Premium Content:

Russian police raid LGBTIQA+ venues follow legal change

Police in Moscow have reportedly staged raids on several LGBTIQA+ venues following a significant legal change late last week.

- Advertisement -

On Friday the Supreme Court declared that the “International LGBT public movement” was an extremist organisation and banned its activities across the country.

The move was promoted by a petition from the justice ministry, even though there is no actual organisation known to operate under that name. The ruling has been explained as encapsulating all LGBTIQA+ rights advocacy.

Vitaly Milonov, an MP from the ruling party, United Russia, said the ban on LGBT groups was “not about sexual minorities or the private life of individuals”.

“It’s more about the political agenda proclaimed by this LGBT international movement,” he told Reuter’s reporter Steve Rosenberg.

“They have their own tasks, their own goals. They act as a political force, a political structure and the goals of this structure contravene the Russian Constitution.”

Milonov has a long history of voicing anti-LGBTIQA+ sentiments.

The move is the latest in a series of crackdowns on directed at the LGBTIQA+ communities under the leadership of Russian President Vladmir Putin. In 2013 a law was introduced that banned the “propaganda of non-traditional sexual relationships” to minors.

In 2022 the law was expanded to include all age groups in Russia, making any mention of LGBTIQA+ people illegal in film, television, books, or advertisements.

Earlier this year a South Korean pop band discovered that a rainbow had been edited out of their music video under the new laws. It wasn;t a Pride rainbow, just a regular rainbow.

Just hours after the new laws came into effect several venues in Moscow were reportedly raided by police. Attendees were held by police for a short time and their passports were reportedly photographed. Attendees have reported that police told then the raids were related to drugs.

OIP Staff


You can support our work by subscribing to our Patreon
or contributing to our GoFundMe campaign.

 

 

Latest

Niger introduces new punishments for homosexuality

Niger’s military government has introduced new laws criminalising same-sex relationships, with prison terms and fines for offenders.

On This Gay Day | ‘My Little Pony’ introduced a same-sex couple

The emergence of an animated lesbian pony upset conservative commentators across Australia.

Rainbow Reads will celebrate their first birthday with author Em Readman

Rainbow Reads marks its first birthday with a zine-making workshop for LGBTIQA+ young people at Midland Library led by Em Readman.

Artist David Hockney dies aged 88

British artist David Hockney, considered one of the most...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Niger introduces new punishments for homosexuality

Niger’s military government has introduced new laws criminalising same-sex relationships, with prison terms and fines for offenders.

On This Gay Day | ‘My Little Pony’ introduced a same-sex couple

The emergence of an animated lesbian pony upset conservative commentators across Australia.

Rainbow Reads will celebrate their first birthday with author Em Readman

Rainbow Reads marks its first birthday with a zine-making workshop for LGBTIQA+ young people at Midland Library led by Em Readman.

Artist David Hockney dies aged 88

British artist David Hockney, considered one of the most...

Daniel Monks joins the cast of ‘Peaky Blinders’ sequel

Perth-raised actor Daniel Monks joins the upcoming Peaky Blinders sequel, alongside a strong cast set in post-war 1950s Birmingham.

Niger introduces new punishments for homosexuality

Niger’s military government has introduced new laws criminalising same-sex relationships, with prison terms and fines for offenders.

On This Gay Day | ‘My Little Pony’ introduced a same-sex couple

The emergence of an animated lesbian pony upset conservative commentators across Australia.

Rainbow Reads will celebrate their first birthday with author Em Readman

Rainbow Reads marks its first birthday with a zine-making workshop for LGBTIQA+ young people at Midland Library led by Em Readman.