Russian officials have banned fans from staging a parade in honour of Eurovision winner Conchita Wurst. Citing the risk of violence and the need to "respect morality", Moscow's security department denied an application for the Conchita Wurst March of Bearded Women and Men, which was due to take place on 27 May

Wurst, the drag persona of Austria's Thomas Neuwirth, has become an icon for Europe's LGBTQ community and a flashpoint for Russia's debate over gay rights. So while the singer has her share of fans - she won 290 points in the Eurovision final - the proposed parade was a piece of hirsute political theatre. "The march of bearded people ... will [be] a trial balloon in our relations with the Moscow mayor's office this year," Nikolay Alexeyev, founder of Moscow Pride, recently told GayRussia.ru.

On Thursday, a representative for Moscow's security department announced that the parade had been rejected.



"We informed them that the event could not take place," Alexei Mayorov explained to Interfax. While the Associated Press reported that there were "concerns [the march] would provoke clashes between gays and their opponents", Mayorov told Interfax that the city's decision rested on their wish to "respect morality in the education of the younger generation".

By choosing 27 May for the bearded march, organisers had hoped to mark the 21st anniversary of homosexuality's legalisation in Russia. Alexeyev told Pravda that they plan to "urgently appeal" the mayor's decision; even if unsuccessful, they will try to merge the event with a proposed gay pride parade in 31 May. They face an uphill battle: in 2012, Moscow city government enacted a 100-year ban on pride marches.

Russia's anti-gay protesters have been campaigning against Eurovision for weeks, calling it a "Europe-wide gay parade". "The participation of the obvious transvestite and hermaphrodite Conchita Wurst on the same stage as Russian singers on live television is blatant propaganda of homosexuality and spiritual decay," said the St Petersburg's notorious legislator Vitaly Milonov, who led the charge for Russia's homosexual propaganda laws. After Wurst's win, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, head of Russia's Liberal Democratic party, said, "There's no limit to our outrage. It's the end of Europe."

But Filipp Kirkorov, Russia's losing contestant for Eurovision 2014, chose to emphasise the winning song, not the singer. "It was the song that won, and in my opinion it was a beautiful song," he said. "With a beard, without a beard, a woman, a man - it is unimportant, this is a competition, a song contest." Wurst had previously described her beard as a statement on tolerance, proof "that you can achieve anything, no matter who you are or how you look".

