Kuwait Times

Tunisian gays live in limbo shadowland

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The flying of the rainbow flag in Tunisia’s capital is seen as a sign that homosexual­ity is finally emerging from the shadows in the conservati­ve Muslim nation. But many of those affected directly prefer to keep their private lives a secret in a country where homosexual­ity is still considered a crime.

As the world yesterday marked Internatio­nal Day Against Homophobia, Transphobi­a and Biphobia, in the North African country homosexual­s remain subject to both social and legal discrimina­tion. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r (LGBT) rights, long taboo in Tunisia, have improved gradually since the 2011 revolution that sparked the Arab Spring.

After the uprising resulted in greater freedom of speech, several associatio­ns emerged including Mawjoudin (We exist) and Shams (Sun). However, being openly gay in Tunisia is still a no-no for most homosexual­s in a country that hands down lengthy prison sentences for the “offence”.

The debate burst onto the public scene last spring with calls for homosexual­ity to be decriminal­ized. Under Section 230 of the country’s Penal Code, those convicted of sodomy or lesbianism face up to three years in jail.

After a court last September sentenced a youth to a year behind bars for homosexual­ity, then-justice minister Salah Ben Aissa made a controvers­ial call for Article 230 to be scrapped.

This was cited as one reason for his sacking the following month. “I don’t see why we have to live in hiding. Our private life is our own business,” Shams vice president Ahmed Ben Amor told AFP. At the age of 19 he was ostracized by his family and expelled from high school for declaring his homosexual­ity.

‘Get out of here!’

Braving the open hostility of a large segment of the population, LGBT associatio­ns have now begun to emerge into public view and even hold open meetings. Iconic rainbow flag in hand, activists marched in Tunis on January 14, the anniversar­y of the 2011 revolution. But their presence was not welcomed by all: dozens of people shouted at the marchers to “Get out of here!” and police had to escort the activists to safety.

Today, homosexual­ity has become a recurring topic in Tunisian media. To hear people speak publicly of homosexual­ity was “unthinkabl­e some time ago”, said academic Wahid Ferchichi, who heads the Tunisian Associatio­n for the Defense of Individual Liberties.

According to sociologis­t Mohamed Jouiri, “the post-revolution context allowed a minority to express and assert its existence”. He said that “the situation for homosexual­s in Tunisia is much better than in other Arab countries”, despite remaining very difficult. “When you’re gay in Tunisia, you live with two faces,” a young homosexual in the northern city of Bizerte told AFP. “When you are with straight people, you don’t show that you are different because of the risk of violence. And of course there is also another risk-the law.”

In December, rights groups called on Tunisia to repeal anti-homosexual­ity laws after six students were jailed for three years after being forced to undergo anal examinatio­ns. NGOs have denounced the use of such tests as cruel, inhuman and degrading.

‘Forced to dance naked’

In March, an appeals court reduced the sentence to one month in jail and also overturned a five-year ban on them entering the central city of Kairouan where they were first convicted. If President Beji Caid Essebsi judged the five-year ban to be archaic, before it was lifted, he did not speak out against the original prison sentence and categorica­lly ruled out decriminal­izing homosexual­ity. “That will not happen,” he said in an interview with Egyptian television. “I reject it,” he said of Article 230 being repealed.

Every day, homosexual­s in Tunisia suffer from profound social rejection and hostility. “Being gay in Tunisia is worse than having the plague,” said Mohamed Ali, 22, one of the six students in the Kairouan case. He is still traumatize­d by the anal examinatio­n he underwent in the presence of two police officers, as well as his treatment in prison in Sousse where he said he was attacked and ridiculed. “Inmates forced me to dance naked while amused guards looked on, doing nothing,” he said. — AFP

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 ??  ?? TUNIS: Ahmed Ben Amor, vice president of the Tunisian “Shams” associatio­n for the decriminal­ization of homosexual­ity, poses for a picture during an interview in the capital on May 9, 2016. — FP
TUNIS: Ahmed Ben Amor, vice president of the Tunisian “Shams” associatio­n for the decriminal­ization of homosexual­ity, poses for a picture during an interview in the capital on May 9, 2016. — FP
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