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Vladimir Putin’s gay rights charm offensive ahead of Sochi Winter Olympics is all lies, activists say | Vladimir Putin’s gay rights charm offensive ahead of Sochi Winter Olympics is all lies, activists say |
(about 20 hours later) | |
President Vladimir Putin's latent charm offensive ahead of the Sochi Games to persuade the West that he is not homophobic has been condemned by Russian gay rights campaigners as "lies". | |
In a round of carefully choreographed interviews with British | |
and US television presenters Mr Putin claimed he was on "friendly | |
terms" with a number of gay people and was "not prejudiced" in any | |
way. | |
The Russian President also insisted there was no professional or | |
social discrimination against gays in Russia and said Sir Elton | |
John - who condemned a newly enacted law that criminalises "gay | |
propaganda" during a recent performance in Moscow - was an | |
"extraordinary person" loved by millions "regardless of his sexual | |
orientation". | |
He told the BBC presenter Andrew Marr that he would be prepared | |
to meet with the star and the English actor Sir Ian McKellen to | |
discuss their concerns. | |
But Mr Putin's newly found liberal voice was met with | |
incredulity by gay rights activists who said it did not square with | |
the government-sponsored discrimination that was routinely | |
practiced in Russia. | |
Yelena Kostyuchenko, a columnist for the independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta and an LGBT organiser, said Mr Putin was | |
"lying" when he said that gay people did not face discrimination at | |
work or in Russian society. | |
Activists pointed to arrests, homophobic statements from | |
officials and persistent violence against the LGBT community as | |
proof that the opposite was true. | |
Ms Kostyuchenko said she herself has been detained and beaten | |
with other activists during attempts to hold gay pride parades and | |
"kissing rallies" pressing for LGBT rights. | |
The gay community now faces the possibility of further laws | |
targeting them. Proposals by Yelena Mizulina, the author of the | |
"gay propaganda" law, would see a new law allowing children to be | |
taken away from gay parents. | |
"Many of my friends in same-sex families are either moving | |
abroad or buying guns" in response to the proposals, Ms | |
Kostyuchenko told The Independent. | |
In June last year, Mr Putin signed a law forbidding the | |
promotion of "gay propaganda" among minors that could be | |
interpreted to ban any public event in support of gay rights. | |
Activists argue that the law also condones homophobia and violence | |
against gay people. | |
Mr Putin says the new law does not harm anybody and there is "no | |
danger" for homosexual competitors or spectators at the forthcoming | |
Winter Olympics. | |
But on Saturday, a gay man was detained in Voronezh when he ran | |
toward the Olympic torch relay with a rainbow flag. He was later | |
questioned at a police station. | |
Russian President Vladimir Putin talks to the BBC’s Andrew Marr during an interview in Sochi | Russian President Vladimir Putin talks to the BBC’s Andrew Marr during an interview in Sochi |
In October, three LGBT activists unfurled rainbow flags in St | |
Petersburg as Russia's culture minister carried the torch past, | |
after which one of the activists said a man dressed in Olympic | |
regalia attacked her. "Let's call things by their names," Ms | |
Kostyuchenko said. "It's written in the law that gay people are not | |
equal to other people." | |
The Russian president’s charm offensive in Britain comes as | |
Kremlin-connected opponents of gay rights continue to inflame | |
tensions. | |
In December, Mr Putin appointed Dmitry Kiselyov, a conservative | |
television presenter with outspoken views on homosexuality, as the | |
head of the new state news agency Rossiya Segodnya. Mr Kiselyov had previously made | |
statements that gay people should be banned from donating blood, | |
sperm or organs, telling a television audience in 2012 that "their | |
hearts should be burnt or buried in the ground as unsuitable for | |
the continuation of life." | |
Meanwhile, Ivan Okhlobystin, an actor and former Russian | |
Orthodox priest who has been a main ideologue for the | |
Kremlin-linked Right Cause party, earlier this month began a | |
campaign to re-criminalise gay sex. | |
Okhlobystin, the star of a popular medical sitcom inspired by | |
Scrubs, posted an open letter to Mr Putin calling for a Soviet-era | |
article against sodomy to be restored to the Penal Code. | |
But Mr Putin insists that Russia is more tolerant of gay people | |
than many other countries. "It seems to me that the law we adopted | |
doesn't harm anybody," he said. "What's more, homosexual people | |
can't feel inferior here, because there is no professional, career | |
or social discrimination against them. So there’s no danger for | |
individuals of this non-traditional sexual orientation who are | |
planning to come to the Games as visitors or participants." | |
Asked whether athletes or spectators who protest against the law | |
could face action, Mr Putin said: "Protest actions and propaganda | |
are two slightly different things. Similar, but from a legal point | |
of view, protesting against a law is not the same as propaganda for | |
homosexuality or child abuse." | |
Mr Putin has also been forced to deny allegations of corruption | |
surrounding the Sochi Winter Olympics. | |
Western and Russian opposition critics have made allegations | |
that large amounts of money have been stolen during construction | |
for the 2014 Olympics in the Black Sea city, but have provided | |
little concrete evidence. | |
Some Olympic subcontractors have said corruption has been | |
endemic during preparations for the games, which start on 7 | |
February. | |
In an interview with ABC, BBC and Russian and Chinese | |
journalists, Mr Putin said: "We don’t see any large-scale instances | |
of corruption during our preparations ... in Sochi. If anyone has | |
any information about corruption in Sochi, please hand it over, we | |
will be glad and grateful." | |
Russia has spent more than $50bn (£30bn) on preparations for the | |
Games, making them the most expensive in Olympic history. The Putin | |
government hopes to show the world a modern face of Russia, which | |
has faced increased criticism from the West over human rights. |