Russian Court in Kostroma Overturned the Law on GayMarches


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 A court in the Russian region of Kostroma on Wednesday overturned a ban on gay pride marches and gatherings.

 St. Petersburg along with eight other regions have adopted similar laws, while the Russian Duma in January approved a measure that would prohibit the “promotion of homosexuality” to children across the country.
Gay Star News reported the Civil Chamber of the Kostroma Regional Court issued its decision after Nikolai Alekseev, founder of Moscow Pride, appealed a lower court’s decision that banned several gay-specific events that had been scheduled to take place last March.

Kostroma lawmakers in Feb. 2012 approved a prohibition on so-called “propaganda of homosexuality,” but the website reported the court concluded rallies and marches did not fall under the ban.
“This is important,” Alekseev told Gay Star News after the Kostroma court issued its ruling.
Madonna and Lady Gaga are among those who have spoken out against the St. Petersburg law. The U.S. State Department, Amnesty International and other groups have criticized the proposed countrywide ban on so-called gay propaganda to children.
More than 60 members of Congress earlier this month also urged lawmakers in the neighboring Ukraine to reject two bills that would ban the distribution of gay-specific information and materials in public gatherings and the media.

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