Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russia gay activists win Europe ruling

Court finds ‘propaganda’ ban illegal

- NATALIYA VASILYEVA

MOSCOW — The European Court of Human Rights on Tuesday ruled that Russia’s law banning disseminat­ion of so-called gay propaganda to minors violates the right to freedom of expression.

In the first major court battle for gay-rights activists who have contested the law, the court found in favor of three gay activists who claimed the law violated the rights to freedom of expression and prohibitio­n of discrimina­tion under the European Convention on Human Rights. The applicants were awarded $55,000 in total.

Over the course of several years, Nikolai Alexeyev, Nikolai Bayev and Alexei Kiselyov have picketed to promote gay rights and unsuccessf­ully applied for permission to hold gay-pride parades in Russia.

“By adopting such laws the authoritie­s reinforce stigma and prejudice and encourage homophobia, which is incompatib­le with the notions of equality, pluralism and tolerance inherent in a democratic society,” the seven-judge panel said in the ruling, adding that “Russian authoritie­s oversteppe­d the margin of appreciati­on” of Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights that guarantees freedom of expression.

After legislatio­n in several regions, Russia in 2013 adopted a federal law prohibitin­g disseminat­ion to minors of “propaganda” legitimizi­ng homosexual­ity. The law has been condemned as an outright ban on any public discussion­s of homosexual­ity but authoritie­s have defended it, citing the interests of children.

The court on Tuesday rejected the Russian government’s claim “that regulating public debate on LGBT [lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r] issues may be justified on the grounds of the protection of morals.”

One of the claimants, Alexeyev, described the ruling as “an enormous court victory for LGBT people in Russia.”

“We have managed to legally prove that by adopting those laws, Russian authoritie­s breached their internatio­nal commitment­s under the European Convention,” he said.

Homosexual­ity was decriminal­ized in Russia in 1993, but anti-gay sentiment remains strong. Alexeyev and other activists have petitioned authoritie­s in Russian cities for permission to stage a gay-pride parade but have been denied. Alexeyev, along with other activists, has been repeatedly detained and fined for “disseminat­ing gay propaganda.”

Alexeyev said Tuesday’s ruling will give his advocacy group legal grounds to get the anti-gay law scrapped.

Although the court’s rulings are binding, Russia in 2015 passed a law saying that its constituti­on superseded European Court of Human Rights rulings. In the most recent case, Russia’s Constituti­onal Court said in January that the European court’s ruling ordering payment of nearly $2 billion in compensati­on to shareholde­rs of the defunct Yukos oil company cannot be enforced.

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