Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 7 – “Hysteria around
the propaganda of homosexuality [in the Russian Federation today] has become an
analogue to the hysteria about the Jewish question in Nazi Germany,” according
to the Free Petesburg internet movement, which points to as yet unpunished attacks
by rightwing groups on LGBT activists in the northern capital.
In an online appeal to the liberal
Yabloko Party yesterday, the Free Petersburg group argued that “a dangerous
situation” had arisen in the city because “radical ultra-right marginals have
begun attacks on LGBT activists,” attacks that “remain unpunished” and
therefore are likely to “be repeated” (vk.com/freespbfree?w=wall-49584024_367%2Fall).
The group suggested that the
authorities are not addressing the problem “for one simple reason: discord in
society works to their benefit,” allowing them to play one group against
another and thus maintain their own power.
But such attacks and the policies which allow them are extremely
dangerous.”
Indeed, the group said that what is
going on in Russia today with regard to homosexuality recalls what happened to
the Jews in Nazi Germany, an obvious “analogy” which most Russians do not see
because they know far too little about what happened 80 years ago in that
country. But their ignorance “does not make the analogy any less true.”
Abroad, the group continued, “St.
Petersburg and Russia as a whole will continue to suffer a loss in their
reputations” as a result of such street actions and such policies. Petersburg,
it noted, already is being called “the former cultural capital,” and the worse
this situation will become “if we do not stop this immediately.”
To achieve that goal, the Free
Petersburg movement said, it seeks to unite with the Yabloko Party and form an
Anti-Fascist Front,” one based on a recognition that the Kremlin’s policy of
setting one group against another – a classic example of “’divide and rule’” – “is
directed exclusively to [its] retention of power.”
Ever more people in Russia recognize
this and the dangers it poses for them and their country, the group continued,
and “among such people are represenatives of the LGBT community and its supporters
who are showing albeit not yet massive but exceptional courage in defending their
rights.”
Today, the St. Petersburg group said, “the
Yabloko Party is not devoting particular attention” to these developments even
though the situation in St. Petersburg provides it with “a rare chance to
become the single ‘legal’ channel for the civil society tht is coming into
existence” and “to lead” that society in the city’s parliament.
If Yabloko agrees to form such an
anti-fascist front, to engage in street actions, and to work in legislative
bodies, it will win electoral support, the group said. Moreover, it will help
with “the struggle against a very real danger” by focusing the attention of
Russians “on the current course” of the Kremlin toward “state Nazism.”
Such a front, the St. Petersburg
group suggested, would have as “its goal the overturning of anti-legal laws”
such as those about adoptions, defense of believers’ feelings, NGO registration,
bans on internet sites, and homosexual propaganda as well as helping Yabloko to
“become one of the main moving forces” of Russian civil society.
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