Thousands as tens of Gathered in London for the capital’s annual pride paradeLGBT artists disintegrate Supreme Court Decision on the definition of a woman and expressed fear trans people are being “more villain”.
In a rain Proud In London Parade, London Mayor Sadiq Khan shouted “Happy Pride” And thousands went through Central London, along with employees Independent, Official news partner for the incident.
Months later The UK Supreme Court ruled on the definition of a woman, At the London event, which includes Oli Alexander, writer Sean Faye and BBC drama, who felt it for a girl, Alice Howard criticized the verdict.
Meanwhile, young demand protesters blocked the parade route wearing Palestine flags.
There was a shout for “Trans Rights Now” as the engine was roaring and it started raining on Saturday afternoon.
American pop singer Chaka Khan is heading the event in which about 500 organizations were filed from Hyde Park Corner via Pikadili Circus, and at Whitehall Place.

East years and years of singer Alexander said: “Now trans people, they need our support and need more love than ever, they are a lot of media, the villain in the press, being demonetis, and transfers people that they are like us … they are you, they are mine.
“They deserve the same honor, the same right, the same privilege, equal opportunity, and that’s why Proud This year is so important. ,
Single artist and contestant of Eurovision 2024 said: “DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusive) is a real backlash against policies and it has been going on for years, and I think we are in a swing, it is going against it where we were five years ago.
“We have decided the Supreme Court and I think a lot of trans people are scared, scared correctly, they are unable to understand … their life is about to look like.”

In April, the Supreme Court ruled that the words “women” and “sex” refers to an biological woman and biological sex in the Equality Act 2010.
Before the beginning of March, the author of Sean Faye, Love in Ocily and the Transgender Issues, said, “We have just seen an unprecedented attack on queue rights and trans rights worldwide”.
He said: “We have seen the role of human rights in the courts, especially in the UK, especially here for the Trans community, wrong information, media attacks, and unfortunately.
“I think (pride) is more important than ever – I think this year a lot of trans people have been created to feel fear in public place and this year is about withdrawing the pride public place, and to show that we are not going to happen, and we are not going to be afraid.”

Asked what she would expect, Fay said: “I think it is not a one -year change … Movement goes in generations, I think what we have to do now is accepting the reality of the situation that we are inside and we have to work with other groups, start forming a strong alliance to fight this goods within and outside the LGBT community.
“I think where we are going to Britain, unfortunately, this right twist is going to continue for some time. People are powerful together.”
He said: “I think the reality is that some of these attacks are designed to do, it ends us … we get very centered and frightened and sometimes it is easy to retreat and the reality is that we need to do the opposite – we need to be ready to work with those who do not necessarily do not necessarily do”.

Howard played Paris Lees in the BBC dramaticness of his memoir and was supporting Trans Rights Charity in a phase in the parade, like Alexander and Fay.
He said that “we are an incredibly indefinite political time” and said that pride is “more important than ever”.
The actor said: “I think it is so important, so important that we show as a queue, as a partner, and we celebrate. Joy is a function of resistance.
“I hope it shows queues of all the ages that we are standing with you, we are for you, and we love you”.
He said: “Recently the Supreme Court has worried me, the lack of proper tangible support from our government worries me, amazing outfits lack of funds such as not really a phase, I really worry.
“But honestly, I look around, I see the goods in this way, I see what the grassroots can do, and the power that can be”.
A YouGov poll released before the incident found that 67 percent of people in the UK believe that the country is inclusive to the LGBTQ+ people, and 60 percent more would not welcome a change towards negative attitudes.
Stonwall’s Chief Executive Simon Black, who commissioned the survey, stated that despite the findings, “We know that many LGBTQ+ people do not feel it in their neighborhood and workplaces”.
He said: “In the context of policy, reality is also different. The UK has rapidly dropped the global leaderboard for LGBTQ+ rights.”
This year, UK LGBTI fell into its lowest rankings for human rights, an annual report.
This was due to the Supreme Court verdict and later the UK equality and the Human Rights Commission (EHRC) guidance, the Rainbow Map of Ilga-Europe said, which has gone since 2009.