Source: Human Rights Watch
Homophobic Laws Create Climate for Assault
(Moscow) – Russian authorities should promptly and effectively
investigate a violent attack on a gay-friendly club in Moscow on October
11, 2012, Human Rights Watch said today. The attack took place several
days after People’s Council, a nationalist organization, said publicly
that homosexuality is “a grave sin” and that it would try to close down
gay clubs.
Soon after 9 p.m. on October 11, between 15 and 20 black-clad men
wearing surgical masks ran into the 7FreeDays Club, which was hosting a
party organized by gay activists in celebration of National Coming Out
Day. The attackers rampaged through the bar, throwing chairs and bottles
at guests and staff, kicking people, and destroying property. The
attacks took place in the context of a sinister legislative trend in
which many Russian regions are passing laws to ban “homosexual propaganda.”
“Russia’s leadership has stood by as regions have adopted blatantly homophobic laws,” said Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “These laws cannot but encourage attacks like the one last night.”
An ambulance worker at the scene told a correspondent for the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta
that four people had head injuries and that two of them had to be
hospitalized. Several others had bruises and other minor injuries.
Witnesses told Human Rights Watch that about 70 people were at the
party when the attackers arrived. The witnesses said that the attackers
had at least two guns, which may have been stun guns, and mace. They
rushed into the premises screaming, “You wanted a pogrom? You wanted a
flight? You got it!” and proceeded to destroy the club. They held the
bartender at gunpoint, forced her face down on the floor, and started
smashing the bar, breaking bottles and glasses over her head. They also
smashed plates and glasses, overturned tables, and threw chairs and
other objects directly at the guests.
The three witnesses interviewed by Human Rights Watch said that most
injuries were caused by flying furniture and other objects. The
attackers, who wore heavy boots, also kicked people, some in the head.
One young woman’s eyeglasses were broken by a flying object, and shreds
of glass got into her eye. The ambulance workers, who arrived at the
club shortly after the attack, provided medical assistance to several
people and took two people with head injuries to the hospital.
An activist who was at the club during the attack told Human Rights
Watch that although there is a police station close to the club, it took
the police half an hour to arrive after they were called.
“The authorities need to send an unambiguous signal that homophobia
will not be tolerated, and the first step should be to investigate and
prosecute the attackers,” Williamson said. “The second step should be
to annul the homophobic laws.
They are discriminatory, they violate Russia’s international
obligations, and they have no place in a society that upholds the rule
of law.”
People’s Council and several other conservative groups have called on
the Moscow city council to adopt a law banning “homosexual propaganda.”
Such a law has already been submitted to Russia’s lower house of
parliament, the State Duma. Legislatures in nine Russian regions have
adopted these laws, and similar measures are pending in another seven.
The laws use the pretext of protecting children from pedophilia and
“immoral behavior.” The propaganda bans are so vague and broad that they
could be applied to anyone displaying a rainbow flag, wearing a T-shirt with a gay-friendly logo, or holding a gay-friendly-themed rally.
Russia is a party to the European Convention on Human Rights and the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, both of which
impose obligations on countries to protect the right of individuals not
to be discriminated against, and the rights to freedom of assembly,
association, and expression. Russia also supported March 2010
recommendations from the Committee of Ministers in the Council of Europe
to end discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation or gender
identity. The recommendations include provisions to safeguard freedom of
assembly and expression without discrimination on grounds of sexual
orientation or gender identity.
The European Court of Human Rights has firmly rejected an argument by
the Russian government that there is no general consensus on issues
relating to the treatment of “sexual minorities.” In a case against
Russia for failing to uphold the rights of the lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender (LGBT) community to peaceful assembly and expression,
the court affirmed that there is “no ambiguity” about “the right of
individuals to openly identify themselves as gay, lesbian, or any other
sexual minority, and to promote their rights and freedoms, in particular
by exercising their freedom of peaceful assembly.”
In September, Russia sponsored a resolution on “traditional values” at
the United Nations Human Rights Council that threatens the rights of
LGBT people and women in particular. It passed on September 27. The
resolution contravenes the central principles of the universality and
indivisibility of human rights and fundamental freedoms embodied in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Human Rights Watch said.
“It’s bad enough that the Russian government is not stopping
discrimination against LGBT people in Russia,” Williamson said. “It’s
particularly disturbing that the government is essentially promoting a
position that will be used to silence LGBT people and groups around the
world. Russia should strengthen, not undo, protection for universal
rights.”