тхеодоре кацзынски
Well-Known Member
that place just gets worse and worse.....breakingnews.ie
Activists from nationalist and Russian Orthodox groups today launched a campaign to keep homosexuals away from a Moscow park they say is a popular meeting place for gays and lesbians, Russian media reported.
The campaign reflects confidence among anti-liberal activists that they will face no opposition from authorities in Russia, which liberals accuse of tolerating nationalist and extreme-right activists while taking measures to silence Kremlin critics.
About 50 people from several organisations converged on the small park in central Moscow near offices of President Vladimir Putin’s administration, the Interfax news agency and Ekho Moskvy radio reported.
Several prayed at a monument honouring 19th century Russian military heroes, led by a Russian Orthodox priest, Ekho Moskvy reported.
Interfax quoted a spokeswoman for a Russian Orthodox youth activist group called Georgiyevtsy, Diana Romanovskaya, as saying the park is frequented by people “who boldly demonstrate their non-traditional (sexual) orientation, persuading everyone that it is normal. We believe that it is a vice and want to remove all this from this site, which is sacred to Russians.”
Starting tomorrow, the activists plan to conduct “patrols” of the park every evening, asking people they believe are gay to leave the area, the reports said. According to Ekho Moskvy, the Georgiyevtsy group plans to ask city police and Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov’s office to help patrol the park or to stipulate that their actions are legal.
Activists from nationalist and Russian Orthodox groups today launched a campaign to keep homosexuals away from a Moscow park they say is a popular meeting place for gays and lesbians, Russian media reported.
The campaign reflects confidence among anti-liberal activists that they will face no opposition from authorities in Russia, which liberals accuse of tolerating nationalist and extreme-right activists while taking measures to silence Kremlin critics.
About 50 people from several organisations converged on the small park in central Moscow near offices of President Vladimir Putin’s administration, the Interfax news agency and Ekho Moskvy radio reported.
Several prayed at a monument honouring 19th century Russian military heroes, led by a Russian Orthodox priest, Ekho Moskvy reported.
Interfax quoted a spokeswoman for a Russian Orthodox youth activist group called Georgiyevtsy, Diana Romanovskaya, as saying the park is frequented by people “who boldly demonstrate their non-traditional (sexual) orientation, persuading everyone that it is normal. We believe that it is a vice and want to remove all this from this site, which is sacred to Russians.”
Starting tomorrow, the activists plan to conduct “patrols” of the park every evening, asking people they believe are gay to leave the area, the reports said. According to Ekho Moskvy, the Georgiyevtsy group plans to ask city police and Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov’s office to help patrol the park or to stipulate that their actions are legal.