Skip to main content

Home News News World

Glasgow set for protest against detention and torture of gay men in Chechnya

By Ross Semple

A demonstration has been set up in Glasgow to draw attention to the treatment of gay men in Chechnya.

‘Protest Against Concentration Camps For Gay Citizens In Chechnya’ will be held at George Square in Glasgow’s city centre on Wednesday April 19.

Horrifying accounts of brutality and killings have been emerging from the Russia republic over the last two weeks, after Russian opposition newspaper, Novaya Gazeta reported that over 100 gay and bisexual men aged 16-50 had been detained by authorities over the last few months.

At least three men are known to have been killed, though the paper estimates the real figure to be higher, with witnesses and survivors reporting that detainees have been imprisoned together in large groups or ‘camps’, where they have been beaten and tortured – sometimes to death – by officials.

The protest follows a similar demonstration at the Russian embassy in London this week.

Those at the demonstration on Wednesday (April 12) held signs and placed flowers on a pink triangle outside the embassy in a display of solidarity.

Despite the growing evidence of mass targeting of gay men in the region, a spokesperson for Chechnya’s Russian-backed leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, has denied the reports, insisting that gay people do “not exist” in the republic.

The spokesperson added: “If such people existed in Chechnya, law enforcement would not have to worry about them, as their own relatives would have sent them to where they could never return.”

This is a position that appears to be shared among Chechnyan people. The Guardian reports that Thursday saw a protest of up to 15,000 people outside a mosque in Chechnya’s capital city, Grozny. The crowd gathered to protest the supposed “lies and libel” of Novaya Gazeta for suggesting that there are gay men in Chechnya.

They called on the government to pass a resolution to confirm the “dignity” of Chechen men. “The centuries-old traditions of Chechen society, the dignity of Chechen men, and our faith have all been insulted, and we promise that those behind it will face reprisals, whoever they are and wherever they are.”

ABC News reported

last week that Dmitry Peskov, a prominent spokesperson for Russian president Vladimir Putin said: “We do not have any reliable information about any problems in this area.”

United Nations human rights experts had previously called on Russia to end the abuse and murder of gay men in Chechnya. “We urge the authorities to put an end to the persecution of people perceived to be gay or bisexual in the Chechen Republic,” the experts said.

They added that LGBT+ Chechnyans “are living in a climate of fear fuelled by homophobic speeches by local authorities.”

Meanwhile, an Amnesty International petition calling on Russian’s prosecutor general, Aleksandr Ivanovich Bastrykin, to investigate the reports had reached almost 200,000 signatures by Monday afternoon (April 17).