc.
The journalists didn’t spend their time in vain: as soon as the notices the
12-meter flag were displayed, they turned on their cameras and aimed them at
us. We stopped for a while near a
Belarusian institute of arts, expanded the flag and continued shouting out
our slogans.
After a while we continued marching down the street.
I noticed two journalists
quarrelling because one of them occupied the other’s place for photo
shooting and it made me smile. I
suspect I had looked quite serious before.
Suddenly a police car full of big, severe guys stopped.
The doors opened and an army of
policemen rushed on us. Oleg and I lost control and started running back.
Everything messed up in my head and
I couldn’t understand where exactly I was running to.
There was one aim: to run somewhere away from this massacre.
Passing by one of the journalists I
saw him throwing an egg at me. He
missed, but it made me run faster.
Two plain-clothes policemen were a real obstacle for me:
I could figure out that these men
were from the police only by a walkie-talkie stashed in a pocket of one of
these guys. With great subtlety one
of them hit my leg with his knee and threw me down on the ground.
When I was recovering my glasses, he grabbed my collar and dragged me behind
him for a while. With a rapid move
he picked me up and punched me hard in the chest.
I can still remember his face during this heavy handed treatment:
his eyes were full of anger and the mouth was deformed with a blush of
hatred. At the same time he
understood I was his target and I was maybe twice young as him.
He wasn’t a human anymore…
Another guy grabbed my collar in order to prevent me from running away.
Then I saw Oleg. He was suffering
from pain caused by gastric ulcer he had. No
one was paying attention to his suffering, all
the police were concerned about was a way to take us to a police department.
The mother of one of our activists
quickly appeared in front of us and introduced herself as a doctor in order
to lead us away from the threat. She
was totally ignored and we were tossed into a police car.
We were sitting on the floor of the police department.
I felt blood running down my arms.
My shirt was tattered with dark red
spots all over. I put myself
together and made a statement that we needed an ambulance.
Should I say that it’s obvious that
the statement was ignored?
Then the others were brought-in. My
friends were thrown out of another police car and were forced to go inside
the police department. They looked
so fragile in comparison to huge clumsy policemen. The short walk was
followed by kicks. I could do
nothing but look at this happening. I
felt so helpless.
The police then brought the 12-meter Rainbow flag in to the room.
They put it on the floor and started
mocking at us. One of my friends
told me that while he was in the car the policemen were forcing a baton into
his mouth and promised they would force it up his backside in case he tried
sucking the baton.
They then took us to another room for interrogation.
We spent another two hours there.
They were humiliating us all that
time. One of them kept a gas balloon
in front of my face saying: “I will fucking burn your eyes right now!”
We were terrified.
We couldn’t ever imagine the safest
place in the world could be so insecure…
We were released on Monday. We were
waiting for this moment eagerly all this time.
Two nights in the police department
seemed an eternity for us. So now
when I’m free I can’t keep it to myself. I
don’t appear to have any freedom of speech in my country, but I have the
freedom on the internet.
– Sergey Yenin
■ Sergey Yenin is vice chairman
of the LGBT Human Rights Group GayBelarus.By, the group which co-organised
last Saturday’s Slavic Pride in Minsk. A
student in classical philology, Sergey, is also writing for
Gay: Good As You, Belarus’s only
exclusively LGBT magazine.
SEE ALSO
Belarusian Court Fines,
Releases Participants Arrested at Slavic Gay Pride.
The seven Belarusian and Russian gay activists, who spent the weekend
in police custody follow their arrest during Saturday’s banned Slavic
Gay Pride march, have been released. (UK Gay News, May 17, 2010)
Brave Gay Activists Stage
Pride March in Minsk but Were Met By Violent Police Action.
Belarus had its first Gay Pride March this afternoon. But after some
200 metres, it was broken up by the riot police, with twelve
participants arrested after scenes of reported police violence.
(UK Gay News, May 15, 2010)
No Restriction on Private Gay Events, Belarus MPs
Tell French Parliamentarians. By Teo
Valenti in Paris. MPs from Belarus have told their French
counterparts that the decision to ban the Baltic Gay Pride parade in
Minsk tomorrow was taken by the city authorities.
(UK Gay News,
May 15, 2010)
Blogging from Belarus and Slavic Gay Pride.
This page will be constantly updated
during the weekend .
(UK Gay News,
May 14, 16, 17, 2010)
IDAHO Committee Strongly
Condemns Ban of Slavic Gay Pride in Minsk.
The IDAHO Committee of International Day Against Homophobia and
Transphobia (IDAHO) has asked Jérôme Lambert, member of the French
Parliament and President of the France/Belarus friendship group, to
raise the issue of the ban of the planned peaceful Slavic Gay Pride
event due to be held on Saturday with the delegation of Belarusian MPs
visiting France this week.
(UK Gay News,
May 12, 2010)
Minsk Authorities Ban Next
Weekend’s Slavic Gay Pride. The city
authorities have banned next weekend’s Slavic Gay Pride March, using an
obscure law that says public events are not allowed near underground
pedestrian crossings and metro stations.
(UK Gay News,
May 8, 2010)