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Russia bans international LGBT movement as ‘extremist’

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Russia’s Supreme Court on Thursday banned the “international LGBT public movement” as an extremist organization — even though the alleged movement has no organizational structure, leaders, membership, website or address.

The Russian ban, which was approved in a closed hearing, nonetheless could have sweeping implications for LGBT people in Russia. It could be used to prosecute any LGBT organization, activity, communication, or mutual support initiative, including those online.

While critics called the ruling legal nonsense, the Kremlin appears to be banking on global homophobia as a unifying ideology that will align intolerant countries — particularly in the Middle East and Africa — against the liberal West.

In many Middle Eastern and African nations, homosexuality is illegal. Anti-LGBT polices have long been a populist cause, for example, in Uganda which criminalized same-sex relationships earlier this year, including sentencing a potential death penalty for “aggravated” homosexuality.


The ruling shocked liberal Russians, and prominent independent Russian media organizations on Thursday displayed the LGBT flag on their social media pages in solidarity with LGBT people.
Judge Oleg Nefedov ordered that the ban, which followed a motion to the court from the Justice Ministry, come into effect immediately.
The ban will likely force LGBT groups to operate in secret and could be used against LGBT people, although the legal implications remain far from clear.
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LGBT activists said Russian authorities were using the court system to criminalize and persecute LGBT people.

A striking element of the ban is its sweeping, amorphous nature, raising uncertainty about what actions and organizations may be targeted as extremist. It is a form of legal obscurantism often used by the regime of President Vladimir Putin, sowing confusion and fear about how to avoid arrest and, potentially, prison.


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Renat Davletgildeev, an LGBT activist, journalist and author of the Russian Telegram channel Gay Dynamite, called the ruling “absurd, extrajudicial, illegal.”
“The illegality of this whole process was observed from the first days,” Davletgildeev said. “We sent both individuals and legal entities a petition to the Supreme Court asking to be made interested parties. We have all been denied.”

A ban could force the disbanding of LGBT rights groups such as Delo LGBT+, which provides legal advocacy for queer people in court, Center T, a group representing transgender people, the Russian LGBT Network, and others. Activists who try to support LGBT people could be charged and imprisoned for 10 years. Individual participants in the LGBT movement could face six-year terms.
The wording of the Justice Ministry motion implied that LGBT people are part of a shadowy global organization — the international LGBT public movement — with extremist goals set on harming Russia.


The Kremlin has long asserted that the West, particularly the United States and its European allies, are enemies of so-called traditional family values and are responsible for promoting “decadent” lifestyles.

None of the arguments or evidence presented to the court by the Justice Ministry were public, nor was any legal representative of LGBT organizations permitted to appear to argue against a ban. The court denied an application by representatives of the Russian LGBT Network and others to appear as interested parties

The secrecy around the court hearing reinforced fear and anger in Russia’s LGBT communities that Russian authorities are using the judicial system to sow hatred against them, and to smear them as representing “decadent” Western values.
One Russian LGBT Telegram channel, Guys+, called the judgment a “parody” and an “attempt by the state to humiliate LGBTQ+ people and recognize them as second-class citizens.”



“The trial of all of us is taking place without us,” the group said on Telegram.
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A Russian cultural magazine, Discourse, announced its solidarity with LGBT people and said it plans to publish underground material in support of them.
The ban comes after two previous repressive laws against LGBT people: a ban on “LGBT propaganda,” which criminalized the spread of any information about LGBT identity, and a ban on Russian transgender transition, both changing a person’s sex in official documents, as well as the use of surgery or hormones.
It comes as Putin is pressing a regressive agenda of “traditional” values, with growing restrictions on abortion and officials urging women’s careers and education to be put aside in favor of having many babies at a young age.

Putin has frequently attacked transgender people and parental or marital rights for LGBT people as alien to what he calls the “Russian world.”


However, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday that the Kremlin was not tracking the highly controversial court case.
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Pro-Kremlin analyst Yevgeny Minchenko, raised doubts about the Justice Ministry motion in comments posted on Telegram before the Supreme Court endorsed the motion to ban the international LGBT movement: “Is there such an organization? Is it possible to join it? Is there a charter, a program, a leadership and so on? It seems to me that if we are talking about an extremist organization, it must have the characteristics of such an organization,” he wrote.

Minchenko said the legal implications of the ruling were unclear: “Will its nonexistent offices be shut down? There are more questions than answers to the situation.”
Russia’s Supreme Court last year recognized an online movement praising the 1999 Columbine shootings as a terrorist organization and in 2020 it recognized a Russian youth gang movement AUE as extremist.
 
Trump will steal this idea for his campaign. One more group to blame for all of societies ills, and a convenient deflection.
It isn't like the USSR/Russia was very open and welcoming to the LGBTQ community to begin with. Now that he's losing the war in Ukraine it's time to create enemies at home to rally the public against.
 
There is - and has been for a long time dating back to the USSR - a reality where ethnic Russian reproduction rates are considerably lower than those of the various ethnics in the border regions, and particularly among islamic minorities in those regions. That has manifested itself in Stalin's Russophilia, and runs all the way to Putin's pseudo-Orthodox initiatives around increasing Russian fertility rates, which include direct cash incentives to moms. This is sort of the other side of the coin to that.

Interesting side story - there is a Danish fellow named Frederik Paulson, who may well be one of the world's greatest living explorers, and who owns one of the world's larger fertility drug manufacturers. Paulson helped set up fertility clinics in Russia, and has been given various awards by Putin for doing so, but perhaps the most significant benefit he received was getting to use a Russian navy bathysphere to visit the north pole at the sea floor. Paulson is the first person to have visited all 8 of the Earth's poles. (Yeah, I didn't know there were 8 either).
 
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