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Joly seeks reprimand of Russian ambassador as embassy tweets against LGBTQ community

Embassy posted images of a crossed-out rainbow flag and Orthodox icons of Adam and Eve
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Minister of Foreign Affairs Melanie Joly speaks during a news conference to announce Canada’s Indo-Pacific strategy, in Vancouver, on Sunday, November 27, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly has directed her department to summon Russia’s ambassador over social media postings against LGBTQ people.

In recent days, Russia’s embassy in Ottawa posted on Twitter and Telegram that the West is imposing on Russia’s family values, and that families can only include a man, a woman and children.

The embassy posted images of a crossed-out rainbow flag and Orthodox icons of Adam and Eve. It decried Canada for “conflating the concepts of individual sexual preferences and universal human rights” and repeated old tropes about pedophilia.

The first post appeared Nov. 24, just days after five people were killed in a shooting at a gay bar in Colorado.

The tweets came as Russia expanded a ban on exposing children to so-called homosexual propaganda, meaning that authorities can now prosecute Russians for doing things they argue might entice adults to be gay or transgender.

Canada was among 33 countries that signed a joint statement condemning the legislation, prompting the embassy to push back.

“Our country is not interfering in the Canadian domestic affairs,” the embassy claimed, seeking a “corresponding respectful attitude toward the legislative process in Russia.”

Despite ample documentation of persecution of LGBTQ people in Russia, including forced disappearances in Chechnya, the embassy asserted that “there is no discrimination in Russia with respect to the rights of sexual and other kind of minorities.”

In reaction to the first tweet, Sports Minister Pascale St-Onge, who is lesbian, decried Russia’s treatment of LGBTQ people as “a disgrace and an attack on basic human rights.”

The Russian embassy responded with a photo of the Russian imperial Romanov family, asking St-Onge to “please explore and explain how you appeared in this world.”

The family photo includes Russia’s last emperor, Nicholas II, his wife and their five children, all of whom Bolshevik revolutionaries assassinated in 1918.

The embassy did not immediately respond to a request asking to explain the tweet.

Maria Popova, a McGill University professor specializing in Eastern European politics, said she doesn’t think the post makes a grand political statement.

“I think what they’re trying to communicate with this is that the Romanovs would not have had five kids if they were gay. I think that’s literally what they’re trying to say,” she said.

Joly’s office says the posts must be called out.

“Unsurprisingly, the Russians have once again chosen hateful propaganda,” wrote spokeswoman Maéva Proteau.

“We absolutely can’t tolerate this rhetoric, and even less the subsequent comment on Minister St-Onge’s response. This is an attack on the Canadian values of acceptance and tolerance.”

Should Global Affairs Canada summon ambassador Oleg Stepanov, it will be the third time the department has done so this year.

The federal Liberal government has previously said it does not plan to order the Russian embassy closed, since it wants to maintain its own diplomatic presence in Moscow.

Popova, who is a Jean Monnet Chair in European law, says the Russian government has increasingly espoused Christian nationalist rhetoric that includes a “clash of world views” with the West.

“LGBT rights is actually a big motivator for this war,” she said of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“They’re constantly talking about how Ukraine has gay soldiers and that is part of the contamination, so to speak, of Ukraine by the West,” she said. “It’s part of the narrative that they use to make the war look defensive, which of course it is not.”

Popova said Russia is likely trying to stir up division where it can.

“It’s an attempt also to just push a bit of polarization onto Western audiences, (and) activate the people who may find this message attractive, and embolden them to to be more vocal,” she said.

“Russian diplomats at this point are completely fine with posting hate speech and outright lies, which they know are lies.”

—Dylan Robertson, The Canadian Press

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