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  • I've just arrived in St Petersburg for the opening of Queer Fest, the city's annual gay

  • festival, and I'm racing to get to the launch party before police close it down. Since July,

  • promoting homosexuality has been a criminal offence.

  • "Well we've just arrived at the venue for the opening of Queer Fest and there are three

  • police cars and some fourteen police apparently on the lookout for gay propaganda".

  • That's the official term for suggesting that it's okay to be gay.

  • If you suggest it to anyone under 18, you can be arrested.

  • The law against so-called gay propaganda to minors has made the festival a pariah. Forty

  • venues refused to host the launch before this 17th floor gallery came to the rescue.

  • Polina, who's now scared to give her surname, is Queer Fest's main organiser."Nobody knows

  • what propaganda means. It's vague, and it's deliberately

  • vague because then our government can use this law arbitrarily to apply to anything,

  • any open expression of homosexuality. So really it drives all these people out of public space".

  • The law has caused outrage in the liberal West. Diplomats from Britain, Sweden and the

  • Netherlands have come to lend high-profile support.

  • "The Prime Minister has told President Putin, the other Ministers, their counterparts, that

  • they find this law against European law on human rights. So you have to say to what you

  • think is not right and is discrimination. So that is what we do and what we will keep

  • doing". Not if this man can help it.

  • "Why it's polite to act like this in Russia? It shows that these countries, honestly, they

  • don't respect us". Vitaly Milonov heads the legislative committee

  • of the St Petersburg city government. He drafted a ban on gay propaganda that became the model

  • for the national law. On the eve of the Queer Fest launch, he asked police to lock down

  • the venue.

  • For once, he didn't get what he wanted and the festival went ahead. It's organised by

  • a group called 'Vixhod' meaning 'Coming Out' but thanks to Milonov's law all this year's

  • events will be inside. "People are intimidated. People are afraid.

  • They don't know what is legal and not legal to do. I don't know

  • if I can hold hands with my girlfriend in the street and everybody's just feeling this

  • pressure all the time. That's what it's all about".

  • A video message from an esteemed gay celebrity urges them to carry on.

  • "Hello, I'm Stephen Fry. I'm sitting here in the offices of Vixhod, in St Petersburg.

  • I came here on a journey to find out just exactly what this new homophobic law is about

  • and although I've been horrified and upset and angry, at the brutish

  • tyranny of so many of the homophobic people who are supported by the local government

  • and indeed the federal government, what has touched me much more has been the work of

  • the activists of Vixhod and the people who stand up to bullying,

  • stand up to homophobia, stand up to name calling, stand up to violence.

  • And Vixhod is wicked. Thank you". The sentiments go down well with the LGBT

  • crowd, meaning lesbians, gays, bisexuals and trans-gendered.

  • But the overwhelming majority of Russians support the new law.

  • The country has never departed from the view that sex is only normal between a man and

  • a woman. Even in the relatively gay-friendly world of showbiz, popular celebrities are

  • actively backing it.

  • Valeriya Perfilova is one of Russia's favourite entertainers, performing around the world

  • and even at the Kremlin.

  • "I think it's our duty to protect our children from any kind of sexual propaganda, because

  • their mind is so vulnerable to process information of any kind of sexual relations,

  • whether straight or gay. It doesn't matter -- even me I would prefer not to know who

  • sleeps with whom. I think the person's private life has to be left behind their doors".

  • As well as being an acclaimed singer, Valeriya is a devoted mother of three. Like many Russians,

  • she wonders why her country's being picked on when scores of other countries don't even

  • allow gay sex. "Nobody discriminates them because they are

  • everywhere, in every sphere of social life and we have a lot of friends who are gay".

  • "So you have nothing against anyone for being gay?"

  • "No, no not at all. It's... I'm against ah... they need to shout it in the media. It's quite

  • unnatural. Why should I know who does this or that, who prefers this or... why should

  • I know? I don't care. I think it's not decent at least. We were brought up like this. It's

  • not decent to speak about it". Masha Gessen is also a mother of three but

  • sees the issue very differently. She's the ultimate suspect minority - a US-educated

  • dissident writer who is also a Jewish lesbian."Russia is not a tolerant society.

  • When the West was having a sexual revolution and the gay liberation movement in the '60s,

  • '70s and '80s, we had the Soviet Union. We didn't have any of that. We don't have a way

  • of talking about these things. This is really the first time that homosexuality has been

  • discussed in public in Russia and this is the way it's been discussed. So it's very

  • easy, it's very easy to turn people who are already not particularly tolerant, not accustomed

  • to talking about these things, to turn them violently against a social group and that's

  • exactly what's happened. We've seen a huge rise in anti-gay violence".

  • And they've seen it all over the internet. Vigilantes have been luring gays to parks,

  • accusing them of being paedophiles and publicly humiliating them. Every encounter recorded

  • and uploaded to far-Right websites.

  • "All of that appeared after propaganda laws. This group of people,

  • Occupy Pedofilyaj it's called, they are posting videos of young gay men being tortured and

  • obviously they open themselves in the videos and the police is not doing anything to investigate".

  • Some might see this as bullies picking on a weak minority, but Vitaly Milonov says he's

  • fighting Satan.

  • As well as being a politician, he's an Orthodox Church deacon.

  • "It's a sin. We... as a Christian, I cannot allow... because I'm elected as a Christian,

  • a member of parliament... because I never hide that...I'm a Christian. I think that

  • a society that legalise sin cannot do it because sins are written not

  • by men, not by humans, it's written by God a list of the sins. That's why society that

  • legalise sin is going down terrifically". Even so, he insists his law isn't anti-gay,

  • it's just pro-children. Homosexuals can still do what they want behind closed doors but

  • from now on they can't tell anyone under 18 that it's normal.

  • "It's legal to smoke a cigarette, it's legal to smoke a cigarette, but no one is able to

  • make propaganda of cigarettes or spicy food among very small kids. It's

  • not... it will.... it can kill a kid to give him spicy food, but it's nice stuff for an

  • adult. We are talking about lessons in the schools

  • with the assistance of LGBT organisation describing that it can be not only Santa Claus, one Santa

  • Claus, it can be a couple of Santa Claus - you know... that they are destroying the fairy

  • tales of Europe, changing them from princess and a prince to two princes or two queens

  • living together". Gay rights for Russia!... Gay rights for Russia!

  • The repercussions of Milonov's law are spreading around the globe. Protests have been held

  • in 30 countries, like this one outside Downing Street in London.

  • Many are demanding a boycott of the Winter Olympics to be held in the Russian city of

  • Sochi in February. "We should boycott the Games

  • completely. Boycott them. Any civilised country should boycott them for this. If this was

  • about people of colour or about religion, oh there'd be a huge hue cry, but it's not.

  • Because it's gay men and women, oh fuck them - you know what I mean? Pardon the language

  • folks". Britain's government opposes a boycott, but

  • both sides of parliament decry the law. Chris Bryant, an openly gay Labour MP, warned it

  • could potentially ensnare Russia's president. "And by the way can I just say to Mr Putin

  • that every time he postures with his shirt off again, people might start thinking he's

  • promoting homosexuality".

  • Vladimir Putin is renowned for baring his chest, usually during manly stunts.

  • Even fully clothed he's Russia's ultimate man's man. He just has to plunge a net into

  • water to catch a king-sized trout. The national parliament, the Duma, is just as firmly in

  • his grip. It passed the gay propaganda law without a single dissenting vote.

  • "I mean I don't think he's a visceral homophobe. He's just a basic, primitive xenophobe and

  • this particular brand of xenophobia is convenient and politically-- feels politically

  • right to him at the moment". Masha Gessen was among scores of protestors

  • at the Duma the day the law was passed. Vigilantes attacked them as police looked on. She and

  • her partner are now planning to move the family to the US."We have three kids and we violate

  • the homosexual propaganda law every day, many times a day because every time we indicate

  • that we believe in social equality of traditional and non-traditional marital relations, which

  • is how the law puts it, we violate the law. So theoretically,

  • it is possible to start hauling us into the police station today, several times a day

  • for instances of violation".

  • One group the police aren't hauling in is the far-right, anti-gay gang known as Occupy

  • Pedofilyaj. Its members log onto gay websites posing as teenagers. If anyone responds they

  • cajole him to a meeting place and pounce. What follows is brutal degradation. The gang

  • acting as police, judge and jury. The harassment goes on until they agree they're paedophiles.

  • "Tell us why you were meeting him?""Just to talk. I wasn't going to sleep with him".

  • On the few occasions police intervene, they arrest the gang's victims.

  • One of the most active members is a 24 year old woman named Yekaterina Zigunova. She sees

  • all homosexuals as potential or actual paedophiles. "Are you homosexual?""No"."No? Speak louder!""No,

  • no". "Are you having sex with boys or girls?""With

  • girls". After contacting her on her website, she agreed

  • to meet us in one of the parks where they lure their victims.

  • In person, Yekaterina is remarkably polite and friendly.

  • "The objective of the movement is to look for paedophile-minded residents - to find

  • them and reveal their intentions and consequently to film a video that will leave them publicly

  • disgraced".

  • She and her friends carry out their entrapments every Saturday. They call them 'safaris' as

  • if they're hunting animals.

  • The clips can be sickening - one showing a man being forced to drink his urine.

  • "Isn't that cruel?" "Well, it seems to me paedophilia itself is

  • more cruel than exposing it.

  • For generations, the Communist Party and the Orthodox Church made little distinction between

  • gays and child molesters. When Stalin outlawed homosexuality in 1933 his officials began

  • denouncing gays as pederasts, degenerate aristocrats and traitors. Gay sex remained a serious crime

  • until 1993 - two years after the Soviet Union collapsed - but the old prejudices have found

  • new life.

  • "The paedophiles that come are almost all homosexual so I have to get acquainted with

  • them while talking to them. Otherwise, fortunately I have no such acquaintances"."Why?""Because

  • there is nothing for me to discuss with them... nothing to talk about".

  • "Do you view them as 'dirty' people?""No, from my viewpoint they are not dirty people.

  • We just have different interests, let us put it like that. It's like when one enjoys a

  • certain music style, while the other likes a different one. They have one preference,

  • while I have another. I'll never find a common language with them".

  • Yekaterina clearly enjoys her internet notoriety. In one video she talks about hunting gays

  • with guns. "We do a 'safari' once a week. Paedophiles

  • and faggots are completely nuts. They creep into the main square with a banner of tolerance.

  • At this meeting we decided to arm ourselves with something besides rubber truncheons.

  • Dmitry, do you see the target?""I have the target".She's also a strong advocate of the

  • gay propaganda law. "I fully support it. We should have no propaganda

  • of homosexuality. It is contrary to the basic institution of family. Children can't make

  • decisions of their own, and being kids, they often dwell on things. They shape their viewpoint

  • based on what they see in the street. If they see someone revealing signs of homosexuality

  • in the street, their perception that there is a mum, a dad and a kid is lost. That is

  • why I stand for this law. I fully support this law".

  • "Do you worry, though, that you may have given unintended encouragement to some of the groups

  • who are attacking gay people and videoing them?""Oh this is

  • an element of propaganda, Western propaganda, because believe me, the real level of physical

  • attacks towards gay people is a million times lower than violence among football fans or

  • violence among those who have different tastes in food.

  • It's really funny in Russia to hear all the Western voices, guys you know reporters with

  • the serious faces say, 'Level.... the level of crime against homosexuals is terribly high'

  • you know. We are looking and laughing. What are you talking about?"

  • But anyone can go on line to see the multiple attacks. Police have been crushing gay protests

  • in full view of cameras. So why is Russia risking so much damage to its

  • image abroad as the clock ticks down to the Sochi Olympics? Perhaps part of the

  • reason can be found just walking around St Petersburg. It's a museum of Russia's lost

  • greatness. This was the capital of a Tsarist empire that rivalled Europe. And it was the

  • cradle of the Soviet Revolution that made Russia a superpower. But in the 1990s, amid

  • Western inspired reforms, the state and economy crumbled. "Now to understand the gay propaganda

  • issue you have to look at the other 'p' word - paranoia.

  • You see it's widely accepted that the West doesn't want Russia to be a superpower again

  • as it was in the Cold War. But more than that there are strong suspicions here that Western

  • governments are actively working together to undermine Russia, to keep it weak. How

  • does that relate to this? Well, many in the government, the church,

  • even the media are convinced that gay rights groups, like all opposition groups, are just

  • fronts for hostile Western governments. By that theory, they're being paid to spread

  • gay propaganda to corrupt Russia's children and to dilute its manhood. "Russia can be

  • a problem to some of our partners because we're trying to be strong and we don't....

  • we don't want to allow a new world order to kill people on the streets of Syria.

  • So poisoning of Russian society with these new standards of liberal homosexual revolution

  • would of course make us weak". Polina's group, Vixhod, has already been accused

  • of traitorous activities. In June a court declared it to be a foreign agent and fined

  • it fifteen thousand dollars - prosecutors claiming it was secretly funded from abroad.

  • The finding has been overturned but Polina fears a charge of gay propaganda could wipe

  • them out. "It's a constant risk everything that we do with our organisation could be

  • interpreted as propaganda under this silly law so.... and the fines are thirty thousand

  • dollars. So, as you can understand, a fine like that

  • we cannot sustain. If we are hit with a fine like that we would have to close and then

  • find other ways of working". "Russia without Putin! Russia without Putin!"The

  • paranoia goes right to the top. Over the past two years President Putin has

  • faced angry protests from the new middle class, demanding accountability and an end to corruption.

  • Masha Gessen who wrote a best-selling book on Putin, insists he sees these opponents

  • as a fifth column."In fact he's convinced that Hillary Clinton personally is behind

  • the protest movement and that's why the crackdown is so much targeted against so-called foreign

  • agents. Well LGBT people personify foreign agents

  • better than anybody else. We're sort of the quintessential foreign agent and that's what

  • this law is about". Stephen Fry warned the festival that Russia

  • was sliding toward fascism."And to use your voice quietly, moderately, reasonably,

  • but persistently against the terrible tide of nationalism, religious zealotry and hatred

  • that is threatening to turn this glorious Mother Russia into a fascist state".

  • "I hope there isn't anybody in this room who is below 18 years of age, because if there

  • is I will now be a criminal according to Russian law."

  • At the Queer Fest dance night, the crowd is out and proud, but in contrast to Western

  • gay groups, they're not calling for an Olympic boycott. They're hoping Westerners who come

  • to Sochi might lend a hand. "First and foremost Olympics is going to be a unique opportunity

  • to speak out for LGBT rights. I think that whatever happens in the West usually doesn't

  • get to us here. I would call on Games participants to come here and to do visible things in support

  • of LGBT people. Only this way will we have a public discussion around....

  • again around propaganda laws about these violations of those LGBT rights here in Russia

  • and this is what we need as the LGBT community fighting for our rights here. So that's the

  • most important thing, you know, athletes, visitors, sponsors, come here and do something".

  • Tonight, they can forget about their problems.

  • Tomorrow they can worry about what's coming next.

I've just arrived in St Petersburg for the opening of Queer Fest, the city's annual gay

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