Before the US invasion of Iraq, under Sadam Hussein, gays were more or less
left alone. Now, with religious fascism on the rise, more than 430 gays have
been executed since 2003. How ironic, as the neo-cons invaded Iraq
supposedly to remove a dictator and create a democracy that will spread
throughout the middle east. Instead, they have unleashed religious extremism
in the country, as this article about the execution of gays clearly details.
It proves that all the neocons really wanted was to exploit Iraq's oil
wealth, and that they had no interest in human rights at all. Of course,
should this surprise us? The Republicans in the US are the part of bigotry,
sexism, racism, and homophobia. -=-=-= om-==- Nick


When militiamen from the Mahdi Army came by the compact, two-story stone
home in the Doura neighborhood of
<http://www.newsweek.com/related.aspx?subject=Baghdad> Baghdad, they weren't
looking for Sunnis to harass. They were hunting gays. "Bring us your son's
cell phone," one ordered the middle-aged man who came to the gate. They
wanted to check if his son, Nadir, had been calling foreigners--and in fact
he had only hours earlier called this reporter to set up a meeting, and he
had repeatedly called a gay nongovernmental organization (NGO) in London.
Fortunately, Nadir was ready for them and produced a "clean" phone he keeps
for just such a threat. This time they left, but vowed to come back if they
found any evidence he was gay--or was talking to undesirable foreigners. Now
that  <http://www.newsweek.com/related.aspx?subject=Iraq> Iraq's sectarian
war has cooled off, it's open season on homosexuals and others whose
lifestyles infuriate religious hardliners.

Sometimes the act of reporting a story is revealing in itself--especially
when it proves particularly difficult. This was the case when NEWSWEEK began
looking into the problems of Iraq's homosexuals after hearing reports of
secret safe houses around Baghdad where many of them were taking refuge from
the militias' self-appointed morality police. After weeks of inquiries,
NEWSWEEK managed to find Nadir and persuade him to arrange a visit to one of
the safe houses he helps run. Instead, the Mahdi militia rousted him the
night before. Established in 2004, the militia is the armed wing of the
organization led by radical Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, who has been an
implacable foe of the Maliki government. Terrified, Nadir contacted people
at the London-based gay NGO that finances the safe house, and they
instructed him to break off the visit.

That was only one of many problems reporting on gays in Iraq. Iraqi
authorities scoffed at the subject--when not scolding a reporter for even
asking about it. Some of NEWSWEEK's own local staff were wary of the story.
Virtually no government officials would sit for an interview. And the United
Nations human-rights office, which has a big presence in Iraq, dodged the
subject like a mine field. As with a number of Muslim societies where
homosexuality is officially nonexistent but widely practiced, the policy in
Iraq during  <http://www.newsweek.com/related.aspx?subject=Saddam+Hussein>
Saddam Hussein's rule was "don't ask, don't tell." But that has changed.
Iraqi LGBT, the London NGO that Nadir works for, says more than 430 gay men
have been murdered in Iraq since 2003. For the country's beleaguered gays,
it's a friendless landscape.

Many officials say they feel that in a country at war, there are more
pressing concerns than gay rights. A Ministry of Justice judge rebuked a
reporter for wasting time on such an issue, noting that "crimes of sodomy"
are "very rare" in society and even rarer in the courts. "Most acts of
homosexual people are being done in dark corners and, with corruption and
paying bribes, they will be kept there for a long time, for it is not on the
top of our priorities list, which is occupied by issues of terror,
kidnapping and killing," said the judge, who would not allow his name to be
used discussing gays. An adviser to the government of Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki said that of all the meetings he has attended, none ever touched
on the rights--or even the existence--of homosexual Iraqis.

The only recourse for Iraqi gays seems to come from activists abroad. Iraqi
LGBT, which was founded to defend the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender (LGBT) Iraqis, looks after about 40 young men between the ages
of 14 and 28 in several Baghdad safe houses. There they are fed, can watch
TV, hang out and sleep in cramped quarters, their beds inches apart. They
stay away from neighbors and rarely leave their immediate area. "I hope you
can see how sensitive and very important the security issue is for the safe
houses," said  <http://www.newsweek.com/related.aspx?subject=Ali+Hili> Ali
Hili, who fled Iraq and received asylum in Britain.

Hili continues to use a pseudonym to protect himself and insulate relatives
still in Iraq. He has not returned home in eight years but does visit Syria
and Jordan to raise money and check on an underground railroad that helps
spirit some gay men out of Iraq. He says the government tries to monitor the
group's activities. Saif, one of the older residents at an Iraqi LGBT house,
recalls Saddam's repressive but secular regime wistfully. "Those were the
most beautiful days of our lives," he says. "The fall [of Saddam] was the
worst thing to happen." 

Most people seem to prefer that the subject just go away. A written request
for an interview at the Legal Section of the Ministry of Human Rights was
greeted with a suggestion to delete the word "gays." A sympathetic senior
government official warned that a direct request to talk to a minister about
gays could result in a short conversation. "I would ask about women,
displaced people, children and others before you get to that," he offered.
Officials at the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs and the Human Rights
ministry maintain that they do not keep statistics about gays, largely
because the number is so small, "barely mentioned in Iraq" according to one
of them.

Even relatively liberal people in Iraq seem to have harsh attitudes toward
this subject. "These people are not welcome in the society because they are
against the social, natural and religious rules," said one well-educated
Iraqi who did not want to be identified more closely. A Baghdad executive
said religion and tradition have made the overwhelming majority of Iraqis
hostile to homosexuals. "Nobody is interested in talking about this at all,"
he says with a grim chuckle. A handful of gay men told NEWSWEEK harrowing
stories about being cast out of their homes or savagely attacked by the
storm troopers of virtue: Shia extremists among Badr Corps operatives (many
of whom are now in the Iraqi Security Forces) or groups like the Mahdi Army,
and sometimes both. But when told of such atrocities one Iraqi acquaintance
blamed the victims, calling them "the lowest humans."

Persecution of gays will stop only if Iraqis can abandon centuries-old
prejudices. They would have to acknowledge that human rights don't cover
only the humans they like. Insisting that gays are just a few undesirable
perverts who "should be killed"--as one Iraqi who works in journalism put
it--encourages an atmosphere of impunity no matter the offense. Killing gays
becomes "honorable." And raping them is OK because it isn't considered a
homosexual act--only being penetrated or providing oral sex is. 

Ali Hili says the government, security forces, judiciary and religious
establishment are complicit in terrorizing gays. Since the late-evening
visit by the militiamen, Nadir has moved to another part of Baghdad and
stayed away from home. "They said, 'We will get you even if you fly to
God'," he says. Changing Iraq's attitudes toward its gay minority may prove
even harder than ending the war.

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