Hundreds Protest Trial of Egyptian Homosexuals

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by Bob Roehr

Demonstrators protested the trial of 52 Egyptian men in Cairo accused
of homosexuality in a series of rallies around the world Aug. 15. The
men were arrested in a May 11 raid on the Queen Boat, a floating
discotheque in Cairo with a reputation as a gathering place for
homosexuals.

In Washington, D.C., about a hundred people gathered in the evening
outside of the Egyptian Embassy cultural office just off Dupont
Circle. It was part of an international day of solidarity and mourning
organized by Al-Fatiha, an international organization of Muslims who
are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered, or questioning.

"Every day gays are tortured, killed, imprisoned" by the Egyptian and
other Muslim governments, Al-Fatiha founder M. Faisal Alam told the
crowd. They chanted for human rights in Egypt and to "Free the Cairo 52."

About 80 people rallied outside the Egyptian consulate in New York,
said Scott Long, program director of the International Gay and Lesbian
Human Rights Coalition (ILGHRC). Other demonstrations took place in
Atlanta and San Francisco and overseas in Manila, London, Stockholm,
Antwerp, and Bucharest.

There are reports that those arrested in Cairo were ill-treated and
even tortured by the police while in jail. Homosexuality is not
explicitly illegal under Egyptian law and the men are being prosecuted
under charges ranging from "obscene behavior" to "contempt for religion."

Long sees the prosecution as an attempt by the government to "shore up
its right flank" among the conservative Egyptian public. The
state-controlled media has played up, even fabricated lurid aspects of
the prosecution. Some of the reports have linked the detainees to
"Satanism" and Judaism.

The men are being prosecuted under an Emergency Law passed in 1981
after the assassination of President Anwar el-Sadat, where there is no
appeal of the verdict. This law has been used to prosecute the Islamic
Brotherhood and other religious fundamentalist opposition groups.

In a conversation following the demonstration, Alam said they are
realistic about what they hope to accomplish. The Egyptian government
is "probably not going to release the men. But we want to send a
message that there are members of the community who identify as gay
Muslims, as gay Arabs, who are watching what their governments are
doing. We can no longer stay silent."

He said they considered calling for a boycott of Egypt but after
discussion, Al-Fatiha agreed with IGLHRC and Amnesty International
that such action would be interpreted as a form of Western imperialism
trying to impose its values on the Arab world.

Alam acknowledged that the Egyptian government has long "cracked down"
on fundamentalist Muslim groups and now "those same tactics are being
used against the gay community. They see a rising community that is
beginning to ask for its rights, and would be a threat to the Egyptian
government."

Reps Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) and Barney Frank (D-Mass.) sent a letter to
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak expressing their concern for this
violation of human rights. Alam said, "That sends the message that
they are not going to stand back and watch oppression happen."

The Congressmen's concern could affect U.S. economic and military aid
to Egypt. That nation is second only to Israel in the amount of
assistance given by the U.S. IGLHRC's Long called it "basically a
client state of the U.S, so the letter will at least be listened to."

Long hopes that international pressure will "embarrass them into
dropping the charges" once the Egyptian government has milked the
media coverage for domestic purposes. He fears that the legal
proceedings will be drawn out, with the hope that "international
attention will just go away." That is why it is important to keep the
pressure on.

The organizations are asking people to write the Egyptian Embassy
expressing their concern over this violation of human rights, and over
the facts that the 52 men are being prosecuted because of their
alleged sexual orientation and in violation of international legal
standards.

Letters of protest should be directed to Ambassador M. Nabil Fahmy,
Embassy of the Arab Republic of Egypt, 3521 International Court, NW,
Washington, DC 20008-2023, or faxed to (202) 244-4319.



EGYPTIAN TRIAL UNDERWAY

The trial of 52 Egyptian men arrested at a gay bar got underway in
Cairo Aug. 15 as gay activists around the world staged protests.

The men, nabbed May 11 in and around Cairo's Queen Boat discotheque,
have been charged with practicing sexual immorality. Two of the men
also were charged with "forming a group which aims to exploit the
Islamic religion to propagate extremist ideas."

All of the men pleaded innocent. They have been jailed at Tora Prison
for more than three months.

The immorality offense carries a maximum sentence of three years in
prison and the religion offense carries a maximum penalty of five years.

Gays protested in several cities as the trial began. In Geneva, 50
people picketed the United Nations offices. In Washington, D.C., 100
people demonstrated at the Egyptian Cultural and Educational Bureau.
Filipino gays marched on the Manila Egypt Air office. In Stockholm,
activists picketed the Egyptian Embassy. About 50 people picketed the
Egyptian consulate in San Francisco and 80 targeted the New York City
consulate. Fifteen gays demonstrated at Egypt's London embassy. There
were additional protests in Austria, Switzerland and Uganda.

... Rex Wockner





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