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LGBTQ Plus

New Survey Of LGBTQ+ Russians Finds Steep Rise In Homophobia Since War Began

When the full-scale invasion of Ukraine began, fears were widespread that an already hostile environment for the LGBTQ+ community could get much worse. A new survey finds those fears were more than justified.

New Survey Of LGBTQ+ Russians Finds Steep Rise In Homophobia Since War Began

Holding on

Volha Shukaila/SOPA Images via ZUMA
AgentsMedia

MOSCOW — Soon after Russia launched its Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, the Kremlin passed a law banning “propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations.” It was just one of many signs that the war would likely be even crueler for the LGBTQ+ community than other Russians. A new survey by the Russian LGBTQ+ rights organizations Vykhod (literally “Coming Out”) and Sphereconfirms the bad news — on multiple fronts.

According to the survey released this week, 83% of LGBTQ+ respondents said Russian society has become more homophobic since the outbreak of the war. Of those surveyed, 39% also reported experiencing a steep rise rise in hate speech originating from both pro-government media and government officials, further exacerbating the already challenging situation.

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The most recent in a series of examples of dangerous information was a segment on the country's largest TV news program, Russia 1, that drew false comparisons between transgender individuals and criminals.


The survey also shows that the trust of many LGBTQ+ community members in governmental organizations and especially law enforcement agencies has been severely undermined, with 58% of respondents indicating that they would hesitate to approach the police if they were to fall victim to a hate crime.

Hate and discrimination are increasing 


Like others in Russia, there has also been a stark economic impact of the war on the LGBTQ+ community. Sixty-nine percent of respondents reported that the war had led to a deterioration in their financial situations, arising from loss of work in international companies, the restriction of career prospects, rising prices and lower incomes. Sixty percent now say they have an income below the average monthly salary (64,191 rubles, $800), and 7% report earning less than the subsistence level (13,919 rubles, $175).

Of those surveyed, 16% said they had decided to leave the country as a result of the increased discrimination. Of those, around 60% left the country after September 2022, when Russian President Vladimir Putin declared a partial mobilization of military reservists. Many traveled to EU countries (23%), though Georgia (16%) and Turkey (11%) were also popular destinations. Two percent of the respondents reported that they later returned to Russia.

Russia has long been considered among the world's most homophobic countries. But state and religious rhetoric around so-called "traditional values" has multiplied as part of the justification for the war in Ukraine, which Putin and the Russia Orthodox Patriarch Kirill say is a defense against the West's culture that supports such policy as LGBTQ+ rights.

photo of Vladimir Putin and Patriarch Kirill

A file photo of Vladimir Putin and Patriarch Kirill

commons.wikimedia.org

Russian state policy

The study was conducted from December 5, 2022 to February 12, 2023, with results released on Wednesday. Questionnaires were distributed via the social media pages of both Vykhod and Spheres. A total of 6439 questionnaires were included in the study, with the age of participants ranging from 13 to 70 years.

In 2021, the Russian Justice Ministry announced that it had included Vykhod in the register of public associations acting as a " foreign agent." In April 2022, the St Petersburg district court issued a decision to shut down Sphere.

The Ministry of Justice said the foundation’s activity went against state policy because “all the actual activities of the organization are aimed at supporting the LGBTQ+ movement in Russia” and therefore Sphere was aiming to “change the legislation and moral foundations in the Russian Federation.”

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Geopolitics

U.S. Tech Giants Facing Old Chinese Dilemma In Hong Kong: Live With Censorship Or Leave

American tech companies are still active in Hong Kong, unlike the rest of the Chinese market. But Beijing’s growing attacks on the freedom of expression and information have put them in a quandary.

Pedestrians walking past flags of China and Hong Kong on Nathan Road, in Hong Kong

Walking on Nathan Road, Hong Kong.

Christina zur Nedden

HONG KONG — As the teams lined up before a rugby match between Hong Kong and South Korea in November, a well-known song associated with Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement rang out around the stadium instead of the Chinese national anthem. Apparently, a young employee at the local organizing body had accidentally clicked on the song "Glory to Hong Kong" when he searched for the Chinese national anthem, "March of the Volunteers."

Hong Kong was a British colony for more than 150 years. In 1997 the United Kingdom handed control back to China, which in turn guaranteed that the special administrative region would have political autonomy for 50 years. But this freedom has been steadily undermined since 2019, and Beijing is increasingly trying to bring Hong Kong under its control through crackdowns and a puppet government.

In 2019, up to 2 million people took to the streets to protest a proposed extradition bill and Beijing’s growing influence in Hong Kong. "Glory to Hong Kong" was often played at these protests.

The organizers of the November rugby match made an official apology to Beijing and Hong Kong, but the Communist Party called for an investigation into the incident. Although China’s influence in Hong Kong is growing, the formerly democratic island enjoys more freedoms than the Chinese mainland. A proposal to ban "Glory to Hong Kong" in the country was initially rejected by Hong Kong’s High Court. But the Communist Party will not let this "disobedience" go unpunished.

That’s not all. According to the Communist Party, the National Security Law passed in 2020, which in principle forbids all criticism of the People’s Republic, does not only apply to Hong Kong but to the entire world. That means even an American company such as Google could be charged under this law for having the wrong song as the top result on its search engine.

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