Skip to content

Bosnian capital holds 1st pride parade amid heavy security

Bosnia's capital, Sarajevo, gas held its first LGBT pride parade amid heavy security to prevent violence from extremist groups, as opponents of the event held a gathering of their own.

Participant blows a whistle during the country's first ever LGBT pride parade in downtown Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Sunday, Sept. 8, 2019. Sarajevo is the last capital city in the Balkans to hold a pride parade after neighboring countries moved to improve LGBT rights. (AP Photo/Darko Bandic)
Participant blows a whistle during the country's first ever LGBT pride parade in downtown Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Sunday, Sept. 8, 2019. Sarajevo is the last capital city in the Balkans to hold a pride parade after neighboring countries moved to improve LGBT rights. (AP Photo/Darko Bandic)Read moreDarko Bandic / AP

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnia’s capital, Sarajevo, held its first LGBT pride parade Sunday amid heavy security to prevent violence from extremist groups, as opponents of the event held a gathering of their own.

Using sniffer dogs and metal barriers, more than 1,000 police deployed along the route where hundreds of participants marched, singing and waving rainbow flags.

The colorful crowd held a huge pink banner with the pride's logo "Ima Izac!" which roughly translates as "Coming out." Cheerful participants blew whistles as they marched on a sunny day to the rhythm of drums while many people waved back from balconies and windows.

About a mile away, dozens of followers of a conservative Islamic group held a rally against the parade. They described the pride march as a "sin" and "humiliation" for Sarajevo, symbolically holding a prayer at the end of the protest.

"They want to bring this into our streets, our squares — among our children," Sanin Musa, Islamic theologian and chairman of the "Iskorak" group behind the event, said. "We want to fight against this, we are fighting against their LGBT way of life, which is being introduced into our schools, our homes, our universities. "

Extremists and hooligans in the past have attacked two queer events in Sarajevo, predominantly a Muslim city, fueling fears of violence ahead of this event. Bosnia remains deeply conservative, and Sarajevo is the last capital in the Balkans to hold a pride event.

Local media reported that the U.S. ambassador joined the pride march, along with local officials and activists from the region. The event was widely seen as a test for Bosnia which is seeking to move away its wartime past toward membership in the European Union.

"Everyone who faces discrimination must support all the others in the same position," said 45-year-old Lejla Mijovic, an economic from Sarajevo. "We are discriminated against in one way or another. That is why I walk today."

Members of Bosnia's embattled LGBT community have complained they face widespread harassment and attacks that are rarely prosecuted.

Jovana Gec in Belgrade, Serbia, and Radul Radovanovic in Sarajevo contributed to this report.