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January 30th, 2008, 17:46
C&P:

Article Date: 01/30/2008

Openly gay journalist Siarhei Padsasonny was alone in his apartment in Valatauskaya Street, Gomel, on Saturday evening last week. There was a knock on the door.
It was the militia.

Officer Prakapenka, district officer from the militia department of the Central district, demanded to be let in, saying that he had reports of noise coming from the apartment that was disturbing the downstairs neighbours.

Padsasonny, a member of the Belarusian Association of Journalists, was perplexed. Not only was he alone, but his тАЬneighbours downstairsтАЭ was in fact a grocery store, which was closed for the night.

Then came the arrival of the KGB, led by Lt. Bojak.

"They said they had search warrant, and demanded that I open the door,тАЭ Mr. Padsasonny told Radio Svaboda, the Belarusian service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

тАЬI refused, but they warned they would break the door. The warrant said I was suspected of involving pupils and students in the Young Front (an opposition youth group banned in Belarus), with the purpose to harm the state,тАЭ he explained.

A group of his gay friends soon arrived to support the journalist. They offered to be witnesses of the search.

But the militia and KGB agents forced them to leave.

The hard disk from the journalistтАЩs computer was confiscated, along with a video camera and a flash memory stick.

Padsasonny is said to have fled Gomel and is now in hiding.

Last year on November 23, KGB agents took Padsasonny to the KGB department by force for a so called тАЬtalkтАЭтАФthey were interested in his work with the Poland-based satellite TV channel Belsat. Two weeks later, KGB officers attempted to detain Mr. Padsasonny for a second time.

Siarhei Padsasonny is openly gay and very well-known within Gomel gay community. But in the broader community he is known for his criticism of Belarusian regime.

Further photographs of the militia and KGB operation can be seen on the Naviny.by website. The text is in Russian.

Article courtesy of UK Gay News

Lunchtime O'Booze
January 30th, 2008, 18:41
but everyone says the police are to be avoided at all costs. Isn't the mayor of Moscow a homophobe ?

shame-the country produces such bloody handsome men.

January 30th, 2008, 19:40
yeah indeed the Mayor and establishment are not known for their forward thinking views on gay rights

remember this story last year http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/6698173.stm

ur right though Russian men can be extremely handsome - been told that Moscow/Russia is a very unfriendly place froma friend who was posted there for 3 years, never been myself so no idea - i know any Russian i met in Pattaya was not the friendliest - does it just happen to me, but if i am out shopping and accidentally bump into someone Russian in Pattaya, and i apologise with a smile and a "sorry", i get the deadliest of dirty looks. Most bizarre.

Lunchtime O'Booze
January 30th, 2008, 20:41
regarding Russians in Pattaya ( and by God you see some beauties ) but it's not always rudeness-rather a peculiar Russian trait. Having had a Russian grandmother I found that the melancholia that inhabited her entire being-and those of her relatives who visited was frustrating. On so many occasions a perceived sleight-like accidentally bumping into one as you describe was taken on in a "woe is me" attitude-like they felt they deserved it and the reason you got a severe look was because you were pointing out their great inadequacy.

Mind you-I deliberately hover near Pattaya visiting Ruskies (if there's a handsome one) just to hear them talking..soooo sexy. Why the hell we ever wanted to bomb them is a mystery.

But jolliness is not their greatest trait ( unless full of vodka).

On the other hand-my dear Irish granny was simply stark raving bonkers-like most of the Irish.