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Veselin Toshkov, Associated Press
Veselin Toshkov, Associated Press
Stephen McGrath, Associated Press
Stephen McGrath, Associated Press
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SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) — Tens of thousands of LGBTQ+ supporters took to the streets of Romania and Bulgaria's capitals on Saturday for their annual Pride parades, against a backdrop of rising opposition from conservative groups in the Orthodox Christian countries.
Marchers walked through Bucharest in Romania and Sofia in Bulgaria, waving colorful flags and blowing whistles and calling for equality.
Both Romania and Bulgaria joined the European Union in 2007. Ahead of accession to the bloc, both countries adopted human rights legislation to meet EU standards, despite public opinion polls often indicating a lack of support for the community compared with other EU countries.
READ MORE: Some Republican governors are rebranding Pride Month with conservative alternatives
In ILGA-Europe's 2025 Rainbow Map, which assesses the legal and policy landscape for LGBTQ+ people across Europe, Romania and Bulgaria ranked last among all 27 EU countries.
"We still have a deeply conservative society, with very strong traditional values," said Alina Purcaru, a writer who attended the Bucharest march. "We still live in a patriarchy, sometimes explicit ... with a lot of prejudice and a lot of fear."
Romania and Bulgaria do not recognize same-sex marriage or civil partnerships, despite the bloc prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation.
"That is why we are taking to the streets today … to demand the legalization of civil partnerships," Vlad Viski, president of the nongovernmental organization MozaiQ, told The Associated Press.
"We are talking about essential rights, such as the right to inheritance, hospital visits, medical decisions, survivor's pension," he added.
READ MORE: Budapest's liberal mayor charged for organizing banned Pride event
Simeon Vassilev, one of the organizers of Sofia Pride, told journalists on Saturday that in Bulgaria, "thousands of same-sex couples live together, build homes, raise children, and care for one another … without the right to legal protection or recognition of their relationships."
In recent years, hostility and hate speech against the LGBTQ+ communities in the two Eastern European countries have been on the rise, according to rights groups. On Saturday, anti-LGBTQ+ rallies were held in both capitals.
In Sofia, a "March of the Family" rally — set up by right-wing and religious groups in 2021 — celebrated "Christian, patriotic and traditional values" in its Saturday event. The conservative Orthodox Church, which unites some 80% of Bulgarians, expressed its "disagreement with the ideas and messages" and blessed the "traditional family." In Bucharest, a "March for Normality" was also held by a nationalist group.
This year's Pride event in Sofia was billed under a "Different Together" banner, with the organizers hoping to counter widespread rhetoric against the community.
Additionally, the "Progressive Bulgaria" party of Prime Minister Rumen Radev, which won an April general election, voiced support for the "March of the Family" in Parliament, saying that it's "a cornerstone of our national security, identity and future."
The Bulgarian Helsinki Committee criticized the statement for "placing one type of citizens as more valuable than others."
McGrath reported from Leamington Spa, England.
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<small>Source: PBS NewsHour</small>