These anti-gay Olympics are Putin’s disgrace but they shame the whole world
Sunday Mail - Scotland, UK - 19 January 2014
The Winter Olympics start in the Russian resort of Sochi on 7 February. They are destined to go down in history as the
anti-gay Olympics.
The intensely homophobic atmosphere in Russia, orchestrated by President Putin’s government, means it would be very
unlikely for an openly gay athlete to be selected for the Russian Olympic squad. The Kremlin has banned a Pride House -
a social meeting space for gay athletes and spectators, like the one at the London 2012 Olympics.
Dozens of countries sending competitors to Sochi criminalise same-sex relationships or actively discriminate against gay
people. None of them would be likely to allow the selection of a gay athlete for their Sochi team.
These are clear breaches of the anti-discrimination Principle Six of the Olympic Charter. Yet the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) has said and done nothing. It is allowing the Russian government to ban the Pride House and discriminate
against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) athletes and spectators. The IOC has also threatened that any
athlete who expresses support for LGBT equality during the games will face disciplinary action, possibly including
expulsion and being stripped of any medals won.
The IOC’s top priority is not Olympic values or human rights. It is driven by commercial interests. The Olympics are big
business. The host nation and corporate sponsors are king. Nothing must be allowed to detract from financial success and
‘good news’ PR - certainly not the plight of Russia’s persecuted LGBTs.
The 1936 Berlin Olympics took place in an atmosphere of anti-Semitic hatred incited by the Nazi government. The 2014
Sochi Olympics echo that hatred, only this time the victims of demonisation are LGBT people.
How can there be normal sporting relations with an abnormal regime like Putin’s Russia?
Russia has enacted a harsh anti-gay law that criminalises anyone who portrays homosexuality as “interesting” or
“attractive” - or who suggests that homosexuality and heterosexuality are of “equal value” - in circumstances where a
person under 18 might witness it.
LGBT marches, festivals, posters, magazines, books, films and welfare advice are likely to face criminal prosecution, as
will individuals who identify themselves as gay in public. Any statement that homosexuality is natural and normal will
become criminal, as will the provision of gay-affirmative counselling or safer sex information to LGBT youth. It could
result in the purging of books, films and plays with LGBT characters and story-lines from libraries, galleries, theatres
and cinemas, including many classic works of art and literature.
It is routine for Russian MPs and media to portray LGBT people as the enemy within; equating homosexuality with
paedophilia, bestiality and ‘decadent’ western values. This has prompted a surge in mob violence against LGBTs. Gay
teens are lured to rendezvous and then stripped and tortured - with videos of the abuse posted online. The Russian
police mostly do nothing, apart from threatening the victims who report these crimes.
This is the homophobic backdrop to the up-coming Winter Olympics. Parallels with the Nazi Olympics are obvious. No
concentration camps but...
That’s why it is outrageous that UK government ministers are going to Sochi. They should, like President Obama, boycott
the games and send an LGBT delegation instead. Indeed, all world leaders should stay away from the opening and closing
ceremonies. Empty VIP seats would send a powerful message to Putin.
I’m hoping that some athletes and spectators will take a stand by wearing rainbow ribbons, scarves, hats and gloves and
by making the Principle Six sign - five fingers and a thumb. Everyone everywhere can stand in solidarity by posting
selfies doing the same. The international LGBT lobby group, allout.org, is planning a big Global Speak Out for Principle Six just before Sochi.
Homophobic discrimination in sport is not just a Russian and Olympic issue. It will figure big at the Commonwealth Games
in Glasgow this summer. Eighty per cent of participating Commonwealth countries criminalise LGBT people, with penalties
ranging up to life imprisonment. In more than 40 of these countries, discrimination against LGBT people is lawful,
including discrimination in sport. Any athlete or coach known to be gay would most likely face arrest. They’d stand no
chance of selection for Glasgow 2014. The games organisers need to address this issue. But will they?
ENDS