<p>Russian lawmakers have submitted a draft bill to parliament that would ban legal or surgical sex changes, as Moscow sharpens its conservative turn during the Ukraine offensive.</p>.<p>Russia has for years been an inhospitable environment for anyone whose views differ from the hard-line interpretation of "family values" promoted by the Kremlin and the Orthodox church.</p>.<p>Pressure had been building on LGBTQ activists in recent years but has grown still more intense as troops fight in Ukraine.</p>.<p>The conflict is increasingly portrayed in Russia as an existential fight against the "decadent" West.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/outcry-as-ugandas-anti-gay-bill-signed-into-law-1223048.html" target="_blank">Outcry as Uganda's anti-gay bill signed into law</a></strong></p>.<p>The bill -- submitted on Tuesday -- would prohibit "medical interventions aimed at changing the sex of a person", according to the website of the Duma, the lower house of the Russian parliament.</p>.<p>This would include "the formation of a person's primary and (or) secondary sexual characteristics."</p>.<p>It says the government will determine a list of allowed interventions "related to the treatment of congenital physiological anomalies in children."</p>.<p>The bill also de-facto bans legal transitions, since it prohibits "state registration of sex reassignment without surgery."</p>.<p>Around 400 members of parliament, headed by speaker Vyacheslav Volodin, supported the legislation.</p>.<p>The bill is the latest in a series of conservative proposals put forward since the Kremlin launched its invasion of Ukraine last year.</p>.<p>Last Autumn, Russia toughened a so-called "gay propaganda" law, in effect banning positive references to LGBTQ relationships.</p>.<p>Back then senior lawmaker Alexander Khinshtein lauded the law, saying the Ukraine military operation "takes place not only on the battlefields, but also in the minds of people."</p>.<p>Some lawmakers also called on officially declaring "radical feminism" -- a term increasingly used against political opponents -- into an extremist, banned ideology.</p>.<p>In a ranking of 49 European countries, the Rainbow Europe organisation ranked Russia as third from the bottom in terms of tolerance of LGBTQ people.</p>
<p>Russian lawmakers have submitted a draft bill to parliament that would ban legal or surgical sex changes, as Moscow sharpens its conservative turn during the Ukraine offensive.</p>.<p>Russia has for years been an inhospitable environment for anyone whose views differ from the hard-line interpretation of "family values" promoted by the Kremlin and the Orthodox church.</p>.<p>Pressure had been building on LGBTQ activists in recent years but has grown still more intense as troops fight in Ukraine.</p>.<p>The conflict is increasingly portrayed in Russia as an existential fight against the "decadent" West.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/outcry-as-ugandas-anti-gay-bill-signed-into-law-1223048.html" target="_blank">Outcry as Uganda's anti-gay bill signed into law</a></strong></p>.<p>The bill -- submitted on Tuesday -- would prohibit "medical interventions aimed at changing the sex of a person", according to the website of the Duma, the lower house of the Russian parliament.</p>.<p>This would include "the formation of a person's primary and (or) secondary sexual characteristics."</p>.<p>It says the government will determine a list of allowed interventions "related to the treatment of congenital physiological anomalies in children."</p>.<p>The bill also de-facto bans legal transitions, since it prohibits "state registration of sex reassignment without surgery."</p>.<p>Around 400 members of parliament, headed by speaker Vyacheslav Volodin, supported the legislation.</p>.<p>The bill is the latest in a series of conservative proposals put forward since the Kremlin launched its invasion of Ukraine last year.</p>.<p>Last Autumn, Russia toughened a so-called "gay propaganda" law, in effect banning positive references to LGBTQ relationships.</p>.<p>Back then senior lawmaker Alexander Khinshtein lauded the law, saying the Ukraine military operation "takes place not only on the battlefields, but also in the minds of people."</p>.<p>Some lawmakers also called on officially declaring "radical feminism" -- a term increasingly used against political opponents -- into an extremist, banned ideology.</p>.<p>In a ranking of 49 European countries, the Rainbow Europe organisation ranked Russia as third from the bottom in terms of tolerance of LGBTQ people.</p>