SAINT-PETERSBURG
— US President Barack Obama will meet with Russian gay rights activists in the
course of his visit to Russia, two groups invited to the meeting told AFP
Wednesday.
The US
leader, who called for equal rights for gays on the eve of his trip to
Saint-Petersburg for the G20 summit, will meet with activists on Friday
evening, said Igor Kochetkov, an activist who has been invited to the meeting.
Kochetkov,
who heads the group LGBT Network, told AFP that he plans to attend to speak
about "rights violations based on sexual orientation" and call for
international monitoring of such violations.
A
representative of another Saint-Petersburg-based gay rights group Coming Out,
Anna Anisimova, told AFP they have also received an invitation and will have
someone attend.
A White
House official said Wednesday that Obama will "meet with Russian civil
society leaders to discuss the important role civil society plays in promoting
human rights and tolerance".
![]() |
A
demonstrator brandishes a rainbow flag
to protest repression of gays in Russia
September 3, 2013 (AFP/File, Curto
de la Torre)
|
Several
prominent Russian rights campaigners in Moscow said however that they were
invited but will be unable to attend because of constant changes in scheduling
by the US delegation.
"We
apologised and said we cannot come" because the meeting date was switched
several times, making logistics difficult, veteran rights activist Lyudmila
Alekseyeva told Interfax news agency.
Lev
Ponomarev of For Human Rights organisation and Svetlana Gannushkina of Civic
Assistance group said they will not be there for the same reason.
Speaking
ahead of the Russian visit in Stockholm, Obama voiced support for equal rights
for gays in statements widely seen as directed at Russia, where President
Vladimir Putin recently signed a controversial "gay propaganda" law
punishing people for dissemination information about homosexuality to minors.
"We
share a belief in dignity and equality of every human being. That our daughters
deserve the same opportunities as our sons. That our gay and lesbian brothers
and sisters must be treated equally under the law," Obama told reporters.
While
meeting Russian activists, Obama is not holding a bilateral meeting with Putin
at the G20 after scrapping a much-anticipated state visit to Moscow over
Russia's decision to grant temporary asylum to US intelligence leaker Edward
Snowden.
Putin has
denied that the "gay propaganda" law is discriminatory, saying in an
interview on Wednesday that Russia doesn't have "any laws pointed against persons
with a non-traditional sexual orientation".
Russia has
faced a barrage of criticism for the law, which is widely seen as anti-gay and
has led to calls for boycott of the Winter Olympic Games it is hosting in the
southern city of Sochi next February.
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