Kuwait Times

As Egypt targets gays, band reluctantl­y bears flag

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The symbol of solidarity brought a harsh backlash. As Lebanese rockers Mashrou’ Leila played in Cairo, fans hoisted in the air rainbow flags, the global emblem of gay equality. The open-air festival on September 22 passed peacefully. But as pictures of the flags spread, Egyptian authoritie­s launched roundups of the gay community, arresting dozens of people, with rights groups saying some were subjected to humiliatin­g physical exams.

Mashrou’ Leila’s singer Hamed Sinno is openly gay and the band voiced outrage over the crackdown. Yet the group scoffs at being viewed as poster boys — for gay rights or also for what Sinno sees as facile Western narratives about the Arab world. Mashrou’ Leila — which, with its unique blend of intricate indie rock and enigmatic Arabic poetry, has become one of the Middle East’s biggest bands — sees music as a goal in itself.

“I think the question of wanting to represent anyone other than our own persons is one that’s really troubling,” the quick-witted Sinno told AFP at a bar near New York University, where the band is leading a twomonth seminar. If Mashrou’ Leila ever speaks for others, those moments “have to be unplanned and accidental, and they have to be a byproduct of people just being able to relate to what you’re saying,” he said.

Sees progress still

Laws in the Middle East banning gay sex date largely to Western colonialis­m. Egypt had no formal prohibitio­n on homosexual­ity but its parliament is now considerin­g one. “The only reason that something like that would happen right now is because of, essentiall­y, a very clear cultural tide moving towards greater acceptance. Otherwise there would be no reason to introduce a new law,” Sinno said. In Egypt and other revolution­ary states in the wake of the Arab Spring, an idea has emerged of “national masculinit­y as a form of dignity,” Sinno said.

But Sinno saw Egypt’s anti-gay campaign more as a political move by President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi, a former army chief who overthrew his Islamist predecesso­r and has clamped down hard on the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, to woo skeptical conservati­ves before elections. Elsewhere in the Arab world, Jordan last year barred a performanc­e by Mashrou’ Leila. Nonetheles­s, Sinno said he saw growing strides on issues of gender and sexuality in Lebanon as well as Morocco and Tunisia. — AFP

 ??  ?? Musicians Haig Papazian, Carl Gerges and Hamed Sinno of Mashrou’ Leila pose for a picture on November 1, 2017 in New York. — AFP
Musicians Haig Papazian, Carl Gerges and Hamed Sinno of Mashrou’ Leila pose for a picture on November 1, 2017 in New York. — AFP

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