Lolita Milyavskaya’s concerts are being canceled all over Russia

Lolita Milyavskaya’s concerts are being canceled all over Russia

[ad_1]

In Tyumen, Perm and Yekaterinburg, after Novosibirsk, Omsk and Barnaul, the concerts of pop singer Lolita Milyavskaya’s jubilee tour were cancelled. The entire tour will probably be canceled (there are only two concerts left).

Concerts scheduled for March and April began to be canceled in December after Lolita’s participation in the so-called naked party in the Moscow club “Mutabor”, organized by blogger Anastasia Ivleeva.

On February 8, it became known that Milyavskaya entered the list of 77 artists and groups banned in Russia. Soon after that, the concerts of her tour were canceled in Perm, followed by cancellations in Yekaterinburg and Tyumen on the same day. The concert scheduled for February 15 in Ramensk near Moscow was also canceled. In the case of cancellations, the organizers either do not report the reasons, or refer to circumstances independent of the venues.

Sources from the music industry previously reported that the organizers are prohibited from organizing events and placing outdoor advertising with the musicians included in the list.

Earlier, Lolita reported that the organizers had canceled “a huge number” of her concerts. Some concerts are still listed on the singer’s poster on her website, but it is no longer possible to buy tickets for them – except for the concerts in Krasnoyarsk and Irkutsk, scheduled for April.

The work of the Mutabor club, where the party took place, has been suspended for 90 days starting from January 10. Anastasia Ivleeva was fined 100,000 rubles by the court for the fact that during the party allegedly “violations of public order were committed, in the form of citizens being naked in a way that insults human dignity, promoting non-traditional sexual relations, obscene fighting in a public place.”

As sources in the government, the State Duma and the presidential administration told The Moscow Times, the persecution of the party participants began by order of the Kremlin.

Public apologies and trips to the occupied territories of Ukraine did not help the artists.

[ad_2]

Original Source Link