BBC News - Saturday, 29 September, 2001
This year's parade celebrated a notable victory for gay rights, as well as mourning all those who have died of Aids.
It came just after a court decision to allow gay couples to adopt children.
But while the emphasis now may be on celebration rather than protest, homosexuals in South Africa still face a struggle to win popular support.
Celebrate the difference
Edwin Cameron, an acting Constitutional Court judge, told his fellow marchers that they represented the whole multi-racial nation of South Africa.
"Gathered today, we have gay people of every colour and language and some are parents and some are children of gay parents," he said.
"We represent the nation as a whole and we can be proud to be South African."
Mr Cameron had a message of defiance for those who, like himself, suffered from Aids - about one in nine South Africans.
"Do not be ashamed of living with Aids," he said.
"Those who must be ashamed are those who try and stigmatise those of us with the virus."
Without giving names, he also rounded on "people who seem to ignore (the) epidemic".
President Thabo Mbeki has questioned the link between HIV and Aids in the past.
Recognition
Beyond Saturday's sequins and pink carnival floats, the South African gay community still faces widespread hostility.
Some South African gays afraid of being identified wore brown paper bags over their heads at the first march in 1990, when apartheid was still in force, the BBC's Barnaby Philips reports.
Gay rights are now enshrined in the constitution and activists are confident that the court ruling on adoption will be confirmed by the Constitutional Court.
"But gay couples in South Africa do not yet have the right to marry, and despite the country's liberal constitution, they encounter prejudice and hostility," the correspondent notes.
"Homosexuality is not accepted within the majority black population."
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