Thousands of people are taking part in Edinburgh Pride which this year is marking the 50th anniversary of a pivotal moment in gay rights history.
The festival is taking place five decades on from the Stonewall riots of 1969 in New York, an uprising by young LGBT people that changed the face of the gay rights movement in the US and beyond.
Thousands of people are attending a parade in the Scottish capital, which this year has the theme This Is Me.
The annual march began outside the Scottish Parliament where the crowd heard speeches from campaigners and MSPs including Green co-convenor Patrick Harvie and Scottish Lib Dem MSP Alex Cole-Hamilton.
READ MORE: Pride Glasgow announces new 2019 venue after capacity issues last year
Mr Harvie looked back to the campaign which led to the scrapping of the controversial Section 28 or clause 2A law which banned the "promotion" of homosexuality in schools and said it is now important to stand together to fight for trans rights.
Earlier this week gender identification changes proposed by the Scottish Government were shelved to allow further consultation on the way trans people receive legal recognition.
Mr Harvie said section 28 was repealed because communities stood together and called for people to come together again.
He said: "Now those within our communities who are experiencing that same level of hatred, of stigma, of aggression and in this case of transphobia, they need to know that we will stand together again.
"I am sorry that this parliament very recently was used as a platform for transphobic hatred and bigotry but I am determined that we won't let that tell us we're going to lose."
Thanks to @FollowTheCow we are more rainbow than ever! @PrideEdinburgh @manairport pic.twitter.com/jukFyy7UXq
— Pride Edinburgh (@PrideEdinburgh) 22 June 2019
He added: "It is not enough just to celebrate our victories. We have to ensure that the next 20 years will be another two decades where this parliament never does the wrong thing with our rights, with our equality, never pitches against one another, fragments our solidarity, we will stand together, we'll win again and I hope next year is a happier Pride for everyone."
READ MORE: First Pride march takes place on Presbyterian island of Lewis
Mr Cole-Hamilton said: "People ask me why do you still come to Pride, why does Pride still need to happen? We've got gay equality rights, we've got marriage equality?
"Pride matters because we still have frontiers to push back on, not just in terms of trans equality, but so many ranges."
The march followed a route up the Royal Mile, before turning on to George IV Bridge and finishing at the Edinburgh University Students' Association campus at Potterrow and Teviot.
Entertainment at the campus includes family events, ceilidh dancing and a main stage headlined by singer Tulisa.
Pride celebrations in the capital officially got underway on Friday evening with a 5k run organised by the Edinburgh Frontrunners group.
Pride Edinburgh spokesman Jamie Love said: "We're so excited for Pride Edinburgh 2019. This year marks the 50th anniversary of Stonewall, which really reinstates the history and meaning of Pride.
"We're the oldest Pride event in Scotland and one of the largest free Prides in the UK - for this reason, like every other year, we are looking forward to welcome Pride-goers from all walks of life.
"Our goal is to truly and authentically celebrate and accommodate diversity. We'll have a trans-space, a youth area, a family area and more to really make Pride a home for everyone."
Pictures to follow
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