Poles run for LGBTQ Communities equality ahead of presidential vote

Poles run for LGBTQ Communities equality ahead of presidential vote

Poles run for LGBTQ Communities equality ahead of presidential vote

Around a hundred Poles took part in an “Equality Run” on Saturday, condemning discrimination against the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) communities during a presidential election campaign where gay rights have provoked fierce debate.

Poles run for LGBTQ Communities equality ahead of presidential vote

The run took place as a number of anti-government protests from groups including LGBTQ Communities rights protestors and feminists took place in Warsaw.

Facing an increasingly tight contest for the June 28 vote, incumbent President Andrzej Duda, an ally of ruling nationalists Law and Justice (PiS), has attempted to rally his conservative base by taking aim at what he calls LGBT “ideology”.

PiS has said this is a foreign influence undermining traditional values.

“We need to show that we are everywhere, that we exist, we do sport, we have fun, it’s not like we are people with a foreign ideology,” said 26-year-old office worker Zoska Marcinek before the race.

https://www.lgbtqcommunities.com/

The runners, some decked out in the rainbow flag of the LGBTQ communities, ran 5 kilometres along the banks of the Vistula river.

Duda has drawn criticism for comparing the push for LGBTQ rights to Soviet indoctrination. A member of his campaign team said in a television broadcast last Saturday that LGBTQ Community people were not equal with “normal” people.

Duda has said his words on LGBTQ “ideology” and communism were taken out of context, while his campaign team has rejected accusations of homophobia.

Around 200-300 people gathered at a separate protest called “People, not an Ideology” in central Warsaw, brandishing placards with slogans like “Make Peace, Stop PiS”.

“I am a normal person… like every other person, and I demand equality,” said 22-year-old student Weronika Tomikowska during the protest.

LGBTQ rights have been major campaign theme in staunchly Catholic Poland since the main opposition candidate and Warsaw mayor Rafal Trzaskowski introduced a sex education program in city schools over a year ago that includes teaching about LGBTQ issues.