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Mélanie Joly summons Russian ambassador to answer for anti-LGBTQ tweets

Canada's foreign affairs minister is summoning Russia's ambassador after the embassy in Ottawa published a number of anti-LGBTQ social media posts.

"Unsurprisingly, the Russians have once again chosen hateful propaganda," Mélanie Joly said in a media statement issued by her office.

"We absolutely can't tolerate this rhetoric … This is an attack on the Canadian values of acceptance and tolerance."

It's the third time Ambassador Oleg Stepanov has been summoned by Joly this year.

Last week, Russia passed legislation through its lower house extending its ban on publishing information relating to LGBTQ people.

Sport Minister Pascale St-Onge, who is lesbian, criticized the Russian legislation on Twitter, calling it "homophobic propaganda" and "an attack on human rights." The Russian embassy lashed out in response.

It published a series of tweets accusing the Canadian government of meddling in Russian affairs — one of which was targeted at St-Onge personally. 

The embassy published a picture of the late Romanov family with the message, "Madame, with all due respect to your opinion, will you, please, explore and explain how you appeared in this world?"

Joly's office said the ambassador will be expected to explain the tweet directed at St-Onge.

Other recent tweets from the Russian embassy included a picture of a pride flag with a cross through it, with the caption, "It is all about family. Family is a man and a woman and children." Another posted an image of Adam and Eve with the caption, "And yes, there are just two sexes/genders — a man and a woman, male and female."

A statement dated Nov. 25 published by the Russian Embassy's Twitter account accused Canada of "deliberately distorting the reality by conflating the concepts of individual sexual preferences and universal human rights."

The statement says that the rights of sexual minorities are protected in Russia but that "propaganda" about the LGBTQ community "infringes the rights of traditional majority of the Russian citizens."

The statement goes on to quote former Canadian prime minister Pierre Trudeau's famous statement on gay rights — "There is no place for the state in the bedrooms of the nation" — adding that details of LGBTQ relations should "remain strictly personal."

The embassy has also published a number of tweets criticizing Canada's Medical Assistance in Dying legislation, claiming it amounts to the Nazi regime's eugenics policy "reincarnated in neoliberalism."