LGBT rights in occupied territories of Ukraine from 2014 to 2022 Donbas Contrary to perceptions of it being a conservative region, the
Donbas in
eastern Ukraine has traditionally been the most LGBT-supportive region in the country. This situation changed dramatically after the beginning of the
war in Donbas, when pro-Russian militias seized vast areas in
Luhansk Oblast and
Donetsk Oblast. Homophobia occupied an important place in the rhetoric of the groups. In the occupied territories, systemic persecution and targeted killings of LGBTQ people began. The constitution of the
Donetsk People's Republic (DPR) included a ban on same-sex unions. In 2015, both the DPR and the
Luhansk People's Republic (LPR) passed discriminatory "gay propaganda" laws along the lines of Russia's. Local LGBTQ organizations were quickly destroyed, and many LGBTQ people were forced to flee the Donbas. In August 2015, a blogger called the police office of the LPR, saying he wanted to file a report about a so-called "heterosexual
brothel" in
Luhansk city. The LPR representative replied that heterosexuality was prohibited in the republic and said he had sent a squad to the address - seemingly confusing
heterosexuality (attraction to the opposite sex or gender) with
homosexuality (attraction to the same sex or gender).
Crimea Since the times of the
Soviet Union, when
sodomy was a criminal offense, the
Simeiz resort in
Crimea has been a popular destination for LGBTQ tourism. There were LGBT-friendly bars in
Sevastopol, and LGBTQ activists and organizations were included in Crimean public society. After
Russia's annexation of Crimea, discriminatory Russian laws came into effect in the region. Violence against LGBTQ people became more frequent, including by Russian security forces. The human rights organization
Memorial documented cases in which police officers used torture to force LGBT Crimeans, as well as other vulnerable groups, to hand over their property and real estate. Many of the approximately 10,000 LGBTQ people in Crimea were forced to flee the region.
Ukraine , American former journalist who has worked as a spokesperson for Ukraine's
Territorial Defense Forces In Ukrainian society, there has been a "sharp increase in support for the country’s LGBT community". In particular, support for same-sex
civil partnerships has grown. Due to the closure of borders for men 18–60 years old in Ukraine, Ukrainian
transgender women who had not completed their legal transition and still retained the "male" gender marker in their documents could not leave the country. As of 2023, there are no same-sex civil partnerships in Ukraine. As a consequence, "if a queer [Ukrainian] soldier is injured or killed in action, the lack of legal recognition of same-sex partnerships means that their significant other will not be afforded the right to make medical decisions on their behalf, bury them, or collect any state compensation." Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said that he supports greater equality in response to petitions calling for legislation about same-sex marriage, but has said that such a move would require an amendment to the
Ukrainian constitution, which "cannot be changed during a state of war or emergency." ==See also==