Madonna ‘should take off cross or put on knickers’

US pop icon Madonna drew the wrath of Russian ministers and the Church again as she took her gay rights activism to a city that has just banned “homosexual propaganda”.

Madonna ‘should take off cross or put on knickers’

Swelling anger even provoked the deputy prime minister into calling Madonna a whore.

The gay community icon had !preached the dangers of societies that fail to treat their own people with “dignity, with respect and with love”.

“Show your love and appreciation for the gay community,” she called as a sea of hands shot up to display pink bracelets that her team had distributed to the 10,000-strong crowd in Saint Petersburg.

Writing on Twitter ahead of her latest gig in Saint Petersburg, but without spelling it out, deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin said: “Every former w.... seeks to lecture everyone on morality as she gets older. Especially during tours and gigs abroad.”

The pop legend’s show in leader Vladimir Putin’s native Saint Petersburg came two days after she donned a balaclava on a Moscow stage in solidarity with the jailed all-girl protest punk band Pussy Riot.

Madonna had stripped to a black bra in Moscow on Tuesday to reveal the words “Pussy Riot” on her back.

Prosecutors have sought three years in a corrective labour facility for the band on charges of hooliganism for their church performance of an anti- Putin “punk prayer”.

The verdict will be handed down on Aug 17.

On Thursday, Madonna’s lightning-rod antics and outspoken reputation again created a combustible mix, in a city that this year passed controversial anti-gay legislation that some Putin allies hope to apply nationwide.

The US embassy in Moscow warned this week that its Saint Petersburg consulate had “received information regarding a threat of physical violence against spectators and performers”.

The governor deployed 300 police to the Saint Petersburg Sport and Concert Complex as priests vowed to burn pictures of the US pop star and sprinkle holy water on sites she visited on her last stop in the city in 2009.

The war of words between Madonna and her hosts was in full swing hours before the concert’s scheduled, and inevitably delayed, late-evening start.

Mr Rogozin used an epithet he declined to spell out in an angry tweet about Madonna’s moral values. “Either take off your cross, or put on your knickers,” he wrote. Russia legalised homosexuality in 1993 after the fall of the Soviet Union but only ceased to classify it as a mental disorder in 1999.

Homophobic attitudes run high and are promoted by some of Russia’s most powerful politicians.

The Russian Orthodox Church for its part has seen its ranks swell during Putin’s 12 years in power as the state seeks a reliable national base of support.

“She calls herself ‘Madonna’ and desecrates the cross,” said religious activist Kirill Frolov of the Corporation of Orthodox Action.

“We will not tolerate this,” he said.

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