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Ramzan Kadyrov
Ramzan Kadyrov has said gay people in Chechnya should be removed ‘to cleanse our blood’. Photograph: TASS/Barcroft Images
Ramzan Kadyrov has said gay people in Chechnya should be removed ‘to cleanse our blood’. Photograph: TASS/Barcroft Images

Chechnya: two dead and dozens held in LGBT purge, say activists

This article is more than 5 years old

Accounts echo those from 2017, when hundreds of men were rounded up and beaten

Two people have been killed and nearly 40 detained in a new crackdown on LGBT people in Russia’s Chechnya region, activists have said. The deaths were reportedly caused by the use of torture by police.

The reports on Monday echo those from 2017, when hundreds of gay men were rounded up by police in Chechnya and subjected to beatings and electric shocks in secret prisons, provoking international condemnation and sanctions.

If confirmed, the new detentions and killings would show that pressure on Russia and the Chechen leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, has not dissuaded him from presiding over modern-day pogroms against LGBT people in the conservative republic.

The Russian LGBT Network, a St Petersburg-based NGO that campaigns for equal rights for sexual minorities in Russia, led an effort to evacuate LGBT people from Chechnya in 2017. The NGO maintains an extensive network of contacts among Russia’s LGBT community.

The new wave of persecution began in late December, according to the Russian LGBT Network, after an administrator for an online group for LGBT people on the social network VKontakte was detained. Police used the contacts in his phone to round up others.

Those detained included both men and women, said Igor Kochetkov, the programme director for the Russian LGBT Network. Police used a jail in the town of Argun to hold the prisoners, took their documents to prevent them from leaving the region, and threatened violence against relatives to prevent them from speaking publicly about the crackdown.

“The persecution of men and women suspected of homosexuality never ceased,” Kochetkov said. “The only thing that has changed is its scale.”

The reports were partially confirmed by the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, which said its sources confirmed a new crackdown on LGBT people in Chechnya and quoted a message posted on one VKontakte group: “I ask everyone who is still free to treat this message seriously and get out of the republic as soon as possible.”

Previous victims have described the brutal tactics used by Chechen law enforcement against LGBT people in the republic. One young Chechen man said he had been beaten with metal rods, subjected to electric shocks and verbally abused for his sexual orientation. Three young men were reportedly killed in that crackdown.

Another victim, Maksim Lapunov, said he had been beaten with batons while having a plastic bag pulled over his head. He was the first to make a formal complaint to Russia’s investigative committee, which so far has not opened a criminal case in relation to the reports.

The reports led to international outrage and sanctions against Kadyrov, who was targeted in late 2017 under the US Magnitsky Act for supporting “extrajudicial killings” and an “anti-gay purge”.

Kadyrov has denied the purge took place but also told one interviewer that gay people in Chechnya should be removed “to cleanse our blood”.

More on this story

More on this story

  • German NGO files legal case against Chechen officials over anti-gay purges

  • Court in Chechnya banishes human rights activist to penal colony

  • Chechen pop star may have been killed in anti-gay crackdown, rights group says

  • Victim of Chechnya’s 'gay purge' calls on Russia to investigate

  • Chechnya attacks carried out by children as young as 11, say officials

  • Russia investigates 'gay purge' in Chechnya

  • Merkel presses Putin over anti-gay purge in Chechnya

  • Chechens tell of prison beatings and electric shocks in anti-gay purge: ‘They called us animals’

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