Supporters of same-sex marriage are demonstrating in Paris on Sunday after Saturday’s rallies in provincial towns and cities, reports RFI.
The demonstrations are a response to the mobilisation of thousands of opponents of the government’s proposal to legalise gay marriage over the last month.
The weekend’s actions are meant to put pressure on President François Hollande to keep his campaign promises to legalise gay marriage and open medically assisted reproduction to same-sex couples, Stéphane Corbin of the Fédération LGBT group told RFI.
But activists say they had not planned to hold a national demonstration until opponents succeeded in bringing 100,000 people onto the streets in November, followed by several thousand on 8 December.
They declare themselves shocked by the virulence of the antis, backed by fundamentalist Catholics and the mainstream right-wing UMP party, and fear a revival of homophobia in France.
Many gays were “hurt” by suggestions that “because you are homosexual, because you are homosexual parents, you are challenging society, you are a danger to your children”, inter-LGBT’s Nicolas Gougain told a National Assembly committee earlier this month.
Read more of this report from RFI.