The
5th annual march for marriage equality was organised by the advocacy
organisation LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) Noise.
Max Krzyzanowski of LGBT Noise called on the Government to set a date for a referendum on same sex marriage.
Though civil partnership legislation was
enacted two years ago, legislation to allow for full marriage rights for
same-sex couples would require a referendum.
Opinion
polls indicate such a referendum would be passed and in April this year
the constitutional convention voted by 79 per cent to recommend that
the Constitution be so amended.
The
overwhelmingly young protesters - the vast majority were in their
twenties - moved off from City Hall at about 3pm, making their way down
Dame Street, around College Green to Nassau Street, up past Leinster
House on Kildare Street before walking around St Stephen’s Green towards
the Department of Justice, where speakers pumped out the Candi Staton’s
hit You Got The Love.
Along the way they chanted, “One, two, three, four, we’re not waiting any more. A, B, C, D, we demand equality.”
They
carried rainbow flags, and placards with such slogans as ‘Keep Calm and
Marry On’, ‘Fan Socair agus Pós Do Ghrá Geal’, ‘ Does My Equality
Threaten You?’, ‘I want a two-tier cake, not a two-tier system’ and, ‘I
want to be miserable too’.
Among those there was Sinéad Hodgins (22) a psychology student at Trinity College.
“I’m here because it’s just a disgrace that gay people are treated like second class citizens.”
Greg O’Donoghue (23), welfare officer at the National College of Ireland said he was there as the Union of Students in Ireland is “fully backing the campaign for gay rights”.
Anna
McCarthy, also of LGBT Noise, addressed the crowd saying the march had a
second purpose this year, of demonstrating solidarity with LGBT people
in Russia in the wake of the enactment of anti-homosexual legislation there.
She invited people to sign a petition calling on Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore to raise the situation in Russia at EU and UN level in coming months.
Vladimir
Dotsenko from Russia and working in Ireland, spoke about the repression
of gay rights in his home country, describing the “silence” of Irish
politicians on the issue as “disturbing”.
Emer Costello, MEP, was in the crowd and told The Irish Times
she would be seeking a date for a referendum on same-sex marriage when
she attends the Labour party “think-in” in Enfield, Co Kildare on
September 16th.