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US move to legalise gay marriage triggers debate in Russia

Moscow

The US Supreme Court's move to legalise gay marriages triggered heated debate in Russia on Sunday, with one MP saying Facebook should be blocked while a senator urged the adoption of the US army's "don't ask, don't tell" policy.

In a show of support for the US Supreme Court's historic decision, Facebook introduced a function allowing users to decorate their profiles with the rainbow flag of the gay rights movement and many Russians added a rainbow filter to their photos.

Their opponents immediately came up with a counter move, superimposing a Russian tri-colour against their pictures. Homophobia remains widespread in the country, and almost no public figures have come out as gay.

Since coming to the Kremlin for a third term in 2012, President Vladimir Putin has forcefully promoted traditional values, seeking to paint Russia as an antithesis to the West.

In 2013, he signed off on a hugely controversial law banning the promotion or display of homosexuality in front of minors. The US Supreme Court's ruling on same-sex marriage on Friday ignited fresh debate in Russia which is locked in confrontation with the West over Ukraine.

Lawmaker Vitaly Milonov said Facebook should be shut down in Russia while senator Konstantin Dobrynin said it is Milonov who should be banned. Dobrynin, deputy head of constitutional legislation committee in the parliament's upper house, said it was necessary to reduce the level of aggression in society towards gays.

"The most important thing is to immediately reduce the intensity of aggression towards sexual minorities," he wrote in a blog post. He said there should be no place in politics for "quasi- politicians" speculating on the fight against gays.

"Because it them -- and not gays -- who are a direct and overt threat to Russia's security and the state should fight them." He said Russia should legalise the US army's "don't ask, don't tell policy as a compromise measure to reconcile conservative and liberal Russians.

"Don't ask, don't tell" was the US policy on military service by gays and lesbians. The stipulation was repealed in 2011.