LGBTQ organizations There is no official organization in Belarus that represents the interests of gays and lesbians in Belarus. The Women's Organization (Jyana), which was officially registered is working on "gender questions." Jyana, which protected young women in the country, recently announced that it soon will close. The men's organization, Republican Youth (Vstrecha) is not an LGBT-organization, but conducts a great deal of work aimed at preventing HIV infection and AIDS among
men who have sex with men. Any other organization or initiative is working outside the legal framework. • Belarus Lambda League • Belarusian initiative by sexual and gender equality •
GayBelarus - LGBT Human Rights Project, the organizer of the Slavic Pride in May 2010 in Minsk • Vstrecha ["Meeting"], located in Minsk, Главная - РМОО ВСТРЕЧА - САЙТ МУЖСКОГО ЗДОРОВЬЯ. The oldest gay group in Belarus, founded in the early 1990s. Activities include
HIV/AIDS prevention and support groups. • Gay Alliance Belarus was founded in 2008 and represents the interests of the LGBTQ community. Gay Alliance organized a national competition of Mister Gay Belarus and edits a national LGBTQ web site www.gayby.net and LGBT.BY.
Gay pride controversies Violations of the rights to
freedom of expression and
freedom of assembly in Belarus were repeatedly condemned by the international community. flying from the British Embassy,
Minsk, 17 May 2019 After previous failed efforts, in 1999 a
gay pride festival was organised by the Belarusian League for Sexual Equality “Lambda” BLL and
Forum Lambda, a magazine for Belarusian gays and lesbians. The festival program included a seminar for journalists on "lesbians and gay men in the media", conference on the rights of gays and lesbians in Belarus and in the world, the exhibition of photographs and films taken homosexuals, and the competitions “Mr. Gay Belarus” and “Transmission”. The festival was supported by the
UN Development Programme, studio Tatyana, United Way Belarus,
IREX, the Titanic Club, and guests from Ukraine. During one of the parties, the club was raided by riot police that frisked the contestants. In 2000, the organisers of the festival encountered great difficulty in preparing for the event. According to
Edward Tarletski, head of the organising committee, the radio station
Radio BA which was to cover the event and grant its dancehall for evening events received an order from the presidential administration not to do so. Other radio stations reportedly refused support on the same grounds, and events at other venues also were canceled. Orthodox Church-related groups demonstrated in Minsk against the gay festival on 9 September, on the day before the festival was planned. The pride march through the city was banned by the city government 24 hours before it was due to take place, and authorities acted on the day to prevent festivities. Newspapers reported the outcome of the day. In 2001, the Belarus government allegedly prohibited the Belarus Gay Pride Festival. On 3 August 2001, unidentified vandals broke into and vandalised the flat of Lambda Belarus leader Andrei Babkin where fliers, posters and booklets of Gay Pride 2001 had been kept. In 2002, days before Gay Pride 2002, Lambda Belarus leader Edward Tarletski was called to the Minsk police station where he was told that if a gay pride parade took place, "the police will not take any responsibility for possible disorder." In 2004, an international gay and lesbian festival was forced to be canceled. The organizing committee of the final (Belarusian) phase of the 4th International Moonbow Human Rights & Homo Cultural Festival and the first stage of this year's ILGCN (International Lesbian & Gay Cultural Network) World Lesbian and Gay World Conference in August 2004 were forced to cancel the event in Minsk. This came after authorities frightened a club owner into withdrawing his promise to host the event. In addition, threatening phone calls from authorities said foreigners trying to attend the event for workshops and discussions "would be immediately expelled from the country in keeping with the article of intervention in domestic affairs of the Republic of Belarus." On 27 October 2008, the same group asked permission to hold a protest in support of gay rights near the Russian Embassy in Minsk. Both events were not authorised. Because the country is currently not a member of the Council of Europe, Belarusian activists cannot appeal to the
European Court of Human Rights. It is the same group which decided to organise with Russian LGBTQ activists at
Slavic Pride which is planned to alternate between Moscow and Minsk every year. was contested by violent protestors In January 2009, an event titled "The Right to Love" was planned and designed to raise public awareness about homophobia and discrimination against LGBTQ people in Belarus. Authorization was denied. LGBTQ activist Roman Mandryk filed a complaint in the Court of the Central Borough of Gomel in response to this decision of the Gomel City Administration. In the text of the complaint, Mr. Mandryk claims that the decision of the Gomel City Administration violated his right to freedom of Assembly as guaranteed by Article 35 of the Constitution of Belarus. He adds that Regulation 299 itself is unconstitutional in that it imposes unreasonable burdens on those seeking to organize public gatherings. The 2010 Minsk Pride was also banned by the government, resulting in police beatings and arrests, including of activist
Sergey Androsenko, who subsequently filed a lawsuit against the government at a Minsk court and later before the
UN Human Rights Committee, which issued a statement in favor of Androsenko's claim in 2016.
Month against Homophobia The "Month against Homophobia" was a campaign by Belarusian LGBTQ activists from 17 April to 17 May 2009 in Minsk,
Grodno and
Luninets. It consisted of informational campaigns and events. The month was organized by Gayby.org, Gay.by, members of the League of Sexual Equality "Lambda", and Amnesty International (Belarus). More than 50 media outlets reported about the month's events. Belarusian media began to talk about gay and lesbian people. The main aim of the Month against Homophobia was to resist any kind of physical, moral and symbolic violence to people with a different sexual orientation and gender identity, to show solidarity to LGBTQ people in the world who are unable to fight for their rights, and to carry a wider campaign for human rights. == Social conditions ==