LGBTQ Ukrainians captured a group of AWOL Russian soldiers hiding in a basement in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv.
LGBTQ activist Viktor Pylypenko
said that the soldiers didn’t realize the basement they had chosen to hunker down in was also the office of a local LGBTQ group.
Related: Chechen leader behind gay torture & execution campaign killed in Ukraine
Pylypenko, a veteran who rejoined the army last week to aid in Ukrainian defense from Russia, said the LGBTQ group members both beat and captured the soldiers.
“We are confronting a tyrannical, homophobic enemy,” Pylypenko said.
Since Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion, LGBTQ Ukrainians have been
terrified for their future.
While Ukraine does not fully recognize LGBTQ rights – marriage equality is not legal, for example – the country has come a lot farther than Russia, where LGBTQ people continue to be actively persecuted.
Marriage equality is not legal in Russia, nor do anti-discrimination protections exist for LGBTQ people. The country is also infamous for its “gay propaganda” law, which was signed Putin in June 2013 and prohibits the distribution/marketing of any LGBTQ content deemed “harmful” to minors.
And in Chechnya, a Russian republic, head of state Ramzan Kadyrov has spent years overseeing a horrific “purge” of LGBTQ people, during which gay men and transgender people have been tortured and murdered at the hands of authorities.
The U.S. has also revealed that Russia has a “kill list” of Ukrainians it plans to murder or detain. The list includes several LGBTQ people.
But as is the case with so many Ukrainian citizens right now, LGBTQ Ukrainians are stepping up to fight.
Veronika Limina, for example, works for an NGO that promotes LGBTQ rights in the military and has been running a camp to teach LGBTQ volunteer cadets the skills they need to fight.
“I am angry,”
she told The Daily Beast. “We will kill Putin.”
“Many LGBT+ activists, who have an experience of participation in
the Euromaidan events, are joining the Territorial Defense forces or holding training in paramedical help,” she added. “LGBT+ people who served in the army and military volunteers are ready to come back to their service. We are doing the same as the rest of the nation.”