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A Thai man and his girlfriend are shopping at a furniture store. She sees pillows on sale and gets excited, her feminine voice falls suddenly to a deep male-like tone. Shocked and horrified, her boyfriend runs off.
The advertisement by Ikea, the world's biggest furniture retailer, has incensed a Thai transgender group which called it "negative and stereotypical" and "a gross violation of human rights" in an open letter to the Swedish retail giant.
The 20-second commercial shown on YouTube (http://link.reuters.com/gyz45t) and on Bangkok's trains in December and January entitled Luem Aeb (Forget To Keep Hidden), was disrespectful to transsexuals, according to the Thai Transgender Alliance, which demanded an explanation from IKEA.
Transgenders, or ladyboys as they are often referred to, are widely accepted in Thailand and are commonplace in the fashion, beauty and entertainment industries, but are not officially recognised as women.
A marketing official at Ikea Thailand, which opened its first store in the country in November 2011, said last week it had talked with the group in response to its complaint.
"Ikea has spoken to the group over the telephone and the conversation went very smoothly. We are now drafting a letter in response," the official said, declining to be identified.
MOSCOW -- Russia's State Duma has passed the first reading of a bill that would impose large administrative fines for spreading so-called homosexual propaganda to minors.
The vote on January 25 was 388 in favor, with one against and one abstention.
Earlier on the same day, at least 20 people demonstrating in support of rights for homosexuals were detained as scuffles between supporters and opponents of the bill broke out outside the parliament building.
The federal bill would outlaw gay parades and proposes fines of up to 5,000 rubles ($165) for individuals violating the measure. Companies would incur fines of up to 500,000 rubles ($165,000).
In the Duma, Dmitry Sablin of the ruling United Russia party backed the need for the proposed legislation.
"Look at the statistics among our young people," he said. "Already 30 percent of children have a more or less positive attitude toward [homosexuality]. We live in Russia after all; not Sodom and Gomorrah. I think Russia is a 1,000-year-old country founded on certain traditional values and defending our own values is even more important than oil or gas."
Protest Clashes
As Duma deputies headed into their debate, supporters of the bill assaulted rights campaigners.
"Novaya gazeta" correspondent and gay-rights activist Yelena Kostyuchenko was among those protesting outside the Duma building.
"There were also some fascists who came to the Duma," she said. "Some of them threw eggs at us, others chanted prayers. They poured 'zelyonka' ['brilliant green,' a common antiseptic that is hard to wash off] on us. They tried to attack us several times."
Kostyuchenko pointed out that none of the antihomosexual protesters were taken into custody.
"The police were, of course, clearly on the State Duma's side," she said. "In our police van, there are only LGBT (lesbian, bisexual, gay, and transgender) activists and their friends, people who were protesting the bill. There aren't any fascists or so-called Orthodox activists among us here."
'Without This Kind Of Influence'
United Russia's parliamentary faction leader Vladimir Vasilyev supports the proposed law.
"I think the Duma will pass this decision today in order to restrict -- by means of fines -- propaganda of homosexuality among minors," he said. "I stress, among minors. We want our young generation to grow up without this kind of influence."
To become law, the bill must pass two more readings in the lower house, win approval from the Federation Council, and be signed by President Vladimir Putin.
Amnesty International criticized the proposed law as "an attack on the right to freedom of expression."
In a statement issued on January 25, David Diaz-Jogeix, Amnesty's Europe and Central Asia Program Deputy Director said the legislation could be interpreted very loosely and also "further stigmatizes and alienates" homosexual people.
http://www.rferl.org/content/russia-gay-rights-propaganda/24883267.html