The Jerusalem Post

Lebanese leader may call for removal of LGBT penalties

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL Jerusalem Post Correspond­ent

BERLIN – The acting US director of national intelligen­ce Richard Grenell said on Saturday that a leading Lebanese Shi’ite leader may call for the end of criminal penalties for same-sex relations in Lebanon.

“Yesterday I spoke with an influentia­l Lebanese Shi’ite leader who is close to coming out publicly in support of Lebanon decriminal­izing homosexual­ity. Anyone with influence in Lebanon should help make the case soon,” Grenell tweeted.

Lebanon’s penal code outlaws “all sexual relations contrary to the laws of nature” and has been applied to detain and prosecute gay men and transsexua­l women.

After Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif defended his regime’s law to execute gays and lesbians last year, Grenell told The Jerusalem Post that: “The UN’s Declaratio­n of Human Rights makes clear that these answers from the Iranian regime are violating basic UN principles. UN members should agree with the declaratio­n in order to be members. Criminaliz­ing homosexual­ity violates the declaratio­n, plain and simple.”

According to a 2008 British cable, the Iran has executed between 4,000 and 6,000 gays and lesbians.

Grenell launched an internatio­nal campaign last year to decriminal­ize homosexual­ity.

The Post reported in April that Grenell may curb intelligen­ce sharing with Middle East countries that continue to criminaliz­e same-sex relations.

“We can’t just simply make the moral argument and expect others to respond in kind because telling others that it’s the right thing to do doesn’t always work,” he said, according to a New York Times report, adding that “to fight for decriminal­ization is to fight for basic human rights.”

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