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Russian plan: Keep adults from hearing anything good about LGBT people

Russian plan: Keep adults from hearing anything good about LGBT people

Russian legislators are seeking to ban any non-critical public mention of same-sex attraction — what they call “gay propaganda”. Under current Russian law, the subject is only off limits when children are in the audience.

Police confront gay pride rally in Saint Petersburg, Russia, in 2017. (Olga Maltseva photo courtesy of AFP/ Getty Images)

Similar laws are in effect in Lithuania and Hungary, where it is being challenged by the European Union. Such a law has also been proposed in Romania.

Madonna (Photo courtesy of Jenn Deering Davis via Wiki Commons)
Madonna was charged with violating Russia’s “gay propaganda” law at a 2012 concert in St. Petersburg. (Photo courtesy of Jenn Deering Davis via Wiki Commons)

The Russian law is used to harass LGBT rights marchers and activists. Pop singer Madonna was charged with violating it at a 2012 concert when she told fans that homosexuals should be treated with dignity and have the same rights as heterosexuals.

Reuters reported:

LONDON, July 11 – Russian lawmakers have proposed extending a ban on the promotion of “non-traditional” sexual relationships to minors to include adults as well, a senior legislator said on Monday.

Russia’s existing “gay propaganda” law, passed in 2013, has been used to stop gay pride marches and detain gay rights activists.

Authorities say they are defending morality in the face of what they argue are un-Russian liberal values promoted by the West, but human rights activists say the law has been broadly applied to intimidate Russia’s LGBT community.

Under the proposed changes, any event or act regarded as an attempt to promote homosexuality could incur a fine.

“We propose to generally extend the ban on such propaganda regardless of the age of the audience (offline, in the media, on the internet, social networks and online cinemas),” the head of the State Duma’s information committee, Alexander Khinshtein, said on his Telegram social media channel.

Parliamentary Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin said last week that since Russia had quit the Council of Europe human rights watchdog after sending troops into Ukraine, it would now be able to ban the promotion of “non-traditional values”.

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“Demands to legalise same-sex marriages in Russia are a thing of the past,” he said. “Attempts to impose alien values on our society have failed.”

Homosexuality was a criminal offence in Russia until 1993 and classed as a mental illness until 1999.

President Vladimir Putin has aligned himself closely with the Orthodox Church – which rejects same-sex relationships – and has made its social conservatism part of a narrative of Russian political and cultural revival that is now also being used to help justify the invasion of Ukraine.

A new constitution enacted in 2020 that extended presidential term limits also defines marriage exclusively as the union of a man and a woman.

In a ranking of Europe’s most LGBT-friendly nations in this year’s “Rainbow Europe” index compiled by ILGA-Europe, Russia came third to last.

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