Up date 9/3/11 Scroll down to read other posts on this story.
A group of friends from east London are to stage the first East End Gay Pride as a response to an anti-gay poster campaign in the area.
Last month, PinkNews.co.uk revealed that an anonymous sticker campaign had declared the area a “gay-free zone”.
Now, the group of six friends are arranging a Pride parade for April 2nd and say they want to show they are “here and queer”.
Organiser Raymond Berry, a transport worker who lives in east London, said: “We want to send a message that this is actually a very gay-friendly area. We’re here, we’re queer, so get used to it.”
He and five friends, who all live or work in the area, say they have been going out at weekends to scrape the stickers off walls and lampposts.
Mr Berry, who says the parade is open to everyone, told PinkNews.co.uk: “This isn’t the kind of Pride parade people are used to. It will just be the march and then the White Swan is putting on music and cabaret so people can have a day of it.
“No disrespect to the big events, but this is the first Pride in a long time that really means something – it’s a direct response to a hate campaign. It’s taking it back to the old days of Pride and that’s the spirit we want everyone to get into.”
The parade has been backed by local police and Tower Hamlets council.
However, the friends have no idea how many participants are expected as “bickering” meant they had to delete their Facebook page for the event.
The source of the anti-gay stickers has not been identified but there has been animosity in the local LGBT community over who is responsible.
Last week, gay journalist and East End resident Johann Hari said the east London gay community was unwilling to blame anti-gay attacks on the high proportion of Muslim residents.
Gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell has also drawn attention to anti-gay attacks by Asian youths.
But Jack Gilbert, of LGBT forum Rainbow Hamlets, claimed the stickers, which mention Allah, were probably made by the English Defence League.
Mr Berry said: “We’re not here to discuss who or why – that’s up to the police and local authorities.”
He has emphasised that the parade is non-political and has asked marchers not to bring any political signs or banners.
The group also says it has had to reject requests from organisations such as the English Defence League, the Socialist Workers Party and Unite Against Fascism to “jump on board” with the event.
The march will begin in Shadwell’s King Edward Memorial Park, passing along The Highway and Commercial Road before ending at Poplar Recreational Park.
You can follow this story and many more on Pink News.
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UPDATE 17/2/11
Rainbow Hamlets LGBT Community Forum said it welcomed the mayor and mosque’s comments.
People who see homophobic posters are being asked to report them to the Metropolitan police on 0300 1231212.
They are asked to photograph the poster if possible and record the time and its location.
If the posters can be removed in one piece, people should place it in a box with the sticky side up and take to a local police station.
Police have received ten reports of homophobic or transphobic incidents in Tower Hamlets so far this year. Seventy-four were reported in 2010.
Full story http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2011/02/17/east-london-mosque-and-mayor-condemn-anti-gay-stickers/
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16/2/11 Pink Pages Gay News Reported by Jessica Geen
Sticker Hate Campaign Against East End Gay's
16 February 2011, 3:21pm
A small group of East End residents are to tackle anti-gay stickers by ‘love-bombing’ the area with their own posters.
On Monday, PinkNews.co.uk reported that homophobic messages had been placed around the area, declaring it a "gay-free zone".
The messages, posted on buildings and lampposts close to Shoreditch gay nightspots George & Dragon and the Joiners Inn, say “Arise and warn. Gay free zone. Verily Allah is severe in punishment.”
They have also been posted on Whitechapel High Street and outside a school.
Wendy Richardson, an actor who lives in Hackney, says she and four friends will meet on Friday to cover the stickers with messages of love.
The group plans to use quotes from writers Anais Nin, Anne Frank, Coretta Scott-King and Rikki Beadle-Blair to spread the word.
Ms Richardson said she had informed local police of her plan.
She said: “It’s really important to stand together and say ‘less hate please’.”
“Everyone has an obligation to ensure that people have rights and dignity. It’s just a question of doing something to counter the hate.
“It’s about people in the area going to work on Friday and seeing something beautiful and loving in place of those hurtful stickers.”
People should not be afraid of reporting such incidents to police, she said.
Ms Richardson added: “We don’t necessarily think it is Islamic fundamentalists, it’s just somebody hateful.”
The group will meet outside Shoreditch Town Hall at 9am on Friday and volunteers are welcome.
Gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell said this week that LGBT Muslims were living in fear of attack in the East End.
The Muslim Council of Britain said: “These stickers are wrong and not in keeping with our Islamic teaching to respect our neighbours.”
Later today, Tower Hamlets council and the East London Mosque are expected to release a joint statement condeming the stickers.
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