Putin signs 'gay propaganda' ban and law criminalizing insult of religious feelings

Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed two controversial laws strengthening the penalties for "propagating homosexuality among minors" and for insulting people's religious feelings in public.
  Vladimir Putin has signed the so-called ‘gay propaganda’ bill
  after the upper house, the Federation Council, approved it on
  June 26 and the lower house, the State Duma, on June 11.
  
  It introduces fines for propaganda of non-traditional sex
  relations to minors, including in the media, on the internet and
  via viral adverts.
  
  Under the amended law holding LGBT rallies is now prohibited as
  well as distribution of information aimed at forming
  non-traditional sexual concepts in children, describing such ties
  as attractive, promoting the distorted understanding of social
  equality of traditional and non-traditional relations and also
  unwanted solicitation of information that could provoke interest
  in such relations.  
  
  Thus, for giving children propaganda about homosexuality -
  lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community - individuals
  could be fined up to 5,000 rubles ($US 152) for such 'propaganda'
  and foreigners could be fined the same amount, held in jail for
  15 days and deported.
  
  Officials will have to pay up to 50,000 rubles (about US$ 1,500)
  and companies – up to 500,000 rubles (about $US 15,000).
  
  Using the media or the internet for the promotion of
  non-traditional sex relations carries even harsher punishment.
  Individuals will have to shell out up to 100,000 rubles (about
  US$ 3,000), while organizations – a million rubles or face a
  90-day suspension of activities.
  
  The bill was slammed as “anti-gay” by gay rights activists both
  in Russia and abroad. However, the Russian president tried to cut
  short the criticism coming from Western countries and, speaking
  at the press-conference in Finland earlier this month,
  called  on them not to interfere with Russian internal
  affairs.
  
   “Some countries ... think that there is no need to protect
  children from this. We do. We are not going to interfere,” he
  said. “But we are going to provide such protection the way
  that State Duma lawmakers have decided.”
  Meanwhile, one of the recent polls conducted by the All-Russian
  Public Opinion Center (VTSIOM) in early June showed that 88 per
  cent of Russians supported the amendments to the law. Only 7 per
  cent said they are against. Some 54 per cent said homosexuality
  should be banned and face criminal liability.  
  
  Also on Saturday Vladimir Putin signed another controversial bill
  that criminalizes insulting people's religious feelings.
  
  The law allows fines up to half a million rubles (about $15,600)
  and up to three years of jail time for people convicted of
  intentionally offending religious sensibilities at places of
  worship and a year in jail for offenses committed elsewhere.
  
  Premeditated and public desecration of religious objects or books
  will also be punished – by fines of up to 200,000 rubles (over
  $6,200).
  
  The law was initially advanced in September 2012, half a year
  after three Pussy Riot members were arrested for staging an
  anti-Putin punk prayer in Moscow’s main cathedral. The three
  convicts – Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alyokhina and Ekaterina
  Samutsevich – were sentenced to two years in a medium-security
  prison for 'hooliganism motivated by religious hatred and enmity'
  in August 2012. One of them later had her sentence suspended.
  
  The Pussy Riot case attracted unprecedented attention and divided
  Russia’s society into those who think Pussy Riot’s actions
  deserve to be punished harshly, and those who think there was no
  criminal intent.
  
  The case also prompted wide public discussion both on the limits
  of freedom of expression and on the proper punishment for
  attacking other people’s beliefs.
  













