Friday, May 4, 2012

St. Petersburg's propaganda law in reality

I have already written a couple of posts about what is going on in St. Petersburg and what this propaganda law is about. Well, it did come into force and now we have the first guy (a hardcore lgbtq campaigner) to be convicted of ‘gay propaganda’. 

According to the report of the AP, Nikolai Alekseev was said to have been fined 5,000 roubles, just over £100, by a court in Russia’s second city for the promotion of homosexuality among minors... So, what did he do? As the news and the article by PinkNews (link here) highlight, Alekseev had held up a sign reading “Homosexuality is not a perversion” outside the Smolny Institute in April in public view. Shame on him, nah?! 


Wednesday, March 14, 2012

...to lawmakers in St. Petersburg

Just to continue the previous post... so, what is the point in protesting against this horrible bill? Ok, I mean what can be the result? Actually, the bill won't become law until it's signed by the Governor. 

 

So, here is a list of facts, based on the article on All Out (link here): 

No. 1: St. Petersburg is one of Russia's number one tourist destinations. True. That's why an international storm of bad publicity will force the Governor to think twice about the cost of signing this bill. Worth the risk? 

No. 2: Conservatives in St. Petersburg passed this "gay gag rule" despite condemnation from world leaders - and even the country's own international treaty obligations respecting freedom of expression. But at the same time, Russian leaders recently announced that they want to invest $11 billion dollars to build their international reputation and attract tourists from around the world. St. Petersburg, Russia's cosmopolitan "window to the west" is key to that strategy. 

Silencing everything connected to "gay" is not really a western thing... so, I can only show my support, go on with the protest!

As in case of last week, there was another solidarity protest in Budapest, right outside the Russian embassy. This time the demonstration was accompanied by a drum show, just to highlight how important it is to raise your voice. Though the video is pretty dark, the message is clear: "we cannot be censored, banned or silenced" -- in various languages. 



Monday, March 12, 2012

Against the Russian "propaganda law"

Let's start with clarification: this is not an action organized by me, I did not even join but I show my support. 

I do think it is important to say some words -- what is going on with this issue? It already became known that the governor of St. Petersburg (Georgiy Poltavchenko) signed the homophobic law (gay gag law) imposing administrative fines on the so-called "propaganda of sodomy, lesbianism, bisexuality, transgenderism" and paedophilia to minors. The lawmakers passed the notorious "propaganda" law to silence any reading, writing, speech or debate on anything "gay." The goal? To make LGBT people disappear. No question.

Having read the article (link here) posted onto ILGA-Europe's site, I can only quote it, because it perfectly summarizes what the problem is:

"In fact, this law has little to do with protecting minors. Today, neither homosexual people, nor human rights defenders, nor lawyers can answer the question of how this law is going to be applied in practice, due to its vague nature and non-legal terminology. To talk about existence of homosexuality, to publicly denounce homophobic violence, to develop sense of self-awareness and dignity in homosexual people, to promote tolerance – all of these acts can fall under the "propaganda" law. This law will serve directly to further isolate and marginalize the gay community and encourage hate towards a social group."

There was a banner-making afternoon nearly two weeks ago -- oh yeah, how to be creative but serious: spread your message and raise your voice.



There has already been a "sympathy" protest last week outside the Russian Embassy in Budapest and another demonstration is to be held tomorrow. What is the aim? To show rage against condemnation of this bill and also to pressure the governor to withdraw the law. In addition, it is an opportunity to show solidarity with the Russian LGBTQI community.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Anti-Putin March in Moscow


It's the 4th of February, 2012, the place is Moscow. The temperature in the streets is around minus of 18-20 degrees of Celsius. Amazing crowd, thousands of demonstrators marched through downtown Moscow in order to keep up the pressure on Putin one month before a presidential election that would possibly extend his rule for six more years. All occupy movements have a message in common: protesters demand that their voices can be heard. And... it's right.



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