Eurovision: Same-sex kisses feature in songs for Finland and host Sweden

Illustrated rainbow pride flag on a white background.

Tonight Finland’s pro-equal marriage Eurovision entry featuring a lesbian kiss went out to an estimated audience of 100 million in the Eurovision finale, and was joined by a song by the Swedish host featuring a kiss between two “grooms”.

Host Petra Mede sung a piece on Swedish culture including a reference to the country’s same-sex marriage laws, illustrated by two male backing dancers sharing a kiss.

Finlandā€™s Eurovision entrant Krista Siegfrids found herselfĀ withĀ a place in the final, following her performance of her pro-equal marriage song, which included a lesbian kiss.

Siegfrids insisted that her song ā€˜Marry Meā€™ was not political, but did go on to say that she did want to make a statement about the lack of legal recognition of same-sex marriages in Finland.Ā Organisers forbid ā€œlyrics, speeches, gestures of a political or similar natureā€.

When an interviewer asked how Siegfrids thought viewers inĀ countriesĀ such as Belaruse and Azerbaijan might react to her performance she said:Ā ā€I think that everybody should have the right to do that. Itā€™s no big deal, itā€™s not big deal to me. Itā€™s a show, and itā€™s about love and love is beautiful in any form.ā€

Turkeyā€™s official television station was urged by human rights groups to broadcast the final of the Eurovision Song Contest on Saturday, following reports that it had cancelled the broadcast due to a lesbian kiss by Finlandā€™s act on Thursday.

The TRT station claimed that the cancellation of the broadcast was due to low ratings, but last year a quarter of Turkish households tuned in to watch.

All Out has launched a petition urged the President of the European Broadcasting Union to address the issue, and to ensure that Eurovision would ā€œuphold the values of unity and loveā€, as opposed to censoring Kristaā€™s performance.

In the first hour it was live, the petition gathered over a thousand signatures, it has now received the support of over 35,000 people.

ā€œAll Out members are not fooled by Turkeyā€™s weak excuse,ā€ Andre Banks Co-founder and Executive Director of All Out said, ā€œIt is clear to the world that Turkey pulled the popular Eurovision show simply because two women expressed love through a kiss. Nothing could be more harmless than a kiss between two people.ā€

ā€œThe Eurovision kiss was not revolutionary. Turkish people already saw a kiss between two women on television. Two women kissed during the 2012 Olympics and that kiss was broadcast on Turkish TV,ā€ Andre Banks said, ā€œThe world kept turning and the sun came up the next day. Love should never be feared, it is censorship we should fear.ā€