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Thousands attend Gay Pride in conservative Jerusalem

All marchers were inspected before joining, with carrying a weapon of any kind prohibited. Police said 12 people had been arrested before and during the parade, including one carrying a knife.

Participants attend the annual Jerusalem Gay Pride Parade on August 3, 2017. Gali TIBBON / AFP

Thousands of revellers attended Jerusalem’s Gay Pride parade under police protection on Thursday, bringing the rainbow flag to the traditionally conservative city.

More than 10,000 people attended the parade through central Jerusalem, police said, with dozens of roads closed off by security two years after a 16-year-old girl was stabbed to death by an ultra-Orthodox Jew during the event.

All marchers were inspected before joining, with carrying a weapon of any kind prohibited. Police said 12 people had been arrested before and during the parade, including one carrying a knife.

Revellers carried rainbow flags, banged drums and sang songs against homophobia. Many laid flowers under a picture of Shira Banki, who was killed at the 2015 march.

Banki was attacked by Yishai Shlissel, an ultra-Orthodox Jew who also stabbed five other people and is now serving a life sentence.

Shlissel had spent 10 years in jail after a similar attack on the 2005 Jerusalem Gay Pride march, and had been released just three weeks before the event, leading to criticism of the police.

Israel has the most open attitude to homosexuality in the Middle East, with a large and influential gay community. But conservative Jerusalem, a heavily religious city sacred to Jews, Muslims and Christians, is far less gay-friendly than liberal Tel Aviv.

More than 100,000 people attended the seaside Tel Aviv Pride march in June.

Ahead of Thursday’s parade, one of Jerusalem’s two chief rabbis was quoted in local media as condemning it, saying it contradicted “the holiness of Jerusalem that is so important to us”.

“Holding the parade in the city streets is causing more damage to its supporters than benefiting them,” Rabbi Aryeh Stern said. But Roi, an Israeli taking part in the march, said he thought the majority of Jerusalemites were tolerant of homosexuality.

“There is always going to be some part of the ultra-religious, ultra-Orthodox that don’t like us, but they have their own parade today,” he said, gesturing towards around 50 protesters opposed to the pride march.

Same-sex marriage is recognised but not performed in Israel, where there is no civil marriage, meaning that gay couples must travel abroad to wed.

Separately on Thursday, Israel’s High Court postponed for six months a ruling that would allow same-sex couples to arrange surrogate births.

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