Two Gay Men Returned to Chechnya Face ‘Mortal Danger,’ Rights Group Says

Two gay men seized near Moscow and sent back to their native Chechnya, a region accused of brutal persecution against homosexuality, face “mortal danger,” a rights group said Saturday. The LGBT Network rights group helped the two Chechen men, Salekh Magamadov and Ismail Isayev, flee Muslim-majority Chechnya for Nizhny Novgorod east of Moscow in June last year after they were reportedly tortured by Chechen special police. The two men were detained for unknown reasons in Nizhny Novgorod on Thursday and have been sent back to the North Caucasus region, the group said in a statement. LGBT Network spokesman Tim Bestsvet said the men were detained by the Federal Security Service (FSB) domestic intelligence agency and had arrived at a police station in Chechen town of Gudermes on Saturday. “They are tired and frightened,” he told AFP Saturday. “All this time they were being pressured to refuse a lawyer,” Bestsvet said, adding that a lawyer with the LGBT Network was in Gudermes trying to get access to the men. “There have been cases when relatives brought back to Chechnya people that we had evacuated and then these people would die or, we can say, were probably murdered,” Bestsvet said, adding that Magamadov and Isayev faced “mortal danger.” The interior ministry’s Chechnya branch and the FSB were not immediately available for comment Saturday. While Magamadov is older than 18, Bestsvet said that because Isayev is 17 he can only refuse legal representation via his parents.  He added that Isayev’s father was brought to the police station Saturday and was facing pressure to refuse to let his son have an attorney. Magamadov and Isayev were arrested and tortured by Chechen special police in April 2020, Bestsvet said, officially for running an opposition Telegram channel, but “initially because of their sexual orientation.” The two men later recorded a video apology in which they said “they weren’t men,” before the LGBT Network helped them flee, Bestsvet said. They were also forced under torture to learn passages of the Quran as well as Russian and Chechen anthems, he added. Russia’s volatile republic of Chechnya has been under fire over alleged gay persecution since 2017, when gay men said they were tortured by law enforcement agencies. In 2019, the LGBT Network reported a second wave of persecution against gay people in the majority Muslim region, including two killings.  Chechen officials regularly dismiss the reports and strongman chief Ramzan Kadyrov claims the region’s population is exclusively heterosexual. Kadyrov, 36, who has ruled Chechnya with an iron grip since 2007 and oversaw vast redevelopment and Islamization in the war-torn region, is loathed by rights campaigners who accuse him of ordering kidnappings and extrajudicial killings. 

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