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Storm over rainbow nails clouds Sweden gold

A rare gold medal win by Sweden at the World Athletics Championships on Thursday in Moscow was overshadowed by the controversy that erupted after some Swedish athletes painted their fingernails rainbow colours to protest Russia's anti-gay laws.

Storm over rainbow nails clouds Sweden gold

Sweden’s Ethiopian-born Abeba Aregawi won the women’s 1500m title with a time of 4min 02.67sec. The win by Aregawi, who was only cleared to run for Sweden in December 2012, six months after receiving Swedish citizenship, marked Sweden’s first World Athletics gold in six years.

However, news of Aregawi’s win was dwarfed by the actions of Swedish high jumper Emma Green Tregaro and sprinter Moa Hjelmer, who made headlines and stirred up controversy after the painting their fingernails with the colours of the rainbow.

The move was a “silent protest” according to Hjelmer, who along with Green Tregaro wanted to show their disapproval for laws recently passed in Russia banning “gay propaganda”.

“We can’t choose where the championships are being held, but it is sad that they have these attitudes. It should be self-evident that everyone should have the same rights,” Hjelmer told Sveriges Radio (SR).

Green Tregaro, who first hatched plans for the rainbow nail protest in Moscow via social media on Wednesday, called the decision “the perfect opportunity to show what I think”.

“To me, love for another person is the most beautiful thing in the world, and that’s what I want to show, no matter the gender or whatever,” she told SR.

While the athletes won wide praise in Sweden, Russian pole vaulting gold medalist Yelena Isinbayeva slammed the Swedes’ colourful jab at Russia’s anti-gay laws.

“It’s unrespectful to our country, it’s unrespectful to our citizens. Because we are Russians, maybe we are different from European people, maybe we are different to people from other lands, but we have our laws that everyone has to respect,” she told reporters on Thursday.

Swedish gold medalist Aregawi also refused to lend her support to her follow athletes’ show of support for gay rights.

“Personally, because my faith doesn’t allow it, I don’t support it,” she told reporters at a press conference.

She clarified later for the Expressen newspaper through an interpreter that her religion doesn’t allow “men to be with men and women to be with women”.

According to Expressen, a spokesman for the Swedish athletics association later asked Swedish journalists to refrain from publishing Aregawi’s quotes because she didn’t realize how controversial they were.

The head of the Swedish athletics association, Tomas Riste, nevertheless regretted that Aregawi and Green Tregaro didn’t see eye to eye on the issue.

“It’s unfortunate that members of the national team are against each other,” he told Expressen.

“We live in a multicultural society with different opinions and freedom of religion. I’m not bothered by one or the other.”

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GAY

Germany to compensate gay soldiers who faced discrimination

Chancellor Angela Merkel's government on Wednesday agreed a draft bill that would compensate gay soldiers who faced discrimination in the armed forces between 1955 and 2000.

Germany to compensate gay soldiers who faced discrimination
A German flag is sewed to the uniform of a Bundeswehr soldier in Dresden. Photo: DPA

Under the proposed law, which needs to be approved by parliament, soldiers
who were convicted by military courts for being gay, demoted or who otherwise
saw their careers damaged because of their sexual orientation, would receive a
“symbolic amount” of €3,000.

“We cannot erase the suffering inflicted upon these people,” Defence Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer told the RND newspaper group. “But we want
to send a signal” and “turn the page on a dark chapter in the history of the
armed forces”, she said.

The compensation would apply to soldiers from the Bundeswehr, which was
created in West Germany in 1955, and to troops from former East Germany's
National People's Army, founded in 1956.

READ ALSO: More Germans identify as LGBT than in rest of Europe

The defence ministry estimates that about 1,000 people would be eligible
for a payout.

Military court judgments against soldiers for engaging in consensual gay sex acts would also be quashed under the draft bill.

It took until 1969 for homosexuality to be decriminalised in West Germany, but discrimination against gay service people continued for much longer, including after Germany was reunified in 1990.

Gay soldiers could expect to be overlooked for promotions or removed from positions of responsibility, with senior officers often deeming them a “security risk” or a bad example to others.

That ended with a law change in 2000 that officially protected gay, lesbian
and bisexual people from discrimination in the armed forces.

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