Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 29 – Now that an
avowed homosexual is running for Moscow mayor and the issue of Russia’s
handling of LGBTs is again attracting more attention in the run-up to the World
Cup, a Russian news portal has named the “top five homosexuals in Russian politics”
according to accounts by others.
Given public and official hostility
to gays and lesbians in Russia, a hostility enshrined in the anti-gay
propaganda law adopted four years ago, few Russians in political life are
willing to declare their sexual identities in public; and consequently, those
about whom there are rumors are now subject to the kind of “outing” that was
typical earlier in Western societies.
None of the five acknowledges he is
a homosexual. Indeed, most have heterosexual families and have denied stories
suggesting otherwise, but as Russky monitor
notes there have been reports in some cases for many years that these five top
officials are in fact gay (rusmonitor.com/top-5-gomoseksualov-v-rossijjskojj-politike.html).
The
five are:
1. German Gref, head of
Sberbank and former minister for economic development and trade. Despite having
a family, he has been identified by the leader of the GayRussia.ru site as a
homosexual and rumors continue to swirl that he was heavily involved with a
young male assistant at the bank.
2. Vyacheslav Volodin,
speaker of the Duma. Reports that he prefers men to women have been “circulating
on line for more than a year. Stanislav
Belkovsky, a Russian political analyst, has declared that Volodin is gay, one
of quite a large number of such people in the Russian political elite,
Belkovsky adds.
3. Vladimir Zhirinovsky,
head of the LDPR and long an outrageous figure in Russian politics. Duma deputies say he is gay and one suggests
that his party consists of two sorts of people – “’his lovers and his sponsors’”
– especially as the LDPR is notorious for having few female members and as
Zhirinovsky himself supports the idea of gay parades.
4. Mikhail Prokhorov, an
oligarch who founded the Civic Platform Party. Rumors that Prokhorov is gay
began to circulate when he hired as the chief advisor during his 2012 presidential
run someone who is openly gay.
5. Vitaly Milonov, a former
member of the St. Petersburg legislative assembly known for his various scandalous
proposals, including he laws against homosexual propaganda. But many commentators have suggested that he has
adopted an anti-gay public persona because he is in fact gay himself.
Such accusations aren’t conclusive,
of course. Indeed, given the rampant homophobia in Russia, these charges may have
been advanced by the political opponents of these individuals. But it is instructive that such a list is
being produced now, an indirect reflection of how much of a problem this issue
is for the Kremlin.
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