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Pro-gay marriage demonstrators gather for a counter-protest at Bastille square in Paris, today, ahead of Tuesday's vote. Remy de la Mauviniere/AP/Press Association Images

Protesters in final bid to block French gay marriage law

Today’s protest comes just two days ahead of a decisive parliamentary vote that would make France the 14th country in the world to legalise same-sex marriage.

THOUSANDS OF OPPONENTS of a gay marriage bill thronged the streets of Paris today in a last-ditch bid to block the legislation, under the watchful eye of police after recent violence over the divisive issue.

The mass protest comes just two days ahead of a decisive parliamentary vote Tuesday on the bill – which also allows adoption by gay couples – that would make France the 14th country in the world to legalise same-sex marriage.

Clutching French flags, dressed in pink and blue, the colours of the movement, carrying children or pushing buggies, protesters shouted slogans against president François Hollande as they made their way through the city.

“We’ve been to all the protests,” said a 32-year-old mother who only gave her first name Camille, as she breast-fed her four-month-old son.

“We’re here for children’s rights. We don’t want the state to be complicit in a child being deprived of a father or a mother,” she said.

Security

Organisers and security forces were on high alert as they sought to avoid a recurrence of violence that marred anti-bill protests last week, amid warnings far-right extremists intent on sparking unrest have infiltrated the opposition movement.

“We want a peaceful demonstration and we reject all groups that directly target homosexual people,” said Frigide Barjot, spokeswoman for the “Manif pour Tous” group that spearheads the anti-bill movement.

She said she had called on “professional security services” to help out, and police sources said three protesters carrying canisters of teargas had been detained so far.

The leader of the far-right “Nationalist Youths” group was also spotted in the procession. “We’re around 50 nationalists in the protest,” said Alexandre Gabriac, who was detained last week after clashes with security forces.

Tension over the imminent adoption of the law, which is going through a second reading in the lower house after already being approved in the French parliament’s upper and lower houses, reached breaking point last week.

Divisive

It has proved hugely divisive in a country that is officially secular but predominantly Catholic.

In Paris, opponents marched for three nights in a row and a hard-core of activists, some wearing masks, clashed with police who made over 100 arrests. Two journalists were attacked during one march and cars were vandalised.

In parliament’s lower house, the National Assembly, a final debate on the legislation was marred by unprecedented scuffles between deputies.

Rights groups have also reported a rise in verbal and physical assaults against homosexuals, and two gay bars came under attack last week in different cities.

Opponents have accused the government of rushing the bill through its final legislative stages and say Hollande is not listening to dissenting voices.

Same-sex marriage and adoption

Opinion polls regularly show that while most French people support same-sex marriage, a majority oppose adoption by gay couples.

“A mayor to marry one mother and one father, not a pair of mothers nor a pair of fathers”, “A child is not a right” read some of the banners at Sunday’s procession, which was followed closely by police vehicles.

Organisers say the protest was expected to include some 30,000 to 50,000 people, but numbers were not immediately confirmed.

Meanwhile, hundreds of supporters of the legislation gathered on one of the main squares in the capital to protest against homophobia.

“Those who are for more equality must also make themselves heard,” said Bertrand Delanoe, the Paris mayor who is himself gay, describing the recent violence as “a form of barbarism and regression.”

Supporters of the bill, while less vocal than those against it, have also staged large-scale protests in the past months.

On Saturday, several hundred people marched in the northwestern city of Nantes to denounce what they said was a climate of fear created by a “fascist” wave of homophobia.

The bill is largely supported by the ruling Socialists, their allies in the Green Party and the Communists, and opposed by the main opposition UMP and other right-wing and centre-right parties.

- © AFP, 2013

Read: New Zealand votes to legalise same-sex marriage >

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