Gay Kiss in Organizer Was Recognized by Russian at Airport was Punched in the Kisser
The organizer of a number of Vancouver kiss-in protests against Russia's anti-gay gag law reports that he was punched outside the airport in Guangzhou, China after being recognized as the person behind the demonstrations.
In a Facebook posting, Yogi Omar says he was at the terminal entrance when a man asked him if he was the kiss-in organizer.
"Before I even had the chance to answer, out of the blue he punched me in the stomach," alleges Omar, who says his attacker is Russian.
Omar says a crowd intervened to stop the man, but let him go after he started yelling in Mandarin that Omar "is a gay."
Omar alleges the man was getting ready to attack him again, but says he kicked him in the balls and ran towards a cop for help yelling that he is a Canadian. He says he witnessed the officer having a conversation with the Russian man who was eventually allowed to leave.
Omar says the officer then told him that because the incident occurred in an international airport, the law is neutral, that he" should just let this go," and that his attacker would have won the case because he was "in the right."
Omar, who confirms he's okay, says he was escorted through check-in, and is waiting on a flight back toVancouver.
"I know I probably can't do much about this, but one thing was true, I fought back. I'm proud of myself and I am speaking out about this. And this incident will not go unnoticed. I'm OK, but I'm oh so SO pissed," says Omar at the end of the post.
Omar organized an Aug 2 kiss-in outside the Russian consulateamidst growing calls for a boycott of the Sochi Games and Russian products. He organized another outside the same consulate Oct 11 on the occasion of National Coming Out Day, and a third on the opening night of the Vancouver Queer Film Festival Aug 15.
While he understands the rationale behind the calls for a boycott of the Sochi Olympics, Omar says he prefers to fight hate with love. “If I’m kissing a man, it’s just an act of love, but in Russia, it’s propaganda, and you can get arrested.”
He told Xtra in August that the protests are his way of fighting back is "to kill them with kindness."
"I think it's backward. It is wrong," he says of the law. "If it's traditions that have to evolve, then move. If it's religion, then follow all of it, not one law."
Xtra
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