Berliner Boersenzeitung - London marks 50 years of Pride

EUR -
AED 4.0081
AFN 73.909521
ALL 98.796094
AMD 422.31154
ANG 1.96912
AOA 991.991174
ARS 1069.398753
AUD 1.6251
AWG 1.964774
AZN 1.853455
BAM 1.956317
BBD 2.205983
BDT 130.564485
BGN 1.959097
BHD 0.411371
BIF 3223.151295
BMD 1.091238
BND 1.428277
BOB 7.565998
BRL 6.106902
BSD 1.092589
BTN 91.85396
BWP 14.528837
BYN 3.575544
BYR 21388.269047
BZD 2.202282
CAD 1.506853
CDF 3140.583947
CHF 0.939687
CLF 0.036653
CLP 1011.370061
CNY 7.762087
CNH 7.774587
COP 4593.283551
CRC 565.249293
CUC 1.091238
CUP 28.917813
CVE 110.294131
CZK 25.21475
DJF 194.561387
DKK 7.461068
DOP 65.72736
DZD 145.538765
EGP 52.951943
ERN 16.368573
ETB 131.256267
FJD 2.455613
FKP 0.834982
GBP 0.834424
GEL 2.962651
GGP 0.834982
GHS 17.404597
GIP 0.834982
GMD 74.750978
GNF 9425.48945
GTQ 8.449232
GYD 228.580372
HKD 8.475872
HNL 27.188181
HRK 7.517573
HTG 143.83799
HUF 400.338213
IDR 16986.48689
ILS 4.087151
IMP 0.834982
INR 91.734886
IQD 1431.278028
IRR 45943.856663
ISK 149.314392
JEP 0.834982
JMD 172.965684
JOD 0.773248
JPY 162.679068
KES 140.933227
KGS 93.304168
KHR 4438.172205
KMF 490.507518
KPW 982.114149
KRW 1485.64412
KWD 0.334628
KYD 0.91044
KZT 530.150023
LAK 23961.32864
LBP 97839.041143
LKR 320.124551
LRD 210.315548
LSL 19.155859
LTL 3.222143
LVL 0.660079
LYD 5.236383
MAD 10.710929
MDL 19.300098
MGA 5026.327548
MKD 61.545615
MMK 3544.299161
MNT 3708.02749
MOP 8.739608
MRU 43.254424
MUR 50.546569
MVR 16.750994
MWK 1894.400347
MXN 21.19119
MYR 4.703754
MZN 69.729015
NAD 19.155859
NGN 1785.276517
NIO 40.21062
NOK 11.805381
NPR 146.966817
NZD 1.791779
OMR 0.420054
PAB 1.092589
PEN 4.069875
PGK 4.297135
PHP 63.045182
PKR 303.459549
PLN 4.292168
PYG 8551.258549
QAR 3.982652
RON 4.974819
RSD 117.00804
RUB 105.608479
RWF 1471.888754
SAR 4.096946
SBD 9.056543
SCR 15.123609
SDG 656.382002
SEK 11.325061
SGD 1.427912
SHP 0.834982
SLE 24.580156
SLL 22882.716294
SOS 624.364907
SRD 35.013442
STD 22586.427884
SVC 9.559525
SYP 2741.769049
SZL 19.152058
THB 36.416832
TJS 11.635773
TMT 3.830246
TND 3.363088
TOP 2.555791
TRY 37.394164
TTD 7.417959
TWD 35.108956
TZS 2975.455264
UAH 45.013089
UGX 4004.057547
USD 1.091238
UYU 45.612047
UZS 13962.68781
VEF 3953067.767471
VES 42.382786
VND 27218.209219
VUV 129.554026
WST 3.056759
XAF 656.130296
XAG 0.035035
XAU 0.000411
XCD 2.949126
XDR 0.816416
XOF 656.130296
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.191576
ZAR 19.236325
ZMK 9822.456212
ZMW 28.870625
ZWL 351.378261
  • RBGPF

    60.5000

    60.5

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.04

    +0.14%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.69

    -0.08%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    12.98

    +0.54%

  • NGG

    0.6500

    66.89

    +0.97%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.98

    +0.12%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    47.38

    +1.16%

  • GSK

    0.3000

    39.13

    +0.77%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    78.1

    +0.96%

  • RIO

    0.4700

    67.7

    +0.69%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    9.68

    +0.31%

  • BTI

    0.2700

    35.45

    +0.76%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.22

    -0.23%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    142.98

    +0.43%

  • BCE

    -0.4600

    32.56

    -1.41%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    31.99

    -0.38%

London marks 50 years of Pride
London marks 50 years of Pride / Photo: Niklas HALLE'N - AFP

London marks 50 years of Pride

London on Saturday celebrated the 50th anniversary of its first Pride parade, marking half a century of progress in the fight for equality and tolerance but with warnings that more still needs to be done.

Text size:

Several hundred people took part in the first march on July 1, 1972, just five years after homosexuality was decriminalised in the UK.

Fifty years on, more than 600 LGBTQ+ groups danced, sang and rode floats along a similar route to the original protest, in the first Pride since the coronavirus pandemic, watched by huge cheering crowds.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan told reporters the event, which organisers said was the "biggest and most inclusive" in its history, was a celebration of community, unity and progress.

But he said it was also a reminder of the need to "campaign and never be complacent" and the need for "an open, inclusive, accepting world".

"We saw this time last week an attack in Oslo just hours before that parade, where two people lost their lives and more than 20 were injured," he said.

"So, we've got to be conscious of the fact that there's still a danger to this community of discrimination, bias and violence."

Khan's predecessor as mayor, Prime Minister Boris Johnson, said it gave him "the greatest pride to lead a country where you can love whomever you choose to love and where you can be free to be whoever you want to be".

The 50th anniversary was a "milestone", he said, paying tribute to the bravery of those who did it first.

Peter Tatchell, a veteran gay rights campaigner who took part in the 1972 march, said some from the original event have boycotted the modern-day sponsored version as "depoliticised and commercialised".

- Campaigning -

In 1972, "Gay Pride", as it was then known, was a demand for visibility and equality against a backdrop of lingering prejudice, discrimination and fear among many gay men and women about coming out.

In the 1980s, Pride became a focal point for campaigning against legislation by prime minister Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government against the "promotion of homosexuality" in schools.

It also helped to raise awareness and support for people with HIV/Aids.

Now, with the rainbow flag of inclusion and tolerance spread ever more widely over the spectrum of human sexuality and gender, Pride in London is more celebration than protest.

Tatchell said that despite victories such as same-sex marriage, "we are still fighting to ban LGBT+ conversion practices which seek to change a person's sexual orientation or gender identity".

"We're still fighting to secure trans people's right to change their legal documents with ease by a simple statutory declaration. And of course, we are standing in solidarity with a global LGBT+ movement," he told AFP.

Julian Hows, now 67, was at the first march. He said "progress is always incremental", criticising curbs on LGBTQ+ rights around the world.

"We have to be vigilant. The price of liberation and to keeping people's human rights intact is vigilance," he added.

- Visibility -

Padraigin Ni Raghillig, president of Dykes on Bikes London, a motorcycle club for gay women, said the event retained part of its original campaigning spirit.

"It's still important, I think, to at least once a year to be out and about, and to say 'we're here, we're queer, and we're not going shopping'," said Ni Raghillig, astride a Harley Davidson.

Among those marching was a contingent from Ukraine, who criticised homophobia in Russia.

This year's Pride saw warnings for people with monkeypox symptoms to stay away, after public health officials said many cases in the UK were reported among gay and bisexual men.

LGBTQ+ campaign group Stonewall said everyone had a part to play to stop the spread of monkeypox, which is passed through close contact regardless of sexual orientation.

(G.Gruner--BBZ)