Tens of thousands of protesters have taken to the streets of
Paris over plans to give gay couples in France the right to marry and
adopt children, the BBC reports.
Three big marches were converging on the Champs de Mars, next to the Eiffel Tower.
France’s Socialist government is planning to change the law this year.
But the demonstrators, backed by the Catholic Church and the
right-wing opposition, argue it would undermine an essential building
block of society.
The organisers put the number of marchers at 500,000, with
demonstrators pouring into Paris by train and bus, carrying placards
that read, “We don’t want your law, Francois” and “Don’t touch my civil
code”.
But police told French media the figure was 120,000 and one
government minister said the turnout was lower than the organisers had
predicted. A similar march in November attracted around 100,000 people.
The “Demo for all” event was being led by a charismatic comedian known as Frigide Barjot, who tweeted that
the “crowd is immense” and told French TV that gay marriage “makes no
sense” because a child should be born to a man and woman.
Although France allows civil unions between same-sex couples,
Francois Hollande made a pledge to extend their rights part of his
presidential campaign.
Centre-right UMP President Jean-Francois Cope said the rally would be
a “test” for the president because there were “clearly millions of
French people who are probably concerned by this reform”.
The far-right National Front is also opposed to the change, although
its leader Marine Le Pen stayed away from the march, arguing the issue
was a diversion by politicians from France’s real problems.
Despite the support of the Church and political right, the organisers
are keen to stress their movement is non-political and non-religious,
and in no way directed against homosexuals, the BBC reports.
An opinion poll of almost 1,000 people published by Le Nouvel Observateur newspaper at the weekend suggested that 56 per cent supported gay marriage, while 50 per cent disapproved of gay adoption.
The poll also said that 52 per cent of those questioned disapproved of the Church’s stand against the legislation.
Earlier polls had indicated stronger support for the legalisation of gay marriage.
As the marchers began arriving in the centre of Paris, four Ukrainian
activists staged their own protest in St Peter’s Square in the Vatican
in support of gay rights.
The women from feminist group Femen appeared topless while Pope Benedict recited his traditional Angelus prayer.
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