A political ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin is
taking legal action against American pop star Lady Gaga for promoting gay
rights to minors during a concert on Sunday.
Vitaly Milonov, a member of the ruling United Russia party
in the St Petersburg assembly and the architect of a city law that bans gay
"propaganda", accused the singer of breaking the law at the beginning
of her show.
"We saw that in addition to music, songs and such,
there were direct calls for 12-year-old citizens to support the LGBT (lesbian,
gay, bisexual and transgender) community," Milonov said, adding that he
would file a complaint to prosecutors over the singer's actions.
He had unsuccessfully called on authorities to bar people
under 18 from attending Lady Gaga's show.
A vocal defender of lesbian and gay rights, Lady Gaga said
offstage that her managers had received a call threatening her with arrest or a
$50,000 fine if she spoke in support of the LGBT community, according to media
reports.
The lower house of parliament is expected to consider
legislation similar to the St Petersburg law later this month.
It is not clear whether it will pass. Prime Minister Dmitry
Medvedev, now the head of United Russia, said in an interview last week that
"not all human relationships are subject to legal regulation".
Lady Gaga took Medvedev's comments as a sign of support for
her show and thanked him on her Twitter microblog.
"Thank You Prime Minister Medvedev for not standing by
your party's anti gay propaganda law & instead supporting my show+fans all
over Russia," she said in her tweet.
Lady Gaga has a concert in Moscow on Wednesday.
Last month, a St Petersburg court rejected a $10 million
compensation claim against U.S. pop star Madonna initiated by Milonov and a
group of anti-gay activists who accused her of hurting their feelings by
promoting homosexuality at a concert in the city in August.
Culled from Reuters
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