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After Putin's spokesman compared sexual harassment victims to ‘prostitutes,’ the footage of his remarks was deleted

Source: Meduza

After refusing for weeks to comment on the sexual harassment allegations against State Duma deputy Leonid Slutsky, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has finally shared his thoughts, comparing Slutsky’s victims to the dozens of actresses who say Harvey Weinstein harassed them. Peskov said these women remind him of “prostitutes.”

“This has less to do with the Ethics Committee than the police,” Peskov told an audience at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics on Thursday. He then repeated the suspicions many Russian political figures have raised, asking Slutksy’s accusers, “If he groped you, if he harassed you, why did you remain silent? Why didn’t you go to the police? Why did so much time pass, and then you went to the Ethics Committee?”

Peskov said he considers the allegations against Slutsky to be “something of a fashion statement.” “We’re trying to keep up with the mayhem that’s been happening in America,” he explained, before adding, “You know, it reminds me of the Hollywood stars who became stars and who have done a lot that clashes with our notions of honor and dignity. But they did these things anyway, in order to become celebrities. They earned hundreds of millions of dollars, and after 10 years they started saying that Weinstein is a bad man. Maybe he’s a scumbag, but none of them went to the police [sic] and said, ‘Weinstein raped me!’ No! They wanted to earn 10 million dollars. What do we call a woman who sleeps with a man for 10 million dollars? This might sound rude, but we call her a prostitute.”

In the same appearance, Peskov also explained that the president avoided an angry crowd of demonstrators outside the Kemerovo administrative building earlier in the week because “it’s impossible to talk in Putin’s style with a crowd of several thousand people.”

Hushing up Peskov's indelicate remarks

Peskov made these comments while meeting with students at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics as a guest on a educational program hosted by Sergey Korzun. After the show, at Peskov’s request, the university deleted its footage of his appearance. “I spoke on the assumption that we were having an absolutely closed, honest conversation,” Peskov told Meduza, adding that his visit to the school wasn’t in his official capacity as Vladimir Putin’s spokesman.

On Friday, students from the Higher School of Economics’ communications, media, and design department signed an open letter accusing the administration of censorship, saying they had been promised that Peskov’s appearance would be made public. Students also say recordings of Korzun’s educational show are usually announced in advance and free to attend. For Peskov’s appearance, however, the show’s producers apparently handpicked the audience.

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