Belarus compares LGBTQ+ people to pedophiles in new anti-propaganda law

Read more at LGBTQ Nation.

Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko signed legislation on Wednesday that outlaws the “propaganda of homosexual relations, gender change, refusal to have children, and pedophilia,” providing new tools for Belarusian authorities to continue their ongoing crackdown on the national LGBTQ+ community.

The United Nations Human Rights Council called the new law “a dangerous escalation.”

“By conflating human rights advocacy and information about sexual orientation, gender identity, and reproductive autonomy with administrative offenses, the authorities are fueling prejudice and legitimizing discrimination,” the panel said.

“Persecution against already marginalized groups and defenders of their rights” will be legitimized with the new law, the panel added.

Human Rights Watch said the legislation “furthers the legal and political alignment between Belarus and Russia, which both seek to stigmatize minority groups, control public discourse, and suppress dissent.”

Lukashenko, known among European Union (EU) democracies as “Europe’s last dictator,” has been working in lockstep with authoritarian Russian President Vladimir Putin to advance anti-democratic policies along Europe’s eastern frontier, including mocking the LGBTQ+ community as an example of “degenerate” Western values.

Russia first instituted a law targeting LGBTQ+ “propaganda” in 2013, citing its alleged threat to children. It expanded the ban in 2022 to cover all media in the country. In 2023, Russia’s high court designated the “international LGBT movement” as a terrorist organization. The policies have mostly been used to silence LGBTQ+ activist organizations, events, websites, and media, as well as to break up families and harass teachers.

Belarus decriminalized homosexuality in 1994 after the fall of the Soviet Union, but under Lukashenko’s decades-long reign, LGBTQ+ people have come under increasing threat. Belarus lacks any basic protections for LGBTQ+ rights.

Human rights organizations in Belarus, including the transgender advocacy group TG House, say the community is routinely targeted by the country’s security forces, with raids on nightclubs, private parties, and blackmail schemes forcing LGBTQ+ people into cooperation.

In 2022, a gay couple reported they were attacked in their own home by security forces unleashed by Lukashenko after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which was staged in part through Belarus. Police demanded the couple unlock their phones and reveal the names of “gays in Minsk and Moscow.”

“They wanted to expose an ‘underground network’ of gay people in Belarus, following the example of Russia,” the couple said of the raid. “They openly told us that if it is banned in Russia, then it should be banned in Belarus, too.”

Earlier this month, following passage of the bill through the Belarus Parliament, the EU condemned the legislation, saying “the Belarusian regime’s increasing cooperation with Russian security services heightens the risk of coordinated repression, surveillance and hybrid threats in EU territory.”

Like Russia’s recent conjuring of a coordinated and non-existent “international LGBT movement,” the Belarus government’s conflation of gay sex, transgender people, pedophilia, and “childlessness” just duplicates “Russia’s sad experience,” said TG House’s Alisa Sarmant.

“The Belarusian authorities have lumped together gays, lesbians, transgender people, and pedophiles, creating additional grounds for social rejection and stigmatization,” she said, creating “unbearable conditions for LGBT+ people.”

Belarusian parliament passes a bill to crack down on LGBTQ+ rights

Read more at AP News.

The Belarus parliament passed a bill Thursday to introduce punishments for people who promote LGBTQ+ causes, in an echo of restrictions set up in neighboring ally Russia.

The upper house gave final approval for the legislation following its passage last month by the lower house, and it goes next to authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko for his expected signature before becoming law.

The bill makes the “propaganda of homosexual relations, gender charge, refusal to have children and pedophilia” punishable by fines, community labor and 15-day arrest.

Belarus decriminalized homosexuality in 1994 after the collapse of the Soviet Union, but it doesn’t recognize same-sex marriages and lacks protection for LGBTQ+ rights. Lukashenko, who has ruled the nation of 9.5 million with an iron fist for more than three decades, has publicly mocked homosexuality.

Belarus has been sanctioned repeatedly by Western countries — both for its crackdown on human rights and for allowing Moscow to use its territory in the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

LGBTQ+ groups in Belarus have been shut and security forces have regularly raided nightclubs to target private gay parties. Rights defenders have said that the country’s top security agency, which still goes under its Soviet-era name KGB, has blackmailed members of LGBTQ+ community to force them to cooperate.

“LGBTQ+ people had faced beatings, arrests, persecution and mockery even before the bill’s approval, but now law enforcement agencies have received legal grounds for repressions,” said Alisa Sarmant, the head of TG House, a Belarusian group championing transgender rights.

The group has documented what it says are at least 12 cases of persecution of LGBTQ+ people in Belarus over the past three months, including a police raid on a nightclub in Minsk last month during a private gay party.

Sarmant said the legislation has raised fears among transgender people that they could be denied permission to legally purchase necessary medicines. TG House says it already has received hundreds of requests from LGBTQ+ people for psychological assistance and for help moving abroad.

“The Belarusian authorities have lumped together gays, lesbians, transgender people, and pedophiles, creating additional grounds for social rejection and stigmatization,” Sarmant said. “Belarus is copying Russia’s sad experience, creating unbearable conditions for LGBT+ people.”

Russia also has adopted repressive laws curtailing LGBTQ+ rights. Changing one’s gender on official documents, gender-affirming care and any public representation of gay or transgender people are banned in Russia. The LGBTQ+ movement also has been branded as extremist and its members can face up to six years in prison.

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