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Thousands of Croatian Far-Right Supporters March in Zagreb


People hold a banner that reads ''Against the gender ideology'' during a protest against an international convention they say indirectly legalizes gay marriages and gives rights to transgender people, in Zagreb, Croatia, March 24, 2018.
People hold a banner that reads ''Against the gender ideology'' during a protest against an international convention they say indirectly legalizes gay marriages and gives rights to transgender people, in Zagreb, Croatia, March 24, 2018.

Thousands of Croatian far-right supporters marched Saturday in Zagreb to protest an international convention they said indirectly legalizes gay marriages and gives rights to transgender people.

The protesters sang patriotic songs and chanted slogans against Croatia's center-right government, which last week approved the Istanbul Convention that was adopted by the Council of Europe in 2011 but still hasn't been ratified by Croatia's parliament.

Croatia's conservative opposition and the Catholic Church — the organizers of the protest — said they support combating violence against women and domestic violence, which is the main point of the convention, but are against its alleged introduction of "a third gender'' into society.

"We are against gender ideology,'' Zeljka Markic, a leader of the conservatives, told The Associated Press. "The definition of gender separated from sex was not agreed on the level of the European Union or on the level of the Council of Europe.''

Since joining the EU in 2013, Croatia's population has been drifting toward the far right, including some who deny the Holocaust and have reappraised the pro-Nazi Croatian Ustasha regime that ruled the country during World War II.

Top Croatian Catholic Church clergy said before the rally, attended by some 10,000 people, that all those who support the Istanbul Convention should no longer be considered believers.

Speakers at the rally on Zagreb's Bana Jelacica square blasted the EU for allegedly wanting to "conquer'' Croatia with its liberal policies. Several placards bore photos of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, crossed out.

"They say we are backward because we believe in God,'' said Gordana Turic, a former ruling party lawmaker. "The Istanbul Convention is against the Christianity.''

Several smaller counterprotests were set up along the route of the march, including one with a siren that tried to dampen the speeches by the conservatives on the main square. There were no major incidents.

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