Kuwait Times

Egyptian security forces arrest dozens in anti-gay crackdown

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Crackdown sparked by raising of rainbow flag

CAIRO: Egypt has arrested 22 people in the past three days as part of a crackdown on gays after a rainbow flag was raised at a concert, activists and rights groups said yesterday. At least 33 people have been arrested since Sept 23, after a group of people were seen raising the flag the day before in a rare public show of support for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r rights in the conservati­ve Muslim country.

The public prosecutor announced an investigat­ion after local media launched a highly critical campaign against those who raised the rainbow flag at a Mashrou’ Leila concert, a popular Lebanese alternativ­e rock band whose lead singer is openly gay. On Monday police arrested Ahmed Alaa and Sarah Hegazy, the latter being the first woman involved in such an incident in years, in relation to the case, their lawyer said.

They were both charged with “joining a group formed in contrary to the law” and “propagatin­g that group’s idea”. Hegazy faced a further charge of “promoting sexual deviancy and debauchery” and the Supreme State Security Prosecutio­n ordered them detained for 15 days, lawyer Amr Mohamed said. Two men had been arrested earlier in relation to the flag incident but one was released. The remaining arrests were unrelated to the incident but have all been over the perceived sexual orientatio­n of the defendants and came after it.

At least 10 men were arrested between Sept 28-30 and six others earlier that week, judicial sources said. All 16 went on trial on Sunday charged with “promoting sexual deviancy” and “debauchery”, euphemisms for homosexual­ity. A verdict is due on Oct 29. One man has been sentenced to six years in jail over similar charges. Mashrou’ Leila released a statement on Monday condemning the arrest campaign and calling for solidarity with those arrested. “We denounce the demonizati­on and prosecutio­n of victimless acts between consenting adults. It is sickening to think that all this hysteria has been generated over a couple of kids raising a piece of cloth that stands for love,” the band said.

Although homosexual­ity is not specifical­ly outlawed in Egypt, it is a conservati­ve society and discrimina­tion is rife. Gay men are frequently arrested and typically charged with debauchery, immorality or blasphemy. Those arrested are subjected to anal examinatio­ns to determine whether they have had gay sex, which rights groups Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch say amounts to torture. — Reuters

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