The mayor of Sochi, Russia, which in less than two weeks will host the biggest international sporting event in existence, has no concern that a controversial law banning the promotion of “nontraditional” sexual relationships among minors unfairly targets the city’s gay community.
Why?
Because according to him, the city has no gay people.
“We do not have them in our city,” said Sochi Mayor Anatoly Pakhomov in an interview with the BBC that aired Monday.
Pakhomov was answering a question about whether gay people would have to hide their sexuality at the 2014 Winter Games, which begin on Feb. 7. Under the law’s vaguely-worded terms, any Russian citizen found to be peddling gay “propaganda” to children under 18 could have to pay a fine, while any foreigner who does so faces detention or possible deportation. But because the law does not make clear what qualifies as so-called gay “propaganda,” LGBT advocates fear anyone who is openly gay could be in violation of law’s proscription.
“No, we just say that it is your business, it’s your life,” said Pakhomov of Russian views on homosexuality. “But it’s not accepted here in the Caucasus where we live.”
The mayor went on to admit that he wasn’t “sure” whether Sochi had any gay people, but said that if there were, “I don’t bloody know them.”









