The campaign included city light billboards in four cities (Zagreb, Split, Pula, and Osijek), handing out leaflets to citizens in those four cities, and distribution of leaflets to police stations throughout the country.
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Other notable participants include Mladen Badovinac who is a member of famous Croatian band TBF, Predrag Matvejević, Rajko Grlić, Nenad Puhovski, Damir Urban, Zlatko Gall, Jurica Pavičić, Viktor Ivančić, Ante Tomić, Boris Dežulović etc.
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The 2010s have so far been marked with the second gay pride in Croatia in Split, and the return of centre-left coalition after an eight-year rule of coalition led by the conservative HDZ between the years 2003 and 2011.
Croatia | LGBT | European Court of Human Rights | Human Rights Watch | European Convention on Human Rights | Equal Rights Amendment | Digital rights management | Center for Constitutional Rights | women's rights | Convention on the Rights of the Child | Universal Declaration of Human Rights | Human Rights Campaign | Civil Rights Act of 1964 | Socialist Republic of Croatia | Magdeburg rights | Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union | rights | Parliament of Croatia | naming rights | Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms | Inter-American Court of Human Rights | Disability rights movement | Bol, Croatia | Naming rights | Kingdom of Croatia | Digital Rights Management | Croatia women's national volleyball team | Civil Rights Act of 1968 | Rights of way in England and Wales | Požega, Croatia |
Other supporters of LGBT rights in Croatia are actor Rade Šerbedžija, Danijela Trbović, Drago Pilsel, Šime Lučin, Ivo Banac, Furio Radin, Darinko Kosor, Iva Prpić, Đurđa Adlešič, Vesna Teršelič, Lidija Bajuk, Mario Kovač, Nina Violić, former prime minister Ivica Račan's widow Dijana Pleština, Maja Vučić, Gordana Lukač-Koritnik, pop group E.N.I etc.