Advertisement

Czech president condemns Canadian ambassador for supporting gay festival

PRAGUE – Western ambassadors to the Czech Republic, including the Canadian ambassador, are facing accusations of poking their nose in that country’s internal affairs after the diplomats signed an open letter in support of a gay pride festival.

Czech President Vaclav Klaus lashed out at the top-diplomats from 13 countries, calling their petition an “unprecedented step.”

In their statement, the diplomats expressed their “solidarity with the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities in the Czech Republic, supporting their right to use the occasion to march together peacefully and lawfully, in order to raise awareness of the specific issues that affect them.”

“Everyone, including gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people should be free to enjoy the rights and freedoms to which people of all nations are entitled,” said the joint statement, attributed to ambassadors from Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the U.S.

Story continues below advertisement

Klaus, a conservative politician and economist, said he could not imagine any Czech ambassador would dare use a petition to influence a political discussion in any democratic country.

Breaking news from Canada and around the world sent to your email, as it happens.

Klaus said in a statement that he fully agreed with his Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg’s reaction to the ambassadors – that nobody in the Czech Republic has denied or rejected gay rights, so for the diplomats to express support was “counterproductive and redundant.”

Klaus said the issue at stake was not the approval of the festival, but that Prague mayor Bohuslav Svoboda – a member of the ruling conservative Civic Democratic Party – is publicly supporting it.

Klaus on Friday defended criticism of Svoboda by his deputy chancellor, Petr Hajek. Hajek has said the event is “a political demonstration … of a world in which sexual or any other deviation becomes virtue,” and called on Svoboda to leave his party.

Major opposition party the Social Democrats, and junior ruling coalition party, the Public Affairs party, have called on Hajek to apologize. Klaus, however, has refused to distance himself from Hajek’s words, going one further and stating that he – too – is not proud of the event.

Since 2006, parliament approved a law – despite a veto by Klaus – allowing same sex partners to live in an officially registered partnership and have rights to inheritance and health care similar to those enjoyed by heterosexual married couples. The law, however, does not allow same-sex partners to marry or adopt.

Story continues below advertisement

The first Prague gay pride festival opens Wednesday.

Sponsored content

AdChoices