Straight and narrow
How have Moscow’s queer spaces reacted to legal clampdowns and police raids?

Last autumn saw a wave of raids by police officers on queer venues in Moscow to scrutinise their compliance with the country’s increasingly homophobic legislation. Armed police terrified revellers, forcing them to lie face down on the floor, sometimes for hours at a time, beating and humiliating some, while checking the documents and phones of others.
“We had lists of banned performers,” she says. “They included artists who were of Ukrainian origin or were included in the list of foreign agents. We couldn’t perform to their songs, and DJs weren’t allowed to play them.”
“I’ve already been told off once for kissing a guy. I don’t want to get a second warning or I’ll be barred.”
“The management never saw us as stars, just regular staff, like bartenders and bouncers. So drag coming to an end was no great loss for them.”

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