Gay Marriage Opponents Stage Last-Ditch Protest in Paris
Sunday, 21 Apr 2013
11:50 AM
Thousands of gay
marriage opponents waving pink and blue flags marched through Paris on Sunday
in a last-ditch protest before a law allowing same-sex union and adoption is
passed next week.
Chanting "We don't want your law, Hollande!", some 50,000
protesters massed behind a banner reading: "All born of a Mum and a
Dad" and said it was undemocratic to bring about such a fundamental social
change without holding a referendum.
Hastily organised after the law's passage was sped up to circumvent a
big rally set for late April, Sunday's march capped months of protests by a
dogged opposition movement that has sullied President Francois Hollande's
flagship social reform.
"We warned the president back in November that we would not give up
and that we would do everything to stop this law being passed, or to get it
repealed if it is adopted," one of the protest organisers, Alberic Dumon,
told Reuters.
Attended largely by families with children and old people, it was much
more peaceful than a series of agitated demonstrations outside parliament this
month that saw hard-right youths pelt police with stones and bottles and damage
cars.
The piggy-backing by hard-right youths of a movement led by
conservatives and Catholics has fed other ugly scenes including the public
stalking of government ministers and a spate of homophobic attacks around the
country.
As far back as January, the "anti" movement came under fire
when some 350,000 protesters massed under the Eiffel Tower tore up the lawns
beneath the monument.
Hollande, who is grappling with the lowest popularity ratings of any
recent French president as unemployment surges above 10 percent, hoped to win
some glory from passing a reform already in place in a dozen other countries.
Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoe, one of very few French public officials
who is openly gay, headed a rival march in favour of same-sex marriage and said
that it was too late for anything to derail the law, set for a final parliament
vote on Tuesday.
© 2013 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.