Russia’s crackdown on ‘gay propaganda’
This year has seen a record number of ‘LGBT propaganda’ cases filed in Russia. What does the new law mean and who does it target?

Last fall, Russian authorities amended the “LGBT propaganda” law, expanding its scope and increasing the penalty. This year, Russian judges have ruled on five times as many propaganda cases compared to the last ten years.
Streaming services, social media feeds, online marketplaces, bloggers, and transgender sex workers have all been charged with “advertising non-traditional relationships”. Novaya Gazeta Europe has analysed all cases since 2013 — here, we discuss how Russian authorities are, in practice, criminalising LGBT relationships.
In January 2022, Wildberries, Russia’s largest online retailer, was charged with “LGBT propaganda” on the basis of several items — a rainbow flag, a book about lesbians, an “Erotica” calendar — for sale on the platform.
Other convicted foreign citizens have also faced arrest — for an average of three and a half days — and expulsion.
The real point, Olenichev said, is to distract, shifting the public’s attention away from Russia’s war in Ukraine.










