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Horrific murder fuels fears of rising homophobia in Russia

The Russian authorities have been accused of stoking violent attitudes towards gay people following the torture and murder of a young gay man.

Gay rights activists march during a traditional May Day rally in St.Petersburg, Russia, Wednesday, May 1, 2013. The poster reads : ‘We demand the abolition of the homophobic law!’. (AP Photo/Dmitry Lovetsky)

A 23-YEAR-OLD has been tortured to death in Russia in an apparent homophobic attack amid growing fears by rights groups that anti-gay sentiments are on the rise in the country.

The victim’s battered and naked body was found in the courtyard of an apartment building in the southern city of Volgograd on Friday morning, said a spokeswoman for regional investigators.

The young man had suffered numerous injuries, including to the genitalia, and had been sodomised with several beer bottles.

“He was raped with beer bottles and had his skull smashed with a stone,” Natalia Kunitskaya, a spokeswoman for the Volgograd region branch of the Investigative Committee, told AFP.

Two men arrested

She confirmed the attack was believed to have been a hate crime, in a rare admission from Russian law enforcement agencies on the sensitive issue of homophobia in the country.

Two men aged 22 and 27 have been detained in connection with the attack, the Moscow-based Investigative Committee said in a statement on Saturday. One of the suspects has a criminal history, investigators said.

The victim was drinking with the two men, apparently while celebrating Victory Day which Russia marks on May 9, they said.

Regional investigator Andrei Gapchenko told Echo of Moscow radio on Saturday that two men started beating the victim after he told them he was gay.

The Investigative Committee’s tersely-worded statement said investigators had opened a murder probe, without commenting on possible motives for the killing.

Growing discrimination against gay people

The attack comes at a time when rights groups are already worried about growing discrimination against homosexuals as President Vladimir Putin seeks to play up traditional values in a bid to rally support during his third term in office.

Putin, who prides himself on his macho image, has repeatedly denied that Russia was violating gay rights.

But homophobia remains widespread and socially acceptable, and almost no public figures have come out as gay.

Russian parliament is considering passing a controversial national law banning “homosexual propaganda” among minors. Critics say the bill’s wording is so vague that it could be used to justify any kind of repression against gays.

The law is already in place in several regions including Saint Petersburg.

Putin also recently warned that Russia could change adoption agreements with Western countries that are legalising gay marriage, such as France.

Russia decriminalised homosexuality in 1993 and officially removed it from the list of psychiatric disorders in 1999.

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Russians horrified over murder

Many ordinary Russians expressed horror at the Volgograd murder.

“I am wondering whether those State Duma deputies who… are now adopting a law against homosexual propaganda realise that these beer bottles have essentially been planted by them?” film critic Alexander Timofeevsky said on Facebook.

Nikolai Alexeyev, head of Gay Russia, a group advocating for gay rights, expressed concern that the recent legislative initiatives could be fuelling intolerance.

“Homophobic hysteria is being increasingly promoted in Russia,” he told AFP.

He said attacks against homosexuals are widespread in the country but are almost never investigated as hate crimes.

“Slapping a taboo on many aspects of human sexuality is a great way to build a dysfunctional society impregnated with hatred and is used both by Putin and Muslim extremists,” outspoken anti-Kremlin observer Yulia Latynina wrote in opposition newspaper Novaya Gazeta.

- © AFP, 2013

Read: LGBT rights group to hold ‘kiss-in’ for equality
Read: ‘I’ve had enough’ – Dublin victim speaks out after homophobic assault
Read: Homophobic assaults surge in France amid gay marriage debate
Read; Moscow police detain 40 during push for gay pride parade

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    Mute Peter Slattery
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    Sep 23rd 2014, 8:13 AM

    Well done on completing the film. Will seek it out.

    The unfortunate thing is, politicians only pretend to care what people think at one time. Election time. The rest of the time, people are an annoyance to be kept at a distance. They have police keeping the public well away from the public servants and a media to keep them dumb. No amount of protest was going to stop that, or any other war. As long as there’s profit to be made, the march of war will continue.

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    Mute Brehon Law
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    Sep 23rd 2014, 8:28 AM

    It didn’t make a blind bit of difference which shows that it is a mirage of democKracy that those who we ‘elect’ to be in charge or ‘represent’ our view are not in charge at all. It is the military-industrial might that is and it doesn’t give a tinker’s curse about civilisation.

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    Mute Stephen McManus
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    Sep 23rd 2014, 10:22 AM

    That was the first protest I took any of my children. It felt like a special day. If it didn’t stop the war, it did help people understand that public mobilisation in large scale is possible, and it helped unmask the true interests of politicians, which are not the same as the public’s.

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    Mute Darryl Weathers
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    Sep 23rd 2014, 8:45 AM

    It’s people like this that allow groups like ISIS or Al Qaeda to grow with their attitudes of appeasement.

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    Mute Peter Slattery
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    Sep 23rd 2014, 8:50 AM

    More like a continuous cosying up to the wrong type of dictator, interfering in internal conflict and arming the wrong sides, making ‘Hitlers’ out of local bullies and waging illegitimate wars and continuously bombing a region for it’s natural resources facilitates organisations like ISIS or Al Qaeda to warp alienated and confused people into committing atrocities.

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    Mute Jamie McCormack
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    Sep 23rd 2014, 9:07 AM

    Anti-War = Pro-ISIS ?? Good one Darryl..

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    Mute Leviathan
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    Sep 23rd 2014, 2:49 PM

    Nah, I prefer to remember staying up all night watching shock & awe rock Baghdad. Nothing special about a bunch of crusties and easily swayed people gathering in one large group.

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