Gay Life?and Death?in the Arab World
Persecution of homosexuals increases in the Middle East.
Web Specials Archives
Kate Garsombke
Gays and lesbians living in the Arab world are struggling against
an alarming wave of government persecution, according to human
rights groups. But a growing network of progressive-minded Muslims
is beginning to fight back.
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As Penny Dale of One World Africa reports, eight Egyptian
men were arrested for the 'practice of debauchery' on January 19,
and gay rights groups fear the men may be tortured while in
jail.
It?s a 'steadily growing pattern of persecution,' claims the
International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC), a
U.S.-based group that has decried the persecution of gays and
people with HIV and AIDS worldwide.
Last year in Cairo, for example, 23 of 52 men convicted of
'obscene behavior' were sentenced to five years of hard labor.
Then, in December, two Egyptian university students who had
responded to an undercover agent?s request for gay contacts in an
Internet chat room were sentenced under the same law.
And Saudi Arabia punishes convicted homosexuals with the death
penalty? most recently on January 1, when three Saudi Arabian men
were executed. The trial proceedings remain secret, according to
the IGLHRC, and Amnesty International claims the executions may be
part of the government?s 'determination to continue its appalling
yearly rate of executions.'
'The pattern is the same,' says IGLHRC Program Director Scott
Long. 'People suspected of homosexuality are picked up and accused
of prostitution. Police use informers and the Internet to entrap
victims.'
Homosexuality is not explicitly prohibited under Egyptian law,
but statutes are based on Sharia, or Islamic law?which condemn it
as an immoral act. According to the Al-Fatiha Foundation, an
international group for gay Muslims, homosexuality is seen as
sinful and perverted in most Islamic countries based on verses in
the Qu?ran.
But although mainstream Islam condemns homosexuality, the
Al-Fatiha Foundation site claims 'there is a growing movement of
progressive-minded Muslims who see Islam as an evolving religion
that must adapt to modern-day society.'