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Trump's Most Die-Hard Media Defenders Turn On Him After Strikes On Syria

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youtube.com / Via youtube.com

In the minutes after the Pentagon confirmed President Donald Trump ordered missile strikes on Syria, several media outlets and personalities instrumental to his rise to power announced they were turning against him.

Trump campaigned against intervening in foreign conflicts, warning that Hillary Clinton would drag the US into the fight in Syria. On Thursday night, some of Trump's most die-hard supporters felt deeply betrayed that he ordered airstrikes less than three months into his presidency.

Alt-right Twitter personality Baked Alaska summed up the sentiment this way:

"New Right" blogger Mike Cernovich — whose work was elevated earlier this week by Trump allies after he first reported Obama's national security adviser Susan Rice "unmasked" Trump campaign officials caught in surveillance — spent much of the day livestreaming a "filibuster" against military action in Syria before threatening a revolt after the strikes had been carried out.

Cernovich launched the hashtag #SyriaHoax early Thursday afternoon, claiming that the chemical attacks that prompted the Trump administration's airstrikes were not carried out by the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Infowars' Paul Joseph Watson, who picked up Cernovich's claims that the chemical attacks were a "false flag" carried out by Assad's enemies to provoke an international response, announced that he was breaking up with Trump.

Rebel TV correspondent, pro-Trump Twitter personality, and one-time #Pizzagate promoter Jack Posobiec claimed that the pro-Trump online community on 4chan was also in revolt over the airstrikes, though large pro-Trump forums on platforms like Reddit appear split.

Right-wing news media giant Breitbart News seemed conspicuously silent on Syria during the lead-up to the strikes on Thursday afternoon. As conservative social media swelled with conspiracy theories suggesting Trump was being betrayed by false intelligence, Breitbart led with a story that embattled adviser Steve Bannon was still participating in the National Security Council even though he'd been removed from the body the day before.

Breitbart played it straight after the strikes were announced, leading with this headline:

But there were signs of dissent inside Breitbart over the airstrikes. Raheem Kassam, Breitbart's London editor, tweeted:

One of the few right-wing social media personalities vocally supporting the Syria intervention was Bill Mitchell, who built a following on Twitter as one of Trump's most active social media surrogates during the 2016 campaign.

It remains to be seen how deep this schism will divide the pro-Trump media world. This is an ecosystem that thrives best in opposition, and this pivot may fuel the movement in the long run, giving the insurgent group some independence from the Oval Office. The quick disavowal of Trump is actually consistent with the reactionary style that cemented its reputation in 2016. And even as people blasted the president's decision, some were billing themselves as Trump's loyal opposition and leaving room for reconciliation.

That includes Mike Cernovich, who tweeted:

Outside Your Bubble is a BuzzFeed News effort to bring you a diversity of thought and opinion from around the internet. If you don’t see your viewpoint represented, contact the curator at bubble@buzzfeed.com. Click here for more on Outside Your Bubble.


This Anti-Abortion Leader Is Charged With Laundering Money From Azerbaijan

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Vano Shlamov / AFP / Getty Images

A former Italian lawmaker with links to some of the largest social conservative organizations in the US and Europe is under investigation for allegedly accepting millions in exchange for helping muzzle Europe’s top human rights body.

The lawmaker’s name is Luca Volonté, and until 2013 he led the largest bloc in what’s called the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Since leaving elected office, Volonté has been a major player in circles of “pro-family” activists working to build an international movement. He served as the chairman of the Dignitatis Humanae Institute when it hosted a video address inside the Vatican in 2014 by Steve Bannon, then Breitbart’s executive chairman and now US President Donald Trump’s top strategist. That year, the World Congress of Families lauded Volonté’s work “building organizations and networks which support the natural family” by presenting him with a “Family and Truth” award during its meeting in Salt Lake City.

Volonté told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview Tuesday that his foundation has granted more than 200,000 euros (about $218,000) to social conservative groups, which he said came from a former lawmaker from Azerbaijan named Elkhan Suleymanov who served with him in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and headed an organization called the Association for Civil Society Development in Azerbaijan. Volonté’s lawyers maintain this funding was a legitimate partnership between NGOs, but Italian prosecutors say it was part of a scheme that funneled 2.4 million euros from interests close to the Azeri government to Volonté’s foundation and businesses between 2012 and 2014.

“I declare myself totally innocent about the charges and the accusations,” Volonté said in a second phone interview on Wednesday. He also provided a statement from his lawyers saying the charges of money laundering are “groundless since the documentation received from Azerbaijan’s general prosecutor shows that money received was not illicit” and that they have “provided an explanation for the legitimate reasons why Volontè has received this money.” The payments were for “for cultural activities” and had “nothing to do with his functions” in the Council of Europe, his lawyers say.

Suleymanov did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but has in the past called the allegations a “ruthless slander and smear campaign against my country" and "part of a broad international conspiracy” in an interview with the Azeri outlet APA.

In a case approved for trial this February in Milan, prosecutors allege Volonté was paid in exchange for “his support of political positions of the state” of Azerbaijan before the Council of Europe, a body comprising the 47 states that have ratified the European Charter of Human Rights. Specifically, they allege that the Azeri government bought Volonté’s influence to defeat a 2013 resolution that would have condemned the government for holding political prisoners.

The Italian court hearing the case tossed out a corruption charge on the grounds that it would amount to prosecuting a lawmaker for a vote cast in his official capacity. But on Tuesday, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe released a statement saying it had agreed on rules for an investigation to be conducted by an independent body of what it called “allegations of ‘corruption and fostering of interests’ made against certain PACE members or former members.” The statement didn’t name Volonté, but it is the next step in the process begun when the allegations were first made public. The commission conducting the investigation won’t have the power to bring legal charges, but will determine if there is evidence to support the allegations.

Azerbaijan has been accused of meddling with the council before, and an advocacy group called the European Stability Initiative describes Suleymanov’s association as a “key instrument” in what has become known as “Caviar Diplomacy” for regularly handing out jars of the delicacy to foreign officials. This time, prosecutors allege they were handing out cash to Volonté between 2012 and 2014. Politico reported last month that prosecutors believe the money passed from banks in Estonia and Latvia through companies in countries ranging from Scotland to the Marshal Islands before reaching accounts controlled by Volonte.

Volonté told BuzzFeed News that the payments were “private and totally different from the Council of Europe discussions.” He said that Suleymanov had pledged to provide 1 million euros annually for a period of 10 years to Volonté’s Novae Terrae Foundation, which describes its mission as promoting “human life and dignity, natural family, freedom of religion and education.” This made Suleymanov Novae Terrae’s sole donor in 2013 and 2014, but Volonté said the agreement was “suspended” in 2014 after Suleymaonov “told me several times he had some economic problems.”

“He wants support our foundation and developing on human rights too, [and there’s] no reason to refuse so important [a] donation,” Volonté said. Politico reported that Novae Terrae received monthly payments of 105,000 euros between July 2013 and December 2014 before being shut off.

Volonté said that he worries that the allegations have convinced Suleymanov to delay restarting the payments. “We hope that we may start again as soon as possible,” Volonté said.

Prosecutors believe the payments were for a different purpose. Politico reported investigators obtained emails between Volonté and Suleymanov that suggested a plan to defeat the 2013 resolution entitled “on the issue of political prisoners in Azerbaijan,” which would have condemned the imprisonment of 85 people.

The resolution was voted down 125 to 79. The vote was held six weeks after Volonté’s company, L.G.V., received a payment of 220,000 euros, Politico reported, which was followed by a consulting contract with Azeri official that prosecutors allege was intended to justify the amount. Volonté told BuzzFeed News that this was to consult on a government-backed program managed by Suleymanov’s organization “to develop the image and initiative on cultural school programs and social developments.”

In a 2014 interview with BuzzFeed News, Volonté said his primary backing was coming through ties with lawmakers in the the Caucasus, the region where Azerbaijan is located, that began during his time in the Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly.

“During the last three years of my political engagement at the European level, I have developed some friendly relations with members of different parliaments, from different religious inspiration. Some of them, especially in the Caucasus region, are especially happy to help to support this work of the foundation,” Volonté said at the time.

“They think if we present and prepare and take a good fight and good battle to the Western European countries, supporting and promoting family values — freedom of religion, freedom of education, and life values, — they could [stop] aggression by the pro-abortion, pro-gay [forces],” he said, adding, “Also because they are quite moderate Muslims, and they believe that some values and some aggression of these values in these Western countries are totally catastrophic.”

On Wednesday, Volonté said in an interview that Suleymanov was in fact Novae Terrae’s sole donor in 2013 and 2014, and the loss of this funding has depleted the organization’s bank account. The group had a staff of 15 people at its peak, but now it is just Volonté and a temporary secretary, he said. Volonté said that in 2013 and 2014, Novae Terrae issued around 200,000–250,000 euros in grants, but today it is now seeking donations from the groups that it once supported.

Volonté would not name any organizations he’d asked for help, but a cache of internal documents hacked from CitizenGo — an international online organizing platform for social conservatives based in Spain — included a request for support. Volonté sits on CitizenGo’s board, and once contributed 12,000 euros annually to the group, according to invoices in the hacked documents.

Volonté’s ties to many conservative organizations means there could be wide-ranging implications for the movement if he were to be found guilty of the corruption allegations.

Benjamin Harnwell, director of the Dignitatis Humanae Institute where Volonté serves as chairman, said the title is honorary and “we’ll wait until those due processes are completed before responding.” Volonté played no role in inviting Bannon to address the conference by Skype in 2014, and the Novae Terrae Foundation only covered catering costs that year.

CitizenGo President Ignacio Arsuaga did not respond to a request for comment from BuzzFeed News. Brian Brown of the National Organization for Marriage, who sits on CitizenGo’s board and is now also president of the group that organizes the World Congress of Families, told BuzzFeed News that he believed Volonté will be “exonerated completely.”

“Luca [Volonté]’s Novae Terrae Foundation … does international work and has many different supporters. The fact that they have a supporter in Azerbaijan — it’s absurd to take the next step and say somehow that affected his votes,” Brown said. “In my view it’s just a political witch hunt.”

How Sweden Became “The Most Alt-Right” Country In Europe

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STOCKHOLM — The white nationalist Richard Spencer is partnering with two Swedish outfits to create a company they hope will become a media giant and keep race at the center of the new right wing.

It is envisioned, one co-creator said, as a “more ideological Breitbart.” Called the AltRight Corporation, it links Spencer with Arktos Media, a publishing house begun in Sweden to print English-language editions of esoteric nationalist books from many countries. The other Swedish partner is Red Ice, a video and podcast platform featuring white nationalists from around the globe.

Richard Spencer

Nurphoto / Getty Images

It was natural for Spencer to turn to Swedes as partners in the new enterprise, given the country’s history as an exporter of white nationalist ideas. But forging formal bonds between nationalists across the Atlantic makes even more sense today, when the politics of Northern Europe is heavily driving the politics of immigration and Islam in the United States.

Sweden has been a key center of white nationalism for decades. In the 1990s, it was a world capital of “white power” heavy metal bands; today, it teems with websites and podcasts promoting a new language of white identity. Nationalists have built this network in a country that immigration opponents worldwide have been closely watching with the belief that it will be the first Western nation to collapse beneath the weight of Muslim immigration.

“It's almost like Sweden is the most alt-right.”

With a population of just under 10 million, Sweden accepted around 240,000 asylum-seekers in 2014 and 2015, the largest number per capita of any nation in Europe. Sweden also has one of the fastest-growing nationalist parties, the Sweden Democrats, which grew out of skinhead and neo-Nazi circles in the 1990s and is now polling as Sweden’s second-largest party.

Spencer would not discuss details about the AltRight Corporation’s funding, but told BuzzFeed News he was devoting all of the resources that once fed his National Policy Institute to the project, totaling “six figures.” The National Policy Institute’s longtime backer William Regnery II — a member of the family behind conservative company Regnery Publishing — said in an email to BuzzFeed News that he had made the largest contribution to its startup capital.

The Centria center for asylum-seekers in Gothenburg, Sweden, which was the target of a homemade bomb attack in January.

Mikael Sjöberg for BuzzFeed News

For Spencer, this is partly a play to reclaim his place in the nationalist vanguard that helped elect Donald Trump but has since kicked him to the curb. Spencer coined the term “alt-right,” but he has always been small-time compared to outlets like Breitbart and Infowars. He lost what little cachet he had among more mainstream fellow travelers when The Atlantic captured video of him leading a Nazi-esque “Hail Trump” salute in November. By the time an AltRight Corporation board member formally unveiled its creation at a February conference in Stockholm, many Americans thought of Spencer as the racist who got punched on camera during Trump’s inauguration.

Spencer, who now wears what he calls “Clark Kent glasses” to avoid being recognized on the street and punched again, told BuzzFeed News that the immediate goal of the new company was to “displace the conservative movement” in favor of his brand of nationalism — which aims to create a white “ethno state.” Though it would look like a news site, he said, the new Altright.com would “create a consciousness that something like an ethno state would be possible when the contingencies of history allow.”

And why Sweden? In all of Europe, Spencer said, “It's almost like Sweden is the most alt-right.”

Krent Able for BuzzFeed News

Sweden’s leaders and major news outlets were caught completely off guard when Trump said at a February rally, “You look at what’s happening last night in Sweden. … They took in large numbers [of immigrants]. They’re having problems like they never thought possible.”

There had been no terrorist attack the night before, Trump clarified on Twitter the next day. He was instead referring to a segment on Fox News with an American discussing his film claiming Swedish police were covering up a wave of immigrant crime.

Swedish politicians and newspapers scrambled to disprove Trump’s assertion, but nationalist outlets were more than ready for a moment like this. Sweden had become a well-established punching bag for the American right, who view it as the pinnacle of progressive smugness and who delight in mocking trends like transgender-friendly restrooms and gender-neutral pronouns. When Sweden’s leaders welcomed refugees in 2014 and 2015, it offered the perfect laboratory for the American right to prove that progressive idealism would inevitably cause disaster at the hands of Muslim immigrants.

“There is a sort of sick interest there, but there is also, I believe, an unconscious desire among many in the Alt-Right for them to be made an example of,” said Andrew Anglin, of the unapologetically racist website the Daily Stormer, who had been describing this refugee policy as genocide against Swedes as far back as 2013. “Sweden is set to be the first white country to commit suicide through immigration ... The Islamic revolutions in Europe are going to be very painful, and they are going to be bloody, and I think that after one has taken place, the populations in the rest of Europe and in the diaspora will be ready for reevaluating what we are doing to our countries and why we are doing it.”

Most anti-immigrant conservatives would repudiate Anglin’s brand of trolling racism, but even they often single out Sweden as a warning to the West.

Breitbart has produced hundreds of stories about Sweden in the past several years, with headlines like “Sweden ‘Facing Collapse’ Thanks to Migrant Influx, Foreign Minister Warns” and “Europe’s Rape Epidemic: Western Women Will Be Sacrificed at the Altar of Mass Migration.” Arkansas Republican Sen. Tom Cotton and then-representative Mike Pompeo (who is now CIA director) published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal after a visit to Scandinavia in 2016, writing that Sweden’s “radical policy occurred with little debate because political correctness pervades Sweden” and that “Sweden’s failures have been repeated in Germany, France, Austria and elsewhere.”

Breitbart has produced hundreds of stories about Sweden in the past several years.

Some in Sweden shared their views and felt their opinions were deliberately censored by the major news outlets. So, like the American alt-right, they started building communities online. The Reddit-like platform Flashback had forums on immigration as early as 2007 with threads to highlight immigrant crimes and to denounce mainstream journalists as “racists who hate Swedes.” A recent study found that half of Swedes get their news from what are known as "alternative" sites, and 1 in 5 say they don’t trust the traditional media at all. (That’s about the same level of distrust as the Pew Research Center found in the US last July.)

The problem for those who had been certain Sweden would implode is that neither law enforcement nor news outlets ever reported a crisis. Swedish officials and mainstream newspapers say that’s because there isn’t data showing that immigration had caused a major spike in crime. Immigration opponents say there is a cover-up — they claim trends in the same statistics actually show a spike in crime. And they see the fact that the police don’t report the national origin of criminal suspects as evidence that officials are intentionally hiding the problem.

This turned the debate into a fight of anecdotal reporting. Mainstream newspapers didn’t pay a lot of attention to isolated crimes — whether car burnings or sexual assaults — because they don’t see them as part of a bigger news story. New outlets also don’t routinely report a suspect’s ethnicity or national origin, in keeping with ethics guidelines that say not to include such information when it is "irrelevant." So alternative sites started writing about them one by one, feeding the idea that the mainstream media has been covering up the truth.

One of the biggest of these alternative outlets is called Avpixlat — which means “unpixelated” — a name that takes a dig at what immigration opponents say is a key tactic in covering up immigrant crimes: News outlets generally pixelate the images of alleged criminals, a practice intended to avoid libeling someone who might turn out to be innocent. Critics say they’re trying to hide skin color, which might reveal a suspect's ethnic background.

Avpixlat publisher Mats Dagerlind.

Mikael Sjöberg for BuzzFeed News

“The media establishment in Sweden is totally liberal-left,” said Avpixlat publisher Mats Dagerlind during a March interview in his apartment overlooking downtown Stockholm. His shoulder-length blonde hair and earrings give him the look of an aging rocker — he plays bass and has a home recording studio — and he wears a Hammer of Thor around his neck, a symbol used by revivalists of ancient Nordic religion and an emblem sometimes used by white supremacists.

“We accuse establishment media for spreading fake news and they throw the accusation back at us,” Dagerlind said.

Avpixlat has published some unquestionably fake news, most recently when it ran a photograph of someone it claimed was the Uzbek man who crashed a truck into a crowd in central Stockholm in an April 7 terrorist attack that killed five people; the photo was of someone else entirely. It also recently published a column outlining a widespread anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that Jews conspired to promote multiculturalism in the 1960s so that Sweden would no longer be Swedish.

Dagerlind said he felt Trump’s comments about Sweden and the international scrutiny that followed had helped them get the upper hand in the fight over whose news is fake. He felt they’d been painted as peddlers of a “big conspiracy theory in Sweden that the media isn’t reporting fairly,” but now that the debate has spilled over to the English-language media — whether it’s major TV outlets or Breitbart — it's impossible for them to be dismissed.

But Sweden’s leaders — and major media outlets — think this assertion is ridiculous.

“They're painting a picture of, 'No one is listening to us, our agenda is not being referred to,' and so on — it's their way of treating themselves as victims in the debate,” Sweden’s immigration minister, Morgan Johansson, told BuzzFeed News. “Well, that's their narrative ... [but] no other issue has been more covered in the past years.”

The leaders of the new right-wing media in the US and UK have been sending help to bolster like-minded Swedes. In the hours after Trump’s rally in February, Paul Joseph Watson, a popular British anti-Muslim YouTube personality and editor with the US site Infowars, offered to pay for any “journalist claiming Sweden is safe” to visit the country’s “crime ridden migrant suburbs.” Former Vice reporter Tim Pool took Watson’s money and used it to jump-start a crowdfunding campaign he’d launched for a project called “Investigating Swedish Crime Wave.”

Right-wing sites from Spencer’s brand-new Altright.com to Breitbart closely watched Pool’s daily dispatches, which at first showed Sweden’s immigrant suburbs to be pretty calm. Pool finally gave them a video to cheer about when the police stopped him from recording and escorted him from a Stockholm suburb — off camera, Pool said, men were beginning to put on masks and the police warned the situation could turn violent.

Chang Frick of Nyheter Idag.

Mikael Sjöberg for BuzzFeed News

トランスジェンダーの権利はどれだけ支持されているのか。世界23カ国を調査

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BuzzFeed Newsと調査会社・イプソスの調査結果。

米国ではトイレの使用をめぐる論争が起き、トランスジェンダーの権利が大きな政治問題となっている。その一方、ジェンダー・アイデンティティ(性自認)をめぐる基本的な議論をしている国もある。

書類に記入するだけで法律上の性を変更できる国は、少数だが急増しており、2016年にはノルウェーがその仲間入りをした。英国議会の委員会も、後に続くよう政府に求めたインドの議員たちは、最高裁判所命令を受けて、トランスジェンダーに対する差別を禁止し、差別是正措置をとる法案について慎重に検討している。

また、精神疾患のリストからトランスジェンダーを外そうとする世界保健機関(WHO)の国際的な取り組みは前進しており、リストが次に更新される2018年までには実現する構えを見せている。

トランスジェンダーの権利に関する国際世論をつかむため、BuzzFeed Newsと市場調査会社イプソスは、カリフォルニア大学ロサンゼルス校法学院のウィリアムズ研究所と提携し、これまでに類を見ない調査を実施した。調査対象国は23カ国で、トイレの使用や性別適合手術(SRS)などについて質問した。

以下は、その調査結果だ。

Mark Makela / Getty Images

BuzzFeed News

調査対象国におけるトランスジェンダーの権利の支持状況を、政策に関する6分野の質問への回答に基づいてランク付けした。質問内容は、差別防止、トイレの使用、性別適合手術、結婚、妊娠・出産、養子をとることについてだ。

調査対象国におけるトランスジェンダーの権利の支持状況を、政策に関する6分野の質問への回答に基づいてランク付けした。質問内容は、差別防止、トイレの使用、性別適合手術、結婚、妊娠・出産、養子をとることについてだ。

LGBT(性的少数者)の権利に関して長年にわたって欧州で先頭に立ってきたスペインとスウェーデンは、ランキングの上位にいる。

スウェーデンは1972年に、西欧で初めて、法律上の性の変更を可能にする手続きを導入した。スウェーデンのジェンダー・アイデンティティ関連法は、他の諸国のモデルになった。

ランキング3位のアルゼンチンは、2012年にジェンダー・アイデンティティの「自己決定権」を認める法案を可決し、新たな金字塔を打ち立てた。これにより、西半球で初めて、手術や医師の許可がなくても、書類に記入するだけで法律上の性を変更できるようになったのだ。

トランスジェンダー擁護団体「トランスジェンダー・ヨーロッパ」によると、その後、欧州の4カ国がアルゼンチンの法律をモデルにした自己宣言法を採択し、さらに18カ国以上が同様の法案を検討中だという。

ロシアは、ほぼ全ての指標で最下位となっている。これは恐らく「同性愛宣伝禁止法(反同性愛法)」成立をめぐる反LGBT運動が理由だろう。

報道によると
、この法律を提案したサンクトペテルブルクのビタリー・ミロノフ市議会議員は、 性別適合手術を行う医者の起訴を可能にする法の制定に取り組んでいるという。

Ozan Kose / AFP=時事通信

「トランスジェンダー」という単語は、多くの国で幅広く知られているわけではない。そのため、今回の調査では「出生時とは違う性別の服装や生き方をしている」人々に対する意識について尋ねた。

「トランスジェンダー」という単語は、多くの国で幅広く知られているわけではない。そのため、今回の調査では「出生時とは違う性別の服装や生き方をしている」人々に対する意識について尋ねた。

調査では、「性別、性」を意味する単語として、「ジェンダー」ではなく「性(sex)」という語を用いた。大勢の人々が両者の違いを理解しておらず、多くの言語で区別されていないからだ(「ジェンダー」は社会的・文化的性差、「性(sex)」は生物学的性差を指していう言葉だ)。

技術・予算面の制限のため、全世界を対象とする調査は行うことができなかったため、インターネット普及率が高い国を中心に調査をした。(こうした国ではオンライン調査のほうが、一般の人々の声を代表するものとして信頼できる傾向がある)。その結果、アフリカやアジアの、先進国以外の国々からの数字が少なくなってしまった。

インターネットが普及している16カ国でオンライン調査を実施したほか、インターネットの普及率がやや低い6カ国でも調査を行った。インターネットの普及率がやや低い6カ国の調査結果は、人々の考えを知る手がかりになるが、世論を幅広く代表してない可能性がある。

さらに、インドでは、インターネット普及率が低いので、調査員に対面での聞き取り調査を委託した。イプソスは、これらの調査結果が、各国の標本の大きさに応じて3.1~4.5%の誤差範囲内で正確だと考えている(調査方法に関する詳細はこちら)。

Shailesh Andrade / Reuters


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These Activists Were Detained For Wanting Russia To Investigate Kidnappings Of Gay Men

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Five activists were arrested in Moscow Thursday morning while attempting to deliver a petition demanding Russian authorities investigate the kidnapping and torture of gay men in Chechnya.

Several dozen men have been detained and tortured by authorities in Chechnya in the past few months, according to reports by the Russian independent news outlet Novaya Gazeta. Chechnya is a semi-autonomous region inside Russia, and its leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, responded to the reports by saying "we have never had gay men" in the republic.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said he'd order federal authorities to assist in an investigation after being pressed on the issue by German Chancellor Angela Merkel earlier this month, but there is concern whether this investigation will be allowed to do its work.

The petition drive was organized by a trio of Russia LGBT organizations in partnership with US-based online activist platforms All Out, Avaaz, and Change.org. The five activists were delivering 2 million signatures to Russia's prosecutor general, the head of the agency that oversees federal investigations, when they were detained by the Moscow police. The Russia LGBT Network issued a statement saying they were arrested under a law prohibiting unauthorized public gatherings.

Two of those detained were released a few hours after being taken into custody, All Out's Pamela Adie told BuzzFeed News. One of those still being held is an Italian citizen who works for All Out, Yuri Guiana. The other activists being detained are both Russian citizens.

The petition was not delivered and the signatures were also taken by the police, Adie said.

A Russian Embassy Said The Investigation Into Chechnya's Gay Kidnappings Is Already Done

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Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov takes a selfie with the chair of the Federation Council of Russia, Valentina Matviyenko.

Natalia Kolesnikova / AFP / Getty Images

The Russian Embassy to Israel said an investigation into the reported kidnapping and torture of dozens of gay men in Chechnya found that "there are no victims of persecution, threats or violence."

The statement came in a lengthy letter to Israel's Haaretz newspaper published on Thursday. It was formally a response to a story Haaretz published on April 5, describing secret detention facilities where gay men have reportedly been tortured in widespread crackdown in Chechnya, an autonomous region in the Russian Federation.

News of the crackdown was first broken in April by reporter Elena Milashina of the Russian Novaya Gazeta newspaper and since corroborated by international news outlets and human rights groups. Chechnya's leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, has said that there is no crackdown because that there are no gay men at all inside his territory. But last Friday Russian President Vladimir Putin bowed to international pressure and agreed to investigate the reports.

The Russian Embassy's letter to Haaretz, however, suggests that an investigation has already been concluded.

"Authorized official government bodies of the Russian Federation, in cooperation with the government of the Chechen Republic, investigated the claims made by journalist Elena Milashina in her articles published in the Novaya Gazeta newspaper and in other Russian media outlets," wrote Press Attache Dmitry Alushkin.

Citing the "results of the investigation," Alushkin wrote that there "are no victims of persecution" in the republic, offering as further evidence that neither the Chechen human rights body nor law enforcement have received reports of these abuses. (LGBT rights organizations have said that victims are frightened of retaliation for reporting their abuse.) An alleged secret prison, he wrote, "is a storeroom."

Alushkin also wrote that activist Nikolay Alexeyev has rejected the reports. Alushkin calls Alexeyev the "head of the LGBT community in Russia," but he is in fact a highly controversial figure who defended the Russian government during the controversy over the so-called "gay propaganda" law in 2013.

"In light of this, the Russian Embassy in Israel expresses its regret that a few Israeli citizens did not wait until the publication of the results of the objective investigation and rushed to spread factually incorrect information in the local media," Alushkin wrote. "We would like to note that the Russian system of government is of a democratic nature and we are calling to rely on objective and reliable data — and not on rumors and speculation — to analyze the political developments in our country."

The Russian Embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for the findings of the inquiry Alushkin describes.

Here's the full text of his letter:

Authorized official government bodies of the Russian Federation, in cooperation with the government of the Chechen Republic, investigated the claims made by journalist Elena Milashina in her articles published in the Novaya Gazeta newspaper and in other Russian media outlets, which served as the excuse for the beginning of a propaganda campaign against Russia around the world, including in Israel.

The results of the investigation show that these reports were published after local governments in a few North Caucasus regions of Russia, in March 2017, rejected requests from representatives of the LGBT community to hold rallies. The reason was protests of civil society representatives and residents of the regions, who are mostly Muslims and faithful to traditional values.

In the building – which in the past belonged to the military government (address: 99B Kadyrov Street, in the city of Argun) and called in the articles a “secret prison” – is a storeroom, while a parking lot is located on the nearby space.

There are no victims of persecution, threats or violence. Neither law enforcement authorities or the Human Rights Council of the president of the Chechen Republic have received complaints on this matter. The Human Rights Council conducted an inquiry of its own and did not find even indirect evidence of such accusations.

The false reports resonated within the society and spiritual leadership of the Chechen Republic. On April 2, a Majlis (Muslim council) was held in the central Heart of Chechnya Mosque, with the participation of some 6,000 residents and community elders. On April 6, human rights activists, journalists and public figures held a discussion in Chechnya on the topic “Caucasus traditions in the reality of the world today.” The participants traveled to the city of Argun and there, on the spot, were convinced of the falseness of the claims of the existence of the alleged “secret prison.”

The head of the LGBT community in Russia, Nikolay Alexeyev, also rejected the reports. In an interview with the television station Dozhd and on the radio station Komsomolskaya Pravda, he harshly criticized Milashina and accused her of starting a propaganda campaign against Chechnya by publishing clearly false information. Alexeyev said, among other things, that in Chechnya they do not “hunt” representatives of the LGBT community. During his activities, not a single gay person from Chechnya has turned to him. He expressed the opinion that Milashina’s activities have no connection whatsoever to protecting the rights of gays, and Milashina has her own agenda.

In light of this, the Russian Embassy in Israel expresses its regret that a few Israeli citizens did not wait until the publication of the results of the objective investigation and rushed to spread factually incorrect information in the local media.

We would like to note that the Russian system of government is of a democratic nature and we are calling to rely on objective and reliable data – and not on rumors and speculation – to analyze the political developments in our country.

Russian Activists Say They’ve Been Told US Visas Are Out Of Reach For Gay Chechens

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Elena Fitkulina / AFP / Getty Images

A Russian LGBT advocacy group says conversations with the US embassy have led it to believe that visas to the United States are out of reach for gay Chechens fleeing a wave of kidnappings, torture, and disappearances in the semi-autonomous Russian region.

A group of around 40 Chechens are now in hiding in other parts of Russia, said a spokesperson for the Russia LGBT Network, one of the primary groups supporting fleeing Chechens. Though they have escaped their region, they are having difficulty securing visas that would allow them to flee the country.

After initial publication of this story, the Russia LGBT Network spokesperson clarified that the US had not yet formally denied any visa applications. But the group was not facilitating applications to the United States because it was so discouraged by their conversations with the US embassy.

"We were informed there was no political will,” said the spokesperson, who asked her name be withheld because of security concerns. “They’re not going to provide visas. They’re going to support us in other ways, but not with visas."

Since the independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta first reported the abuse of dozens of gay Chechens in April, just two have managed to secure visas to safe countries, despite the European Union and the United States expressing concern about the allegations, the spokesperson said. A handful of gay Chechens have fled without visas because they believed the danger of staying in Russia was too great.

The gay men seeking visas continue to fear for their lives in Russia. The strongman who rules Chechnya with near impunity, Ramzan Kadyrov, is accused of having his critics hunted down both in other parts of Russia and outside Russia's borders.

A US State Department spokesperson said on background that all visa applications are considered on a case-by-case basis and the Chechens are eligible to apply. But US law does not have a visa category that allows someone to come directly to the US because of threats in their home country. Unless their situation fell into an unrelated category — like if they had a job offer in the US or were being reunited with a family member — they would only be eligible for tourist visas that would require them to prove they would return to Russia.

“Nonimmigrant visa classifications and qualifications are set by U.S. law, as passed by Congress,” the spokesperson said. “There is no visa classification designated specifically for humanitarian relief.”

The Chechens are not eligible to apply to come to the US as refugees because they are still inside their native country — someone fleeing persecution generally can only be considered a refugee once they’ve left their country of origin. A Russia LGBT Network official said US diplomats recommended Chechens try applying to the US after leaving Russia, but he worried that this could jeopardize their ability to ultimately reach a safe country legally if that route failed. There is also a risk they could be returned to Russia on trumped up charges. Many of the foreign fighters who have joined groups like ISIS have come from Chechnya, leading to concerns about Chechen asylum seekers.

“They need refuge,” he said. “Not once did officials offer any specific solutions.”

The Council for Global Equality, which advocates for LGBT rights in US foreign policy, said in a statement to BuzzFeed News that the organization was still hopeful an avenue could be found for the Chechens to come to the US despite the fact that the “Russian LGBT Network has been discouraged by their interactions with U.S. officials.”

“We believe there are still options available in extreme cases like this and we are in contact with Russian LGBT activists and US government officials to continue to explore those options,” the statement said. “We hope there is political will on the Hill and within the Administration to provide a safe haven in the United States for carefully vetted claims. As advocates, it's our job to try to make that case here in Washington.”

Kadyrov has responded to the Novaya Gazeta reports — which have since been confirmed by human rights organizations and international news outlets — by denying such a crackdown could have taken place because Chechnya "does not have this phenomenon called non-traditional sexual orientation." Several of the reporters involved in breaking the story left Russia in fear for their safety after a Kadyrov adviser called them "enemies of our faith and of our country" in a televised rally in April.

The Russia LGBT Network spokesperson told BuzzFeed News that "negotiations have been difficult" with representatives of countries that could provide safe refuge for survivors of the violence. She would not name the countries the organization was still trying to secure visas from because this could put any Chechens whose applications ultimately succeeded in danger.

The US State Department called on Russian authorities to investigate the allegations after they were first reported, including a statement from the US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, who said, “If true, this violation of human rights cannot be ignored."

"The United States continues to be concerned about the situation in the Republic of Chechnya, where credible reports indicate at least 100 men have been detained on the basis of their sexual orientation," the State Department spokesperson told BuzzFeed News.

Under mounting international pressure, Vladimir Putin agreed earlier this month to back an investigation, but a letter to Israel's Haaretz newspaper last week by the Russian Embassy to Israel suggested that investigation was concluded almost immediately and found "there are no victims of persecution, threats or violence.”

Jane Lytvynenko contributed to this report.

Outside Your Bubble is a BuzzFeed News effort to bring you a diversity of thought and opinion from around the internet. If you don't see your viewpoint represented, contact the curator at bubble@buzzfeed.com. Click here for more on Outside Your Bubble.


Hungarian Leader: Babies Are The Ultimate Weapon In The Fight Against Immigration

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Szilard Koszticsak / AP

BUDAPEST — Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orbán told a US-backed social conservative summit in Budapest on Thursday that encouraging larger families is integral to Europe's triumph in a clash of civilizations.

"Our homeland, our common homeland, Europe, is standing to lose in the population contest of the big civilizations," Orbán said during a program kicking off the four-day World Congress of Families, a global social conservative gathering sponsored by the US-based International Organization for the Family. "It's important to say that it's a national interest to restore natural reproduction. Not one interest among others — but the only one. It's a European interest too. It is the European interest."

The International Organization for the Family is headed by Brian Brown, who became one of the best-known campaigners against marriage equality in the US as head of the National Organization for Marriage. The conference website says this year's theme is "Building Family-Friendly Nations: Making Families Great Again." The local organizing committee for this year's conference is led by Hungary's secretary of state for youth, family and international affairs, and the program features politicians from several European countries. Friday's program includes Ben Harnwell, director of the Dignitatis Humanae Institute which organized Steve Bannon's 2014 Vatican talk, and Nebraska Republican Congressman Jeff Fortenberry.

Orbán is one of the European Union's most outspoken nationalist heads of government, and has recently clashed with other EU leaders over Hungary's policy of detaining asylum seekers, refusing to take its share of asylum seekers under an EU agreement to address the migrant crisis, and steps to shut down a major university and NGOs backed by Hungarian-American philanthropist George Soros. His government has also been at the forefront of imposing social conservative policies, including passing a constitution in 2011 that made Hungary the first country to enact a constitutional ban on marriage equality after joining the EU.

Orbán announced a new package of incentives to encourage Hungarians to have large families, including a program that would forgive 50 percent of student loans to women who have two children and 100 percent to women who have more than two. Orbán said the country's goal is to increase the country's birth rate by 2.1 percent over the next two decades, a policy he suggested other European nations should follow if they want to avoid being outnumbered by the regions now sending migrants to European.

Szilard Koszticsak / AP

"Europe is old, rich and weak. The part of the world that released more and more crowds of people in the recent years is young, poor, and strong," Orbán said, his comments translated from Hungarian into English. Though many migrant routes have been shut down since the height of the refugee crisis in 2016, Orbán said, it was only a temporary reprieve.

"Europe had been given a minute to breathe in the siege to measure the damage, fix the holes and strengthen the walls," Orbán said.

In a speech following Orbán's, Deputy Prime Minister Zsolt Semjén also linked the government's family-promotion strategy to a nationalist struggle much older than the current migrant crisis. Semjén said the government's plan extends incentives to have children to Hungarians living outside Hungary's current borders with the goal of restoring Hungarian majorities in regions of neighboring countries that Hungary lost during World War I. Restoring "greater Hungary" is a dream of Hungarian nationalist factions.

On its website promoting the Budapest conference, the World Congress of Families said the Orbán government is "the hero of pro-family and pro-life leaders from all over the world" and given Hungary "a well-deserved reputation as one of the most family-friendly countries in Europe."

When asked whether the group shared Orbán's belief that the pro-family agenda is part of an anti-immigration agenda, International Organization for Family President Brian Brown told BuzzFeed News, "If you want to keep the differences in each of the countries, they’re going to have to keep their culture. So part of what we support is big families, growing their cultures, having these differences."

He continued, "If you ask me should we just have mass, unfettered immigration, so that there’s no difference from country to country? Of course not. We appreciate those differences."

Thursday's program was focused largely on Hungary and branded as a pre-conference called the Budapest Demographic Forum. The World Congress of Families program formally begins on Friday and includes workshops ranging from "sanctity and dignity of sex and human life" to "family advocacy at international institutions." It will conclude on Sunday with a "Viva Familia" festival and march in central Budapest.



This Anti-LGBT Activist Violated International Law — But He Can't Be Sued In The US

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Boston Globe / Getty Images

A US federal court dismissed a suit on Monday against Scott Lively, the American anti-LGBT activist whose 2009 visit to Uganda helped catalyze a campaign to enact a sweeping new law criminalizing homosexuality.

The case was brought by the organization Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG), which argued Lively committed crimes against humanity for helping craft legislation that included the death penalty for homosexuality when first proposed in 2009. That year, Lively participated in a conference called "Seminar on Exposing the Homosexual Agenda" organized by a Ugandan activist, during which he gave a talk asserting gays recruit vulnerable children and that homosexuality was linked to Naziism and mass murder.

He also met with Ugandan lawmakers on that trip, and advised them via email as they worked on what became the Anti-Homosexuality Act passed in 2013. (It was struck down in 2014 on technical grounds by Uganda's Constitutional Court.) But SMUG first brought its case back in 2012, when there was a renewed effort to pass the bill, arguing that he was participating in a broad campaign to deprive LGBT people of their fundamental rights in Uganda.

In his ruling on Monday, Judge Michael Ponsor of the U.S. District Court in Springfield, Massachusetts, agreed that Lively's actions violated international law. But, he ruled, US courts do not have jurisdiction over crimes committed on foreign soil.

"Anyone reading this memorandum should make no mistake. The question before the court is not whether Defendant's actions in aiding and abetting efforts to demonize, intimidate, and injure LGBTI people in Uganda constitute violations of international law. They do," Ponsor wrote. "The much narrower and more technical question posed by Defendant's motion is whether the limited actions taken by Defendant on American soil in pursuit of his odious campaign are sufficient to give this court jurisdiction over Plaintiff's claims. Since they are not sufficient, summary judgment [to dismiss the case] is appropriate for this, and only this, reason."

Despite the case being dismissed, SMUG and its legal team claimed the ruling as a victory.

"The court’s ruling recognized the dangers resulting from the hatred that Scott Lively and other extremist Christians from the U.S. have exported to my country," said SMUG's Frank Mugisha in a statement issued on Tuesday. "By having a court recognize that persecution of LGBTI people amounts to a crime against humanity, we have already been able to hold Lively to account and reduce his dangerous influence in Uganda.”

SMUG was represented by lawyers from the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights, which reiterated that preliminary rulings in this case broke important legal ground. In 2013, a ruling rejecting a previous motion to dismiss the case clearly stated that the persecution of LGBT people constituted a violation of international human rights law.

CCR's Pamela Spees said in a statement, "No matter what happens next in this case, they have made an important difference in demanding their day in court, achieving the recognition that persecution of LGBTI people is a crime against humanity, and facing down one of their key persecutors armed only with the truth of their experience and moral courage.”


Russia's "Gay Propaganda" Ban Violates International Law, Top Human Rights Court Rules

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Marcos Del Mazo / Getty Images

Europe's top human rights court ruled on Tuesday that Russia's so-called "gay propaganda" ban violates international agreements protecting free speech and prohibiting discrimination.

Some regional governments in Russia adopted versions of this legislation beginning in 2003, and it was enacted nationwide in 2013, setting up a showdown over LGBT rights ahead of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. The law technically prohibits "propaganda of non-traditional sexual relationships to minors," but authorities have also used the rule to justify shutting down LGBT rights protests, and to fine a newspaper for reporting on LGBT issues. The law led to an investigation of Apple after the company rolled out gay-friendly emojis for the iPhone, and has been invoked in bizarre campaigns against everything from a statue of a pair of dolphins, to a video of a tiger befriending a goat.

Tuesday's ruling came in a lawsuit brought by three LGBT rights activists, who were fined under local versions of the ban for protests staged between 2009 and 2012 at venues including a building used by the city administration of St. Petersburg, a children's library in Arkhangelsk, and a school in Ryazan. After losing appeals at Russia's Constitutional Court, they took their case to the European Court of Human Rights. The ECHR enforces a human rights convention ratified not only by all EU member states, but also by Russia and 18 additional countries.

The ECHR ruled that the ban violates international law, and rejected all the Russian government's justifications for the provision.

"Above all, by adopting such laws the Court found that the authorities had reinforced stigma and prejudice and encouraged homophobia, which was incompatible with the values – of equality, pluralism and tolerance – of a democratic society," the ECHR wrote in an opinion agreed to by six of the seven judges who reviewed the case.

The judgment reiterated that "the Court has consistently refused to endorse policies and decisions which embodied a predisposed bias on the part of a heterosexual majority against a homosexual minority," and that the provision conflicted with a "clear European consensus about the "recognition of individuals’ right to openly identify themselves as gay, lesbian or any other sexual minority, and to promote their own rights and freedoms."

The ECHR also dismissed the Russian government's claims that inappropriate material could "convert" children to homosexuality.

"The Court found that the Government had been unable to provide any explanation of the mechanism by which a minor could be enticed into '[a] homosexual lifestyle', let alone science-based evidence that one’s sexual orientation or identity was susceptible to change under external influence," the judges wrote.

The lone Russian judge on the panel, Dmitry Dedov, dissented from the ruling in an opinion that said "positive image of homosexuality adversely affects the development of children and puts them under risk of sexual violence."

The decision orders the Russian government to pay €49,000 to the activists who brought the suit. This includes €20,000 awarded to Nikolay Alekseyev, a controversial LGBT activist who infuriated LGBT rights supporters by defending the Russian government's rights restrictions in the run-up to the 2014 Winter Olympics. More recently, Alekseyev filed suit against the newspaper that uncovered the wave of kidnappings and torture of LGBT people in the Chechnya region, which the newspaper reported were triggered by Alekseyev's application to hold an LGBT rights demonstration in a neighboring region.

The Russian Ministry of Justice vowed to appeal the ruling, which is supposed to bind the courts of Russia under the terms of the European Convention on Human Rights. But Russia has repeatedly thumbed its nose at the ECHR's authority in recent years, including adopting legislation in 2015 allowing for ECHR rulings to be ignored when they contradict the Russian Constitution.

Trump Administration Appoints Anti-Transgender Activist To Gender Equality Post

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Pool / Getty Images

The Trump administration has appointed an activist who led a campaign to restrict bathroom access for transgender students to the office of Gender Equality and Women's Empowerment in the US Agency for International Development.

Bethany Kozma's title is senior adviser for women's empowerment, according to an agency spokesperson. Kozma did not return a message seeking comment for this story.

Kozma held positions in the White House and Department of Homeland Security under President George W. Bush, according to her LinkedIn profile, before dedicating herself full-time to raising her children. In 2016, she launched a campaign to oppose the Obama administration's guidance to public schools that said transgender students have the right to use facilities matching their gender identity; the guidance was withdrawn by the Trump administration in February.

USAID has backed programs in several countries with the goal of supporting LGBT economic empowerment, access to housing and health care, and political participation. The agency also adopted guidelines in late 2016 barring contractors overseas from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity in providing services.

When asked whether Kozma's appointment signaled a change in policy, the agency spokesperson responded, "USAID has not taken any measures regarding the discrimination policy for contractors, as is the case with many other policies. USAID is committed to promoting a work environment that is free from sexual-orientation and gender-identity discrimination, in accordance with existing federal law."

Austin Ruse of the Center for Family and Human Rights, which opposes promoting LGBT and abortion rights in foreign policy, said he did not think the appointment represented a reversal from Obama administration policy. He believes the agency remains filled with LGBT rights supporters who he said "persecuted" people with views like Kozma under Obama, and argued the Trump administration hadn't clearly reversed course since taking office.

"The LGBTs are ruthless street fighters," Ruse said, citing efforts to discredit his organization as a "hate group" after it was included in a delegation to the UN's Commission on the Status of Women. "This administration is no slam dunk for people like me or Bethany Kozma. The Trump administration is filled with squishes on this issue."

"Bethany Kozma is a lovely, sweet woman who just happens to believe that girls with penises just ought not to be showering next to girls without penises," he added.

In July 2016, Kozma published a post at the Daily Signal, a publication of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, calling for a national campaign in opposition to the Obama administration's guidance saying transgender students have the right to use bathrooms matching their gender identity. She called the campaign "United We Stand," and made her case against the policy by repeating the unsubstantiated assertion that policies allowing transgender people to access the bathroom matching their gender identity leads to sexual assault.

"To put it simply, a boy claiming gender confusion must now be allowed in the same shower, bathroom, or locker room with my daughter under the president’s transgender policies," she wrote. "When I learned that predators could abuse these new policies to hurt children in school lockers, shelters, pool showers, or other vulnerable public places like remote bathrooms in national parks, I realized I had to do something."

After President Donald Trump withdrew the guidance in February, Kozma wrote, "The silent majority must no longer be silent. With Trump, we now have a president who is focused on remedying the lawlessness of the prior administration."

Activists Say Chechnya Has Restarted Its Crackdown Against LGBT People

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Mikhail Svetlov / Getty

The detention of LGBT people has resumed in the Russian republic of Chechnya, where dozens of gay men were reportedly tortured or killed by authorities earlier this year, according to the activist group Russia LGBT Network.

The independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta first reported that around 100 people had been kidnapped in the crackdown in April, but Russian activists reported that sources in the region said the detentions had stopped following an international outcry. Igor Kochetkov of the Russia LGBT Network, which is working to evacuate people targeted in the purge from the region, now tells BuzzFeed News the organization has gotten around 10 calls reporting new detentions since Ramadan ended on June 24.

The news of further detentions comes just before President Donald Trump is due to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday at the G20 Summit in Hamburg, Germany. The US State Department issued a statement condemning the detentions, but Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told a congressional committee last month that he did not raise the matter with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov during face-to-face talks.

Putin said he would order a federal investigation of the crackdown after being confronted by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron. But the Russia LGBT Network said in a statement issued in June that officials were derailing the investigation.

Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov and his government have denied that any crackdown has occurred, arguing that Chechnya had no gay men within its borders to begin with.

These Swedish Nazis Trained In Russia Before Bombing A Center For Asylum Seekers

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Mikael Sjöberg for BuzzFeed News


GOTHENBURG, Sweden — By the time Anna Ahlberg arrived at the shelter, the only evidence that remained of the blast was a pool of blood that had melted through the snow in the parking lot.

The makeshift shelter was a rundown concrete motel on a lonely road off the highway running into Gothenburg, Sweden’s second-largest city. It housed people who had come to Sweden seeking asylum, but had been ordered to leave the country. Ahlberg, the director of the local migration agency, rushed to the scene about an hour after the explosion went off on the afternoon of January 5. By the time she arrived, the only person injured had been rushed off in an ambulance. He was a janitor who’d been peppered with shrapnel and had both legs broken in the blast.

Ahlberg spent a long hour sitting in the back of a police car waiting for a bomb squad to clear the building before they’d allow her inside to reassure the roughly 60 asylum seekers on lockdown. She clung to the hope that the explosion was caused by a firework, or by a propane canister that one of the residents had been using to fuel a camp stove in their room.

“I didn’t want to think that it was meant to harm any person, that it was just an accident or bad luck,” Ahlberg told BuzzFeed News during an interview in Gothenburg in March.

Anna Ahlberg

Mikael Sjöberg for BuzzFeed News

But Ahlberg’s worst fears were confirmed a week later when investigators revealed that the people behind the blast were members of Sweden’s largest Nazi organization, the Nordic Resistance Movement.

They had found DNA samples on fragments of a bomb and the bicycle it had been strapped to that matched a 23-year-old named Viktor Melin. Melin was the leader of the group’s Gothenburg cell, and prosecutors ultimately brought charges against him and two other members, 20-year-old Anton Thulin and 50-year-old Jimmy Jonasson. The explosive matched devices used in two other attacks that winter: one that exploded in November outside the gathering spot of a left-wing organization without injuring anyone, and another that was discovered before it could go off at a residence for refugees in late January.

“I hope that we’re not going back to what happened in the ’30s, but you have a lot of signs that we are going back.”

This was not the first time Ahlberg had seen one of her facilities vandalized. Two others in her jurisdiction had been damaged just before they were due to open in 2015. Scores of facilities were torched that year, part of the backlash that met the 160,000 asylum seekers who came to Sweden at the height of the EU refugee crisis. But the incident in the parking lot was the first time Ahlberg had heard of a bombing — and someone was nearly killed.

As the case headed to trial six months later, prosecutors dropped a bombshell. The perpetrators weren’t simply inspired by events at home, according to court filings reviewed by BuzzFeed News. Prosecutors presented evidence that two of the men had traveled to Russia, where they trained with paramilitaries who had fought alongside Russian separatists in Eastern Ukraine.

The evidence prosecutors laid out to the judge could have far-reaching consequences throughout Europe. They showed how a largely forgotten war hundreds of miles away that has claimed thousands of lives had emboldened fringe nationalists deep inside the EU and built networks into Russia.

Security analysts worry that the Ukraine conflict fueled a transformation of right-wing extremist groups across the West.

“There’s a state actor or proxies for a state actor that is supporting these networks, and that’s a game changer,” said Alina Polyakova, director of research on Europe and Eurasia at the Atlantic Council. “I think that is the problem.”

Ukraine's voluntary militia called the Azov Battalion, March 19, 2015.

Marko Djurica / Reuters

Some security analysts believe that the war in Ukraine has transformed nationalism in the West in a way that echoes another conflict that fueled extremism around the globe: the fighting in Iraq and Syria.

Researchers at the Slovak security think tank Globsec have done some of the most extensive research on how the Ukraine crisis drew in foreign fighters. Globsec’s Ján Cingel, who specializes in Eastern and Southern Europe, said that the way the conflict energized Europe’s nationalist fringe is “really similar to what’s happening with the radicalization of young Muslims in Western Europe.”

“For us, in Central Europe … Ukraine is kind of our Syria,” Cingel said. “The only difference is [European nationalists] will not blow themselves up, but they are training in the woods with standard army rifles. This is what is happening — and we don’t know what they’re preparing for.”

The way he and other experts see it, the Ukraine conflict breathed new life into nationalist movements across the West, offering new narratives reframing their fight as part of a global clash of civilizations.

After years of building itself up as a traditionalist anti-Western power, Russia seized Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula in 2014 and backed separatist rebels in Eastern Ukraine after pro-EU forces ousted Ukraine’s pro-Russian president.

The Ukraine conflict breathed new life into nationalist movements across the West.

Russia and its allies ran a global propaganda campaign to frame its intervention as an “anti-imperialist” move against an expansionist EU, which they claimed was hell-bent on spreading same-sex marriage and overturning other local values. An ecosystem of fake news sites and social networks blossomed in nearly every major language, nurtured by Russian outlets like the television channel Russia Today and the website Sputnik. Online alliances were sometimes matched by those in the real world, facilitated in part by people directly encouraged by allies of the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, or the hundreds of foreign fighters who traveled to fight in Ukraine.

Examples range from direct support for nationalist parties like France’s National Front and Italy’s Northern League, to backing for minor internet trolls turned street activists. When large numbers of refugees began arriving in Europe in 2015, Russian-backed outlets attacked the EU and NATO, fanned anti-immigrant sentiments, and fed the conspiracy theories that immigration was encouraged by liberal elites bent on destroying Europe’s indigenous population. In some cases, Russian media has directly bolstered homegrown nationalist outfits, such as in Austria, where a Sputnik reporter is reportedly the head of a right-wing think tank in Vienna.

The problems the Ukraine conflict caused for the West don’t stop with people directly tied to Russia. It created a new set of narratives — that the EU and liberal regimes are betraying their own people and their values — that has emboldened nationalist groups. In this environment, the most extreme factions are growing more militant, while nationalist movements have become major forces in Western democracies for the first time since World War II.

This is deeply alarming to Anna Carlstedt, Sweden’s national coordinator against violent extremism.

“I hope that we’re not going back to what happened in the ’30s, but you have a lot of signs that we are going back,” she said.

Anna Carlstedt, Sweden’s national coordinator against violent extremism.

Mikael Sjöberg for BuzzFeed News

In some cases, this worldview led foreigners to volunteer for the fight in Ukraine. In addition to the more than 15,000 Russian civilians estimated to have volunteered for the conflict, more than 2,000 foreign fighters from 55 other countries also traveled to Ukraine, according to Kacper Rękawek, another Globsec analyst.

The Ukraine crisis taught nationalists “how you can weaponize this ideology,” and it has helped push “the larger tectonic plates of European politics” to the right, said Rękawek, who edited one of the most in-depth examinations discussing foreign fighters in the conflict, a collection titled Not Only Syria.

Security analysts who spoke to BuzzFeed News pointed out that, unlike ISIS, Russian-linked militants have not called for direct attacks on EU states. But, Alex Niculae, a spokesperson for the EU law enforcement agency Europol, said in an email, “training with paramilitary groups is a pathway to further radicalisation.”

The Ukraine crisis taught nationalists “how you can weaponize this ideology.”

The case in Sweden shows just how these new international networks have unpredictable and dangerous consequences. The evidence suggests that Viktor Melin and Anton Thulin sought training in Russia precisely because they believed the current leaders of their Swedish Nazi organization were growing soft.

The Nordic Resistance Movement’s national leaders had been trying since 2015 to distance the group from its roots in skinhead gangs. The group’s new leaders hoped the organization could exploit the growing anti-immigrant backlash to become players in mainstream politics despite officially declaring its affiliation to National Socialism. The head of the group’s “parliamentary wing” became the first member elected to political office, winning a seat on a small town council. They were also buoyed by Donald Trump’s election in the United States, and a march they held in Stockholm to celebrate in November drew 700 people, their largest showing in years.

This transformation appears not to have sat well with Thulin and Melin, according to transcripts of Skype chats prosecutors submitted to the court.

Thulin and Melin in an undated photo.

Swedish Security Police

“I got so damn angry,” Thulin wrote Melin after listening to a podcast featuring the group’s senior members on November 8, 2016. They mocked a comment on the group’s website, where a commenter expressed hope that “National Socialism can overcome the religion of the circumcised — Judaism and Islam … peacefully and democratically.”

“Disgusting,” Melin replied.

Two weeks after this conversation, a picture of the two men standing side by side holding machine guns and wearing fatigues was posted on the Russian social media network VK by the account belonging to the Partizan paramilitary training program in St. Petersburg. The course likely included weapons training and mock military exercises with airsoft guns. Prosecutors also said geolocation data from the men’s phones showed they spent 11 days in Russia — giving them enough time to do the course — and police seized Russian-language notes on weapons and explosives when they raided Melin’s apartment.

Partizan was created by the Russian nationalist Denis Gariev, who organized something called the Imperial Legion, a battalion of volunteers who traveled from Russia to Ukraine to fight with separatists in 2014. It is the paramilitary wing of a group called the Russian Imperial Movement, which says on its website that it aims to reestablish Russia as a “mono-ethnic state.” Though it declares that it wants Putin’s regime replaced by a restored “Russian autocratic monarchy” — preferably headed by an heir to the Romanovs — it is allowed to operate freely in Russia and network abroad.

(Gariev claimed in phone interview with BuzzFeed News that he is not connected to the Russian Imperial Movement, though he is identified as the leader of the group’s paramilitary wing throughout the group’s website and in videos of him online. He also denied training Thulin and Melin, and the photo of them appeared to have been deleted from Partizan’s VK account after a screenshot was captured by prosecutors; all pictures from the month of November appear to have been removed from Partizan’s social media accounts.)

Russian nationalists were not natural bedfellows for these two Swedish Nazis. The Ukrainian side had attracted its own share of foreign fighters, many of whom had ties to Nazi groups. But as the conflict has cooled, the Nordic Resistance Movement discovered common cause with the Russian Imperial Movement.

In September 2015, the Nordic Resistance Movement hosted a Russian Imperial Movement leader named Stanislav Vorobyov for a festival of “outdoor activities and lectures.”

According to a summary of a speech during the weekend that was posted on the Nordic Resistance Movement’s website, Vorobyov was eager to cast the groups as united in the struggle. He even made a donation to the Nordic Resistance Movement.

“He warned that there currently is a full war against the traditional values ​​that characterize Western civilization,” according to the account, and said the Russian Imperial Movement sent its paramilitaries abroad to fight “Jewish oligarchs in Ukraine.” Vorobyov also linked their fight with the anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that Jews were behind Muslim immigration to Europe, saying “the Zionist strategy in the Middle East in the future will be used in Europe to divide and rule over the European nations. He mentioned the Islamic State (IS) as an example of this in the Middle East.”

Court documents reviewed by BuzzFeed News do not reveal exactly how Melin and Thulin learned about the Partizan course, but this visit could have opened the channels that led them there in the fall of 2016. They maintained their innocence when the charges went before a judge, as did the third man charged with the bombings. But the court sentenced them on July 7 to terms ranging from 18 months to eight and a half years in prison.

The Nordic Resistance Movement demonstrates in central Stockholm on Nov. 12, 2016.

Jonathan Nackstrand / AFP / Getty Images

Sweden isn’t the only European country where a court has weighed a case with Russian and Ukrainian ties this month.

A court in Manchester, England, sentenced 41-year-old Benjamin Stimson to five years in prison on July 14 for traveling to Moscow and then on to Eastern Ukraine to join Russian separatists. Stimson faced terrorism charges even though he had not been a combatant but instead drove ambulances.

Stimson is the only Briton to face charges for joining the conflict. But some countries sent considerable numbers to the fight. The largest bloc of fighters — at least 100 — from an EU country came from Germany, according to a paper by a Polish researcher included in the Not Only Syria collection edited by Globsec's Kacper Rękawek. A group of 50 came from France, this research found. The United States sent 25.

These former fighters do not always appear to be a high concern to government agencies. An American who fought with Russian separatists even managed to enlist in the US military after returning home, and spokespeople for the FBI, State Department, Defense Department, and the Department of Homeland Security all said they are not tracking US citizens who joined the conflict.

Initially, a Europol spokesperson said the agency wasn’t counting the number of EU citizens who had fought in Ukraine, but believed the figure to be in the “dozens not hundreds.” When BuzzFeed News shared press reports and Globsec researchers’ findings with the agency, Europol’s Alex Niculae responded the higher figures “could be right.”

An incident in the Balkan nation of Montenegro last fall gave a dramatic illustration of the potential for veterans of the conflict to destabilize other countries in Europe. As Montenegro’s application to join NATO was pending, authorities arrested a group of nationalists from neighboring Serbia on allegations of a plot to storm Parliament on election day, assassinate the prime minister, and install a pro-Russian government.

The mission was to be led by Aleksandar Sindjelic, a Serbian nationalist who had fought in Ukraine. After being caught, he reportedly told prosecutors that he had been recruited for the plot by “two nationalists from Russia" while fighting alongside Russian separatists. Prosecutors have alleged a more direct connection to the Kremlin, stating in February that “Russian state bodies were involved at a certain level,” an accusation that a spokesperson for Putin has dismissed as “absurd.”

Raffaello Pantucci, director of international security studies at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies in London, said that he is not particularly worried about the threat of people radicalized by the Ukraine crisis — for now. He also said he thinks the Russian government would stop short of directly encouraging violence inside an EU nation, which could be considered an act of war.

But, he said, there are signs that ultranationalist groups are forming alliances across Europe in a way never seen before, creating an “an environment where a violent right could emerge.”

“There’s a lot of them — I think they will come back and magically someone will be a problem somewhere,” Pantucci said. “We’ve started seeing indicators that are quite worrying. I think it will undoubtedly surprise us in some kind of atrocity.”

White Supremacist Platforms Are Being Targeted By Hackers And Rejected By Hosts

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Justin Ide / Reuters

Several right-wing extremist websites and accounts that amplify bigotry were apparently hacked or denied service on various platforms in the wake of the race-fueled fatal white supremacist march this weekend in Charlottesville, Virginia.

The Daily Stormer, 4chan's Twitter accounts, and Richard Spencer's website were among those hacked or denied service.

GoDaddy, the world’s largest seller of domain names on the internet, said on Sunday that it would no longer provide service to The Daily Stormer, a popular neo-Nazi and white supremacist website. The company has been criticized for providing services to white supremacist websites despite its terms of service, which ban “morally offensive activity.”

The action was taken after The Daily Stormer posted an offensive article about Heather Heyer, a 32-year-old legal assistant, who was killed after a car drove into a group of protestors following the Unite the Right white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia on Saturday.

“Given that [The Daily Stormer’s] latest article comes on the immediate heels of a violent act, we believe this type of article could incite additional violence, which violates our terms of service,” a GoDaddy spokesperson said. The company clarified that it does not host any Daily Stormer content on its servers but merely provided the domain name.

GoDaddy also appeared to drop the domain privacy protection for the Daily Stormer website, according to one Twitter user.

Shortly after GoDaddy announced its decision, the Daily Stormer website appeared to be under the control of the hacker group Anonymous. On Saturday, the group urged its followers to hack alt-right and white supremacist sites as part of what it called #OpDomesticTerrorism.

The Daily Stormer / Via dailystormer.com

After being rejected by GoDaddy, the Daily Stormer was briefly hosted by Google — until the company also shut the site down.

"The Stormer registered this morning with google domains and were immediately reviewed and suspended for Inciting violence," a source told BuzzFeed News about Google's decision.

The Daily Stormer's YouTube account has also been terminated "due to multiple or severe violations of YouTube's policy prohibiting hate speech," according to a message now displayed on the page.

BuzzFeed News has reached out to The Daily Stormer for comment.

On Monday, a major Anonymous twitter account, @youranonnews, said that they had no confirmation that Anonymous was behind the Daily Stormer hack and suggested that it was a stunt by the website itself to "woo their clueless base."

Earlier, the Twitter account had claimed that the campaign had taken down other white nationalist and alt-right websites, including Richard Spencer's Altright.com. (The site appears to now be online forwarding to new servers.)

On Saturday, Henrik Palmgren of Red Ice, a white supremacist multimedia platform based in Sweden with more than 130,000 subscribers on YouTube, said its website was down and that hackers were threatening to release the names of some 23,000 people with paid subscriptions to the site.

And on Monday, Twitter also appeared to shut down accounts affiliated with /pol — a 4Chan message board that has been linked to extremist beliefs — its creator said. Twitter declined to comment on individual accounts, as is its policy.

Other tech platforms made individual or blanket policy decisions after the events in Charlottesville.

Over the weekend, Facebook removed Unite the Right's event page. Facebook removes event pages when the threat of real world harm and an event’s connections with hate organizations become clear, a Facebook spokesperson told BuzzFeed News.

The company also removed a number of other pages since the weekend, and said the tools it uses to identify and remove hate speech are the same it's using to combat terrorism.

"Our hearts go out to the people affected by the tragic events in Charlottesville," a Facebook spokesperson said. "Facebook does not allow hate speech or praise of terrorist acts or hate crimes, and we are actively removing any posts that glorify the horrendous act committed in Charlottesville.”

The newsletter service MailChimp announced Monday that it has updated its terms of service to ban hateful content.

And by Monday night, WordPress had suspended the site belonging to American Vanguard, one of the white supremacist groups that organized the weekend rallies in Charlottesville.

Wordpress

WordPress's User Guidelines prohibit illegal content and conduct as well as threatening material, including "direct and realistic threats of violence."

Over the last few months, PayPal has banned accounts of several alt-righters, and crowdfunding platforms like GoFundMe, Patreon, and YouCaring have also cut fundraisers for white supremacy-related causes. Last week, Airbnb started deactivating accounts of people it believed were booking units to host gatherings related to the rally.

LINK: Google Joins GoDaddy In Booting Neo-Nazi Site Daily Stormer

LINK: Protests Erupt Nationwide After Deadly White Supremacist Rally In Charlottesville

LINK: This Twitter Account Is Trying To Identify People Who Marched In The Charlottesville White Supremacist Rally

Outside Your Bubble is a BuzzFeed News effort to bring you a diversity of thought and opinion from around the internet. If you don't see your viewpoint represented, contact the curator at bubble@buzzfeed.com. Click here for more on Outside Your Bubble.

German Vice-Chancellor Was Shocked Trump Did Not Condemn Charlottesville Racists

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Hannibal Hanschke / Reuters

BERLIN — The German Vice-Chancellor, Sigmar Gabriel, said he was shocked President Donald Trump failed to condemn the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, adding that it was full of "neo-Nazis, the KKK, and people that helped Trump get elected."

His remarks came during an exclusive interview with BuzzFeed News on Wednesday, during which he also suggested Trump withheld his criticism because "One of his advisors, Steve Bannon, is an actual right-wing extremist."

“I was shocked that the American president did not call out the perpetrators in Charlottesville," Gabriel said. "We can never trivialize those people. You have to call things by their names and that was right-wing terrorism."

Gabriel, who is a member of the left-leaning Social Democratic Party in the coalition government led by Chancellor Angela Merkel, has been attacked over Germany's intake of refugees, which has seen the country welcome more than one million since 2015.

Last year, he was criticized after giving the finger to a group of masked protestors, who reportedly invoked the memory of Gabriel's father, a Nazi sympathizer, calling out, “Your father loved his country, and what do you do? You destroy it.”

"People thought it was inappropriate for a minister," he told BuzzFeed News. "My only mistake was that I didn’t use both hands. You have to make clear there are boundaries."

Asked if the far right could feel empowered by the protests in Charlottesville, Gabriel said, “unfortunately they feel like they are internationally on the rise.”

He said he thought the global movement is not as strong as some nationalists believe, pointing to the fact that nationalist parties failed to win elections this year in France and the Netherlands. Germany will hold elections in September, but its nationalist party, Alternative for Germany, saw its support collapse this year largely because of infighting within the party.

“They are not on the rise, but because of Trump, the far right feels like they’re part of an international right, so to say — which is nonsense because they are narrow-minded nationalists and thus not internationalists,” he said.

But he said he still considered the global movement dangerous. "There is an actual threat that should not be played down,” he said.


A Priest And A Fascist Walk Into An Election

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ROME — A priest and a fascist will face off this fall in an election in Rome that reflects a deep anger about immigration that could propel nationalist parties into the Italian government next year.

On one side is 71-year-old Franco De Donno, a grandfatherly priest who runs a volunteer network and wears rumpled shirts and sandals. On the other is Luca Marsella, a 32-year-old IT consultant with close-cropped brown hair who has built his reputation by confronting immigrant vendors working on the local beach and protesting a run-down building where many immigrants live. His slogans are “Italians first” and “I’ll carry your rage into city hall.”

Seventy-two years after the fall of the fascist regime led by Benito Mussolini, the movement is making a bid to return to national politics. While its impact is mostly felt on the margins, it is fueled by the same anger that is propelling parties into power that want to pull the country out of the eurozone and deport the hundreds of thousands of immigrants who’ve arrived in recent years. The revival has some left-wing lawmakers so concerned that the lower house of the Italian Parliament adopted a bill this week that would strengthen laws against fascist propaganda if approved by the Senate.

Left: Father Franco De Donno works inside a church. Right: Luca Marsella speaks to CasaPound members during a protest in Ostia on Aug. 30.

Fabio Bucciarelli for BuzzFeed News

Marsella represents one of the most dynamic fascist organizations in Italy, known as CasaPound. The group began to form 14 years ago when the leader of a fascist rock band called ZetaZeroAlfa led a group of young people to occupy a vacant government building in the center of Rome, a right-wing answer to the left-wing squats throughout Italy demanding affordable housing. But within a few years, they grew it into a national organization with outposts across Italy, inspiring imitators in neighboring countries and forging ties with Greece’s far-right Golden Dawn party, the Shiite political party and paramilitary group Hezbollah, and the government of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad.

Marsella is running for president of Ostia, a ward within the city of Rome that is home to 230,000 people — a population equal to a midsize Italian city. The district is ripe for the picking, they believe, because scandals have shattered traditional parties, and local rage against immigrants has grown throughout 2016 and 2017, when nearly 300,ooo new immigrants entered Italy by boats from Libya.

An Eritrean refugee sleeps at the camp behind Tiburtina station.

Fabio Bucciarelli for BuzzFeed News

The vote, scheduled for Nov. 5, is a test run for national elections to be held in the spring, where CasaPound believes it has a chance to win enough votes to enter the national Parliament.

Ostia is a proving ground for whether CasaPound can turn its brand of fascism into a successful election strategy, according to a left-wing former member of Rome’s city council, Gianluca Peciola.

“Ostia,” he said, “is the laboratory for CasaPound.”

CasaPound members at the party's national meeting in Latina on Sept. 9, 2017.

Fabio Bucciarelli for BuzzFeed News

CasaPound activists flocked by the thousands last weekend to the group’s annual convention, which was held outside Latina, a town established in 1932 by Mussolini on swampland 70 kilometers from Rome.

Organizers said the city was a symbol of the good that fascism had done for Italy: It had turned a poor country into a modern nation, built roads and infrastructure, and even guaranteed workers time off at the weekends, while developing beachfronts where they could enjoy themselves. Mussolini also made Italy a power in world affairs, invading territories in North Africa, many of which are now on the routes that thousands of immigrants follow to enter Europe.

CasaPound’s leaders downplay the fact that Mussolini’s government also imprisoned his political opponents. And while it did not fully embrace the drive to exterminate the Jews when it allied with Hitler’s Germany in World War II, the country adopted a race law in 1938, and thousands were later arrested and deported to Nazi concentration camps.

“These are the friendliest fascists you’ll ever meet.”

But CasaPound’s members aren’t what you might expect, said Marko Borisavoff, a young activist who had traveled to the conference from Serbia, where he collaborates with CasaPound on a project with Serbian Christians in Kosovo.

“These are the friendliest fascists you’ll ever meet,” he said.

The crowd for the weekend appeared largely male, and a good portion of the participants were teenagers or in their early twenties. Many wore T-shirts with slogans like “A State of Permanent Hostility” or “Fascist Youth Since 1919.” Many were heavily tattooed, sporting nationalist symbols, references to the wide-ranging literature dear to the group, or lyrics by ZeroZetaAlfa. Though the group says it rejects racism and anti-Semitism, one participant sported a large wolfsangel, a Germanic rune used as the symbol of Hitler’s Waffen-SS and by the US’s Aryan Nation, across his calf.

A CasaPound member wearing a fascist T-shirt.

Fabio Bucciarelli for BuzzFeed News

Friday afternoon began with sparsely attended presentations on literary history and talks by politicians — two members of the European Parliament denouncing the EU and “political correctness.” But hundreds more started to arrive as night fell and the bands took the stage. One of the acts performing that night was Bronson, a band created inside CasaPound and best known outside of the group for its single “Fuck EU.”

Reporters were escorted from the compound as musicians took to the stage; CasaPound spokeswoman Mia Grassi said it was because they wanted to preserve the intimacy of the event and had been “betrayed” by a journalist they had allowed behind the scenes before. She said there was nothing strange or aggressive in the dancing, but the rock scene around CasaPound is a large part of what gave the group a reputation for violence. It first made news several years ago for “La cinghiamattanza,” a hazing ritual in which fans flog each other with belts, and YouTube videos show fans charging at each other and using Roman salutes.

CasaPound first took shape in 2003 under the leadership of Gianluca Iannone, a bearish 43-year-old with a shaved head, long beard, and tattoos down both arms, who fronts the band ZetaZeroAlpha. That year, he led a group that coalesced around his music and regulars of a pub called the Cutty Sark to occupy a vacant fascist-era office building in central Rome, which they turned into a cultural center, headquarters, and a squat that still houses more than 80 people.

CasaPound leader Gianluca Iannone during the party's national meeting in Latina.

Fabio Bucciarelli for BuzzFeed News

“Nobody understands the difference between CasaPound and the other movements of the right wing,” Iannone told BuzzFeed News. “CasaPound comes from the roots, from concerts and bars. This makes us a rock movement … We are free.”

CasaPound was born just as the last institutions with direct ties to the fascism of Mussolini were collapsing. Though Italy’s postwar constitution formally banned rebuilding the Fascist Party, Mussolini’s followers started a party under a different name in 1946, and it remained a force in Italian politics for the next half century. It dissolved in the 1990s, when new leaders reinvented it as a mainstream right-wing party that was later absorbed into the party of former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi.

CasaPound wanted to keep alive what they saw as a purer form of fascism, which to them primarily meant a utopian vision of Italian greatness and a radical anti-capitalism. To signal they were about more than politics, they named themselves after a poet, the American Ezra Pound. Drawn to Italy by Mussolini’s regime, Pound was charged with treason after World War II for running a radio broadcast from Italy praising Mussolini and railing against Jews and the international banking system.

Pound’s militant opposition to capitalism — which he termed usury — is the centerpiece of CasaPound’s political vision, and its first proposal was to disconnect homeownership from banking. They designed a logo that incorporated fascist imagery into the shape of a turtle, because it carries its home on its back.

They formally organized as a national movement in 2008 and experimented with political alliances with other parties. For a time, they became ground troops for the Northern League, the nationalist party that has forged alliances with France’s National Front and Russia’s Vladimir Putin. But the Northern League has distanced itself from more extreme factions as polls showed it had enough national support that its leader, Matteo Salvini, has a shot at becoming prime minister as the head of a right-wing coalition.

CasaPound vice president Simone Di Stefano.

Fabio Bucciarelli for BuzzFeed News

So now CasaPound wants to be the uncompromising voice of Italians who want to leave the EU, withdraw from the Euro, and smash the international finance system.

Its candidate for prime minister is Simone Di Stefano, a 41-year-old who attended the convention wearing a blue suit in the late-summer heat, sporting a lapel pin of the EU flag with a red X across it.

The group’s political vision, Di Stefano said, is best encapsulated by the ending of the movie Fight Club, “when the bank buildings explode and the debt of everyone is canceled.”

Di Stefano said he is not an “extremist, but a revolutionary.” And despite the inspiration of Fight Club’s violent end, he added, CasaPound is committed to advancing its vision with “the consent of the governed.”

“Fascism was a dictatorship … but it was not just a dictatorship. It can live in democracy.” The race laws the fascist government enacted were a “doctrinal mistake,” he said, because “the fascist doctrine talks about the unity of all the bodies of the nation.”

But some incidents have given the group a reputation for violence. Ezra Pound’s daughter unsuccessfully sued to stop their using the Pound name in 2011 after a CasaPound sympathizer killed two Senegalese immigrants during a shooting spree in Florence. A longtime CasaPound activist, Alberto Palladino, was sentenced to more than two years in prison after a 2011 attack that put five Democratic Party activists in the hospital.

“Fascism was a dictatorship … but it was not just a dictatorship. It can live in democracy”

CasaPound spokeswoman Mia Grassi said Palladino was falsely accused and the sentence is still under appeal. (Palladino told BuzzFeed News he “wasn't there” when the incident occurred.) She said the group was attacked by anti-fascist activists dozens of times since 2008. The latest incident occurred on Sept. 13, when left-wing activists allegedly assaulted a group of CasaPound activists attempting to enter a meeting on the fate of a reception center for asylum seekers in Rome.

Di Stefano’s response to the immigration crisis is to turn Italy back into an imperial power. He would use Italy’s army to invade Libya, set up a state strong enough to shut down the route to Italy, and create jobs in North Africa by investing in infrastructure. He said he believes Europe could fund this with 200 million euros, and Italy would cover its share by withdrawing from the eurozone and printing extra currency.

“States must not take money from taxes, but they must print money,” he said. “Everybody in Europe wants inflation.”

Those jobs might get some immigrants to leave Italy voluntarily, but he said, “I believe that if you ask one of these African guys if they want to use their hands in order to work and build, I would find very few people willing to work. But we want to create these opportunities, so that when we have to [remove] them by force, they will find a job opportunity.”

CasaPound’s political vision, said Gianluca Iannone, can be summarized as “Italian first — like Trump.”

“It is fascism that created modern Italy … that revived the spirit of the Roman Empire and brought it back into our nation.”

The organization bristles at being linked to other groups on the far right, and Iannone rejects the label of right wing altogether. But, he said, it is inevitably allied to anti-immigrant, anti-EU, and anti-capitalist movements across the Continent.

“We share the same jailer, which in this moment is the European market,” Iannone said. “In Italy, nobody is helping [Italians] anymore.”

CasaPound has also become a touchstone among underground movements across Europe and the Mediterranean. The conference welcomed guests from CasaPound-inspired groups in France and Spain. Last year, CasaPound even welcomed a delegation led by the deputy foreign minister of Syria, whose government the organization has backed since the civil war began in 2011. They also have an organization called Identity Solidarity that has worked with with groups ranging from a white South African community to the Karen in Burma, seeking out alliances with identity groups they argue are being pushed off their ancestral lands.

The candidacy of Luca Marsella in Ostia is a chance to prove that Italians are ready for a fascist solution to local problems and to be a force in the world, Di Stefano said.

“The elections in Ostia are fundamental,” Di Stefano said. A fascist solution is needed, he said, because “it is fascism that created modern Italy … that revived the spirit of the Roman Empire and brought it back into our nation.” Mussolini created “an Italy that was working — which [sounds] completely crazy today.”

The televised debate between De Donno and Marsella.

Fabio Bucciarelli for BuzzFeed News

For Decades, Nazis Have Been Germany's Shame. But Is That About To Change?

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JENA, Germany — Nazi chants rang out in the east German city of Jena last week, as marchers promised to “build a subway” to Auschwitz for political opponents and declared, “Here rules the National Resistance.”

These words were shouted by some participants of a campaign rally in support of Alternative for Germany — AfD for short — a four-year-old nationalist party that is poised to enter parliament as Germany’s third-largest party in elections on Sunday. It would be the first time that a nationalist party has held seats in Germany's legislature, the Bundestag, in more than half a century.

While the AfD is not a Nazi party, its candidates have smashed many of the taboos of German politics established as the country rebuilt its democracy after Adolf Hitler’s defeat. As it rapidly transformed into a major party, the AfD has roused even more extreme factions from the shadows of German politics that push the limits of the country’s strict laws against Nazi propaganda and hate speech, put in place to ensure that that kind of nationalism could never rise again.

AfD supporters at a campaign rally ahead of Germany's elections on Sunday.

Thomas Victor for BuzzFeed News

Flouting the rules of German politics seemed to thrill these AfD marchers on that September evening. That’s why Katharina König-Preuss, an anti-fascist activist from Jena and a member of the legislature for the east German state of Thuringia, had slipped past the heavy police barricades to keep an eye on them. She filmed the clutch of marchers who shouted Nazi chants at the back of the AfD’s small parade and filed a criminal complaint against them later in the week.

The impending election, König-Preuss worries, is the crack in the wall that could allow the horrors of the past to return.

“The politics and the language of the AfD results in stuff that was unsayable years ago [becoming] sayable and perceived as normal again,” König-Preuss told BuzzFeed News as she chain-smoked cigarettes at a youth center in Jena run by her father, a well-known left-wing pastor.

Katharina König-Preuss, an anti-fascist activist and member of the legislature for the east German state of Thuringia.

Thomas Victor for BuzzFeed News

No one expects the AfD to win on Sunday; polling suggests that Chancellor Angela Merkel will easily win enough votes to secure a fourth term as Germany’s leader. The nationalist wave that crested with Britain’s vote to leave the EU and Donald Trump’s victory in the United States didn’t lead to the toppling of mainstream parties across Europe. But once-marginal factions have pushed the debate far to the right in election after election held this year across Europe.

And that’s especially scary to the AfD’s opponents, who see it as a sign that the lessons of Germany’s past could quickly be forgotten.

“This atmosphere results in Nazis thinking they have a resonance from the majority in the population.”

“They took up the feeling of some Germans being afraid. There is [no message] of hope inside the AfD,” König-Preuss said.

All they offer is a promise to “get strong as Germans,” she said, “and that’s something like what Hitler did in 1933 ... and what escalated into the second world war.”

Germany’s democratic system doesn’t have to collapse for this mood to do serious harm, she said.

“This atmosphere results in Nazis thinking they have a resonance from the majority in the population,” she said. “I don’t want to [say that] it’s possible to get a second Holocaust or Shoah. I don’t want it; that’s why I say it will not be — and I hope that people are strong enough to try to resist.”

Alice Weidel (center) leads a march at a campaign rally for the AfD. The banner reads "Freedom instead of Socialism."

Thomas Victor for BuzzFeed News

The headliner of the rally in Jena was Alice Weidel, one of the AfD’s top candidates for the Bundestag and a symbol of everything that was supposed to make the AfD different than the far-right parties that have failed before.

Weidel is a lesbian, raising two children with her partner, Sarah Bossard, a film producer who lives across the border in Switzerland. She has a PhD in business administration and has worked at Goldman Sachs and other investment firms in Germany and in China.

The party was created in 2013 by a group that included a number of economists opposed to Germany bailing out other eurozone countries. But the backlash against the more than 1 million asylum-seekers who entered Germany in 2015 and 2016 propelled the party into a number of state parliaments, and it moved steadily to the right.

“We have the right to be proud of the achievements of German soldiers in two world wars.”

A rift opened inside the party between more radical factions and party leaders who feared they would open the AfD to accusations of extremism. When a group called Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West — known as Pegida for short — began organizing a wave of anti-Muslim demonstrations in 2014, AfD chairwoman Frauke Petry tried to block party members from participating. She was largely ignored.

The AfD selected Weidel as a top candidate for the Bundestag during its April convention as a compromise with more nationalist factions. She shares the lead spot with Alexander Gauland, who — as BuzzFeed Germany first reported earlier this month — recently said, “We have the right to be proud of the achievements of German soldiers in two world wars.”

Weidel is generally more careful than Gauland, but this month the newspaper Welt am Sonntag reported that she wrote a memo in 2013 saying Germany was being “overrun by culturally alien peoples such as Arabs, Sinti and Roma” and denouncing the current government as “pigs [who] are nothing other than marionettes of the victorious powers of the second world war, whose task it is to keep down the German people.”

Alice Weidel gives a speech to the crowd at her campaign rally.

Thomas Victor for BuzzFeed News

Weidel seemed to be forgetting about Hitler during her speech in Jena, saying Merkel has “divided this country and Europe like nobody has before.” She continued, “The AfD is the only chance left to restore law and order in Germany. We want to make policy [in favor of] our country, for a Germany with a future where law and order mean something.”

When asked by BuzzFeed News about the Nazi chants, Weidel said she was not there at the beginning of the march but did not denounce them. Though such slogans violate German laws against hate speech, the instigators were not removed by organizers.

“I was not there, but I am not responsible for those people who tag along at our protests,” Weidel said.

Tommy Frenck's stock of Nazi T-shirts.

Thomas Victor for BuzzFeed News

In July, 6,000 people swamped Themar, a town of 2,900 people at the foot of Thuringia’s mountains, where they forked out 35 euros per ticket for a show billed as “Rock Against Foreign Infiltration.” Video of the night captured fans raising their hands in Hitler salutes; a singer is now under investigation for shouting “Sieg heil” from the stage; and police ultimately brought dozens of other charges ranging from weapons possession to violating laws against Nazi symbolism.

Concerts of what’s known as right rock (rechtsrock) have generally been small and secretive affairs. But this was the largest neo-Nazi spectacle in more than a decade, and it was made possible by a local AfD politician named Bodo Dressel. He’s the mayor of a nearby village and the owner of the land where the concert took place. He leased it to a man named Tommy Frenck, who runs a shop selling neo-Nazi gear and a bar that hosts right-wing rock bands.

With Dressel’s help, and the shifting political climate, organizers felt the time was right to put on a major festival. Dressel left the AfD after his arrangement with Frenck caused a scandal, but the incident illustrates the forces that the AfD has helped empower, said König-Preuss, the left-wing Thuringia state legislator.

Tommy Frenck

Thomas Victor for BuzzFeed News

“This atmosphere that we have right now leads to people like Tommy Frenck feeling like, ‘Oh yeah, I can just do that — I can organize a concert and … neo-Nazis will show up from all over Europe,” König-Preuss said. “And the ground where that happened didn’t come out of nowhere, but from a former AfD.”

Frenck is a beefy 30-year-old who has the word “Aryan” tattooed across his throat. He’s been active in right-wing politics since high school, when he joined the National Democratic Party (NPD), which Germany’s authorities have twice tried to ban for violating laws against Nazism.

Frenck managed to get elected to a regional council in 2009, but was a relatively minor figure in neo-Nazi circles until recently. He made himself into a national player by distributing right-wing memes. Not online — an alt-right–style internet universe hasn’t really caught on in Germany — but printed on T-shirts, stickers, and home decor. His store, Druck18, sells paraphernalia that skirts Germany’s laws against Nazi propaganda, including stickers with slogans like “I HTLR” and throw pillows with the faces of Nazi generals on them. Business is so good, he said, that he’s thinking about opening franchises in other parts of the country.

The store sells paraphernalia that skirts Germany’s laws against Nazi propaganda, including stickers with slogans like “I ❤️ HTLR” and throw pillows with the faces of Nazi generals on them.

Frenck left the NPD to become an independent in 2009, and the party has since collapsed almost entirely. He said the AfD is not a perfect replacement — it’s “too liberal” on some questions, even immigration, he said — but there are factions inside the party that give him hope.

“Next weekend I give my choice to the AfD,” he told BuzzFeed News.

He said he was ambivalent about this, in part because the AfD are “distancing themselves from anyone who’s been called a Nazi.” He likes the leader of the AfD in Thuringia, Björn Höcke, who was threatened with expulsion from the party after denouncing the Holocaust memorial in Berlin but has managed to hang on to his position. (Party leaders also accuse him of writing under a pseudonym for the NPD, a charge he denies.)

“We have to see which wing of the party will win,” Frenck said.

Frenck’s partner in organizing the concerts is Patrick Schröder, who runs a clothing company called Ansgar Aryan out of a small storefront in a nearby ski town, next door to a candle shop and across the street from a florist.

He also entered politics through the NPD and still plans to vote for them out of a sense of loyalty. But, he said, it makes sense for younger right-rock fans who want to enter politics to go to the AfD today. The party is shifting politics “in our direction,” he said.

Patrick Schröder

Thomas Victor for BuzzFeed News

The specter of an emboldened Nazi movement is especially ominous in Thuringia, where right-wing violence still feels like a present threat.

On the same day that Weidel was campaigning in Jena, a German court held a hearing in a case against a member of a right-wing terrorist group formed in the city.

The group was called the National Socialist Underground, and in 2000 its members began an eight-year spree in which they killed eight Turkish immigrants and two others; the group also wounded 22 people with a bomb set off in a Turkish neighborhood in Cologne in 2004. An underground network of sympathizers helped the group avoid police until 2011, including one supporter named André Eminger who is accused of renting apartments for them. Eminger reportedly attended Frenck’s concert in July.

“I can organize a concert and … neo-Nazis will show up from all over Europe.”

While there’s no evidence that an overtly neo-Nazi party could make a comeback in Germany, polling shows a surprisingly large minority receptive to anti-democratic and anti-immigrant campaign messages.

Nearly a quarter of Germans in a 2016 survey said they believed “What Germany needs now is a single strong party that embodies the national community as a whole,” and the number was much higher in some places — 60% of people surveyed in the east German state of Saxony agreed with that sentiment. One in three people surveyed nationwide said the growing number of Muslims makes them feel “like a stranger in my own country.”

This has contributed to a surge in what are known as “political crimes,” ranging from spreading propaganda for unconstitutional organizations to violent attacks targeting immigrants. Police reported 23,555 right-wing crimes in 2016, the highest number since the interior ministry began collecting data in 2001. (That’s seven times as many as “foreigners’ political crimes,” a category that includes Islamists.)

The challenge now, Frenck said, is for the AfD and other elements on the right to stop fearing being called Nazis and start working together.

“The problem is, everyone is arguing with each other and is divided,” Frenck said. “The Nazis back then [in the 1930s], they didn’t reinvent the [German monarchy]. They brought in a new flag, new uniforms — all new! They didn’t just orient themselves at the past; they created something new. That’s the same [as] what we need to do.”

Lutz Urbanczyk-Bosse, an AfD member from Berlin who spoke at the Enschede rally.

Mascha Joustra for BuzzFeed News

Lawmakers Want To Make It Even Harder To Be Gay In Egypt

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Stringer / Reuters

A group of lawmakers in Egypt presented legislation this week that would further criminalize homosexuality in Egypt, reported the news site Masrawy, including making it a crime to “advertise gay gatherings” on social media.

The proposed legislation, which was announced with the backing of 15 members of the Egyptian parliament, would now explicitly make “perverted sexual relations” between people of the same sex punishable by up to five years in prison. “Inciting” or “hosting” same-sex encounters would also carry a sentence of up to three years under the proposal, as would attending a “gay party” or carrying “any sign or code for homosexuals.”

The legislation was reportedly presented to the Speaker of the Egyptian House by MP Riad Abdel Sattar on Wednesday ahead of his formally introducing it for consideration in Parliament.

The proposal follows a fresh wave of arrests that began in late September. The crackdown started as a response to an image posted on Facebook of a group holding a rainbow flag during a concert by Mashrou’ Leila, a Lebanese band whose lead singer is gay.

More than 30 people were reportedly arrested within the following week, and human rights activists estimate several dozen more have also been detained.

Egyptian police have aggressively pursued LGBT people since President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi took power in 2013. Hundreds have been arrested, many entrapped on social media by police posing as another LGBT person interested in a date.

These arrests happen despite the fact that current law doesn’t specifically criminalize same-sex intercourse in Egypt. Instead, LGBT people have been prosecuted for serial “debauchery,” often on the basis of anal exams that Egyptian authorities falsely believe can prove whether someone has had repeated anal sex.

Richard Spencer Canceled His Trip To Europe Because He's Worried They Might Not Let Him In

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Joe Raedle / Getty Images

White nationalist Richard Spencer announced Monday that he was canceling visits to Sweden and Poland in November, fearing he might be denied entry at the border and banned from the 26-country common immigration area known as the Schengen Zone.

"I don’t think right now is the best time to risk another Schengen ban for me," Spencer told BuzzFeed News. Spencer was kicked out of another Schengen country, Hungary, when he tried to participate in a conference there in 2014.

The Polish foreign ministry formally protested Spencer's plan to attend a conference of nationalists on Nov. 10 that also includes people affiliated with the Ukranian political party affiliated with the Azov Battalion, which has neo-Nazi ties.

Richard Spencer, who helped popularize the term alt-right, was one of the most visible alt-right activists during the white nationalist protests in Charlottesville in August, during which participants chanted an old Nazi slogan, "Blood and Soil," and "Jews will not replace us." Several universities in the US have since prevented Spencer from speaking on their campuses, and student protesters drowned him out when he attempted to give a speech at the University of Florida on Sept. 19.

The Polish foreign ministry had not announced that Spencer would be denied entry into the country, but Spencer told BuzzFeed News, "That’s what they were threatening."

Spencer also canceled an appearance on Nov. 4 at a conference in Sweden called Identitarian Ideas, organized by a partner organization of his AltRight.com site, Arktos Publishing. Spencer said Arktos's CEO, Daniel Friberg had been facing pressure in Sweden and he was worried he might face problems at the border if he tried to fly into the country.

"Daniel was hearing similar things from the Swedish government as in Poland," Spencer said.

Friberg confirmed Spencer's account to BuzzFeed News. In a statement posted on Arktos's website, he said the group was also canceling the conference because of "a wide-spread campaign to prevent us from hiring venues in the Stockholm area."

"The fact that our opponents fear what we have to say that they stoop to threats of travel bans and extensive sabotage to prevent peaceful conferences is a testament to the power of our message and proves that the alt-right are indeed the only true opposition to the globalist agenda," the statement said.

"I’ll be back, but just not right this moment," Spencer said. "There are ways that we can do things that don’t create this kind of dispute. ... Daniel and I actually have a plan, but we just need a bit of time."


Here’s How ISIS Could Be Charged At The International Criminal Court

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Str / AP

Three organizations announced a petition on Wednesday asking the International Criminal Court (ICC) to bring charges against ISIS for persecuting the people under its control on the basis of gender — including the public execution of men alleged to be gay.

The petition is being submitted to the ICC by the New York-based women’s rights group Madre, the Organization for Women’s Freedom in Iraq (OWFI), and City University of New York School of Law. It will be formally presented Wednesday afternoon at an event with ICC Chief Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda.

The ICC is not obligated to take up these charges, but if Bensouda were to convinced to do so, they would be the first criminal cases for LGBT persecution before an international tribunal. The ICC prosecutor has been considering bringing charges against ISIS fighters for a wide range of crimes, but not yet moved forward because neither Syria nor Iraq are signatories to the treaty that gives the court jurisdiction. In 2015, Bensouda said she might consider bringing charges against foreign fighters who joined ISIS from countries that are party to the treaty, however, including the UK, Germany, Belgium, and Jordan.

The case laid out against ISIS in the petition is based in part on extensive evidence compiled by activists working on the ground who had contacts inside the territory ISIS controlled until July 2017.

The more than 300 pages of documentation that supports the petition includes accounts of more than 60 people accused of being LGBT who were raped, set on fire, beheaded, thrown off buildings, or otherwise tortured and publicly executed over a 14-month period in and around Mosul. Accounts of executions of LGBT people have been posted on ISIS media accounts as it captured territory in Syria and Iraq, suggesting this is just a small fraction of the victims of LGBT persecution by ISIS.

ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda

Afp / AFP / Getty Images

Lisa Davis, Madre’s Human Rights Advocacy Director and CUNY Law professor, told BuzzFeed News that such prosecutions could be precedent setting because “this is the first time in history we have a robust documentation of crimes committed against LGBT people in an armed conflict.”

The petition argues that the LGBT cases should be included as part of a much broader set of charges against ISIS for persecution on the basis of gender.

In short, the petition argues, the ISIS regime used torture and execution to brutally force people into narrow gender roles. Along with targeting people perceived to be gay, this ranged from executing women in professional roles to threatening to behead men who did not grow robust beards.

Such a range of gender-based persecution has never been prosecuted in the ICC, Davis said, adding that she hoped such a case could help expand the way the international community understands gender-based crimes. International tribunals have generally considered gender-based violence in the context of rape and other sexual crimes, not in terms of a broad regime regulating gender expression.

“It’s reframing how we see ‘gender’,” Davis said. Before, “we’d have these waves of hate crimes that happen that we don’t recognize as hate crimes. Now we’d have a name for it.”

Leisl Gerntholtz, executive director of the women’s rights division at Human Rights Watch, said that is exactly what could pose a challenge to charges like this.

“The court doesn’t have a great track record on gender or sexual-based crimes,” Gerntholtz said. “It has almost no track record at all on using the persecution on the basis of gender to protect the rights of LGBT people in conflict.”

That’s in part, she added, because a “number of countries that didn’t want to see LGBT concerns be included in [the ICC’s jurisdiction], and that’s one of the challenges for this case.”

Some nations fiercely opposed language in the treaty that created the ICC in 1998, known as the Rome Statute, precisely because they worried it could lead to legal protections for LGBT people. The Rome Statute was the first international criminal law treaty that used the word “gender” rather than “sex,” a change in language that states including the Vatican and members of the Organization for Islamic Cooperation continue to contest in international agreements partly for the same reason.

But the office of the ICC prosecutor signaled that it is ready to consider such charges. In a 2014 position paper that said it would consider sexual orientation as one factor in “multiple forms of discrimination and social inequalities,” adding that it would “take into account the evolution of internationally recognised human rights.”

You can read the full petition here:


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