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Spotify to stop promoting R Kelly songs over sex abuse claims

New York -  Spotify on Thursday announced it would no longer feature R Kelly songs in its playlists or user recommendations, after the Time's Up movement for gender equality urged the music business to dump the R&B star over sexual abuse allegations.

The move marks the first application of Spotify's new policy on "Hate Content & Hateful Conduct," which states an artist's behaviour may result in changes in how Spotify promotes their content.

MORE ABOUT THE POLICY:

"When an artist or creator does something that is especially harmful or hateful (for example, violence against children and sexual violence), it may affect the ways we work with or support that artist or creator," a spokesperson for the Swedish streaming service said.

Users of both the free and subscription-based versions of Spotify will still be able to find R Kelly's music on the service. However, he will no longer appear in playlists curated by the platform or algorithm-generated recommendations.

"We don't censor content because of an artist's or creator's behavior, but we want our editorial decisions -- what we choose to program -- to reflect our values," the spokesperson added.

A representative for R Kelly said in a statement carried by various US media outlets that there was no basis for the move by Spotify and that R. Kelly is innocent of the allegations against him.

"R. Kelly never has been accused of hate, and the lyrics he writes express love and desire," the statement said.

"He is innocent of the false and hurtful accusations in the ongoing smear campaign against him," it said.

MORE ABOUT THE ALLEGATIONS AGAINST R KELLY:

R Kelly real name Robert Sylvester Kelly is accused of sexual abuse against young women and underage girls dating back over a decade, but he has never been convicted.

The I Believe I Can Fly singer and producer, who is 51, was charged with child pornography offences in 2002, but was acquitted in 2008.

According to a BuzzFeed investigation published last July, Kelly is also accused of holding six women in virtual slavery at his homes in Chicago and Atlanta, with power over their clothing, diet and sexual encounters. He has not been charged, however, and has denied all the allegations.

Meanwhile, in April, police in Dallas, Texas, opened an investigation into allegations Kelly gave a 19-year-old girl a sexually transmitted disease without telling her.

At the end of April, the Time's Up movement - created in the wake of a watershed of sexual harassment allegations involving powerful men across several industries - demanded that all these allegations be investigated appropriately.

The organisation also called upon several music industry heavyweights, including streaming services, as well as Kelly's record label to cut ties with him.

"It may be a cultural milestone," Larry Miller, clinical music associate professor and director of the music business program at NYU Steinhardt, said of Spotify's decision.

"There's no question that Spotify's curated playlists... are bigger and more influential and more listened to than any radio station on earth," he said.

"So it's not an overstatement to say that this is likely to have a significant effect on the amount of listening that happens around R. Kelly's catalogue for a period of time."

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