QUOTE(TRL @ Mar 21 2007, 07:09 PM)

Has anybody here been to Moscow lately? My last trip was October of 1990. It was still the USSR, but three months before the collapse.
Anyway, about the upcoming Gay Day Parade in Moscow, I predict it will be as it was last year, with a herd of religious and anti-gay hate mongers unleashed upon the event.
It will be UGLY.
TRL
Moscow, hell most of Russia these days, is ugly.
It is a land of huge contrasts between the (mostly criminal) haves, and the have nots.
Crime is institutionalised, and the government is totalitarian in the worst sense.
The police are a corrupt joke. Payoffs are the norm just for driving through 'checkpoints'.
Attempts by the political opposition - on the right and left who are strangly united in opposition to the govt - to rally even minor support in the past few months have been brutally suppressed. Most important political opposition leaders are in jail. Garry Kasparov has actually emerged as one of the gov'ts largest opposition leaders who is still at large. Political rally's and marches have been BRUTALLY put down with mass arrests of even spectators and foreign press.
If you go near a march in Moscow these days the very least you can expect is a beating and time in jail. IF you yell loudly enough that you are an American, and demand to speak to the American Consul, I am told you may be released to them fairly quickly and just asked to leave the country.
We have a lot of business there, but I don't travel there - no smart businessman does - without bodyguards and a driver; and I never go anywhere near the gay scene there.
On the other hand business is BOOMING over the past few years, and prices in Moscow are some of the highest in the world - think prices in Tokyo. The 'nightlife ' is also some of the wildest, most vibrant and decadent party scenes in Europe. or in the world - think Berlin these days - but there is no such thing as a 'safe' gay hangout.
The elite (read incredibly expensive - they have already paid off the police - but you will still probably be shook down after leaving) gay clubs are open at all times. Cheaper gay discos are full with a mixed gay and straight teenage- 20's crowd. Cruising places known as 'pleshkas' swarm from sunsett till dawn. None of them are 'safe'. It is EXPECTED that you will be shaken down by the cops, the criminals, the gangs, or all three. Yet the gay scene still survives, and is even booming, even if it is mostly 'underground'.
Public attitude to such meeting places varies from feigned ignorance to open contempt. Gay bashing, called "remont" ("repair") in Russian, is common. The "militia" ("police") are very reluctant to meddle with gays and if you happen to be a victim of violence or robbery you are most likely to be denied official protection. Most people are poor and consider all foreigners to be rich and easy prey.
I do not recommend going without a knowledgable guide.
I would not recommend going to Moscow for a political march unless you want to be a martyr.
Rob