Explaining Egypt's Targeting of Gays
From the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (
http://www.iglhrc.org)
By Hossam Bahgat July 23, 2001
(Hossam Bahgat is international relations coordinator for the Egyptian
Organization for Human Rights, and a freelance journalist. As a result of
writing this article, Mr. Bahgat was fired from his job.)
The trial of 52 suspected gay men on charges of immorality, which opened
in Cairo on July 18, signaled an end to long years of discreet and quietly
tolerated public activity by the Egyptian gay community. Standing in a cage
in a small, crowded courtroom, the defendants were testament to a deep political
crisis faced by an insecure regime, a threatened gay community, a mediocre
press and a shattered rights movement. The 52 men, along with three
others who were released without being officially charged, were arrested
May 11 on the Queen Boat, a tourist boat moored on the Nile in Cairo. The
boat has long been a known gathering place for the Egyptian gay community.
What motivated the sudden crackdown? Although the Egyptian regime has been
utterly unpredictable lately -- most notably with the strangely harsh sentence
for human rights advocate and dual Egyptian-US citizen Saad Eddin Ibrahim
-- observers agree that something must have impelled state security forces
to raid a tourist discotheque at a time when Egypt's economy, which depends
heavily on tourism revenue, is still struggling to overcome the fallout from
the 1997 Luxor massacre.
DISTRACTING THE PUBLIC
One motive is certainly to divert public attention from economic recession
and the government's liquidity crisis. According to official statistics,
at least 23 million of Egypt's 65 million people live under the poverty line.
Last year, poor Egyptians watched their purchasing power sink due to devaluation
of the Egyptian pound. The huge media frenzy over the Queen Boat case has
distracted people while the government introduces additional sales taxes,
despite private sector complaints about a severe drop in sales. Two other
sensational cases have also crowded out economic issues. Days after the Queen
Boat raid, a businessman was referred to the criminal court for having been
married to 17 women. Shortly afterwards, a banned videotape that shows a
former Coptic priest having sex with women who came to his monastery to seek
healing was leaked, many think by state security, to the press, leading to
Coptic demonstrations, clashes with security forces and a series of newspaper
articles and state security trials. According to lawyers for the 52
detainees, state security arbitrarily arrested many men who were not on the
Queen Boat on May 11, to inflate the numbers arrested for the press. After
the July 18 court session, a beleaguered mother screamed: "He went out to
buy me medicine when [the police] arrested him." This would explain the almost
identical news reports published in the two weeks that followed the raid.
The reports, probably issued by state security sources, described rituals
of a Satan-worshipping cult and public orgies allegedly taking place on the
Queen Boat every Thursday night. By the time the public prosecutor issued
a statement denying these reports, the goal had been achieved: the public
was attentive. "The case involves religious beliefs and morality, two elements
that have always succeeded in keeping people engaged for a long time," says
Taher Abul Nasr, a lawyer from the Hisham Mubarak Law Center, which represents
four of the defendants.
FLASHING CAMERAS
The semi-official Egyptian media has always shown willingness to be used
by the security services in their fight for publicity. The heavy coverage
of the Queen Boat case brings to mind a similar case in 1997, when 78 teenage
men were arrested on charges of establishing a Satanic cult. They were released
after two months of detention, and the case was never brought to the courts.
Newspapers came under harsh criticism for printing the names and pictures
of the suspected devil-worshippers, tarnishing their images despite their
release. But in May, official, opposition and independent newspapers published
the names and professions of the 55 Queen Boat defendants; some front pages
carried their pictures with the eyes crossed over in black. On July
18, families of the defendants punched and kicked photographers who tried
desperately to take pictures of the men before, during and after the court
session. "Filthy press. You fabricated the whole story," relatives shouted
at journalists. Fathers and mothers who came to see their sons could not,
since the handcuffed defendants were covering their heads with scraps of
newspaper, plastic bags and towels to avoid the flashing cameras. Publishing
details concerning an ongoing investigation or trial that might influence
the course of the proceedings is prohibited by both the Press Law 96/1996
and the Code of Ethics issued by the Egyptian Journalists' Syndicate.
"ISLAMIC VALUES"
But the state's motivations to raid the Queen Boat may run deeper than the
pursuit of photo opportunities for the police. The May 11 assault on gay
men fits into the regime's efforts to present an image as the guardian of
public virtue, to deflate an Islamist opposition movement that appears to
be gaining support every day. Last November, the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood
sent 17 new members to parliament, outnumbering the representatives of all
the official opposition parties put together. Earlier this year, the Brotherhood's
list of candidates swept the elections for the Bar Association's board. To
counter this ascending power, the state resorts to sensational prosecutions,
in which the regime steps in to protect Islam from evil apostates. Article
98 of the Penal Code, which criminalizes "contempt of heavenly religions,"
was used by the state prosecutor twice last year, against writer Salaheddin
Mohsen and female preacher Manal Manea. This June, prominent feminist writer
Nawal Al Saadawi was interrogated by the public prosecutor under the same
law, regarding views she expressed in a press interview. The charge was dropped,
though a maverick Islamist lawyer is still trying to divorce Al Saadawi from
her husband. Last month, the front pages of official local newspapers
carried headlines hailing Egypt's position "in defense of Islamic values"
at the UN General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS. At the session, Egypt
led several other Islamic countries in a failed attempt to ban the only representative
from a gay and lesbian organization, the International Gay and Lesbian Human
Rights Commission, from taking part in the official roundtable on HIV/AIDS
and human rights. Later, the Egyptian delegation to the UN succeeded in deleting
a sentence from the final declaration of the session, which mentioned gay
men and lesbians as a vulnerable population at high risk for HIV infection.
These "Islamic" positions raised the eyebrows of Egyptians accustomed to
a foreign policy which had only stressed "Islamic values" at the low-profile,
and mostly meaningless, meetings of the Organization of the Islamic Conference.
The regime seems to have realized that suppression and persecution of Islamists
will not uproot the Islamist threat unless it is combined with actions that
bolster the state's religious legitimacy.
GOING WITH THE FLOW
Egyptian human rights organizations have found themselves in an awkward position
during the Queen Boat case. Activists felt bound to take a stand, especially
after international groups like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch
issued statements condemning the Queen Boat arrests. But instead of playing
the vanguard role in explaining the rights dimension of the case, most of
them chose to go with the flow to avoid being attacked in the local press.
Moreover, many human rights activists volunteered to express homophobic views
to the press, and attacked the international organizations who took more positive
positions (one has even decided to write a book about how gay rights are
not really human rights). They deliberately chose to ignore reports that
the suspects were tortured and ill-treated to extract confessions that they
were homosexuals and were on the Queen Boat at the time of the raid. Even
the fact that police officers broke into a public place and arrested all
the Egyptian men inside, while pointedly leaving foreigners and women alone,
did not bring any response from local rights groups. Most human rights
activists in Egypt are former political activists, who took up human rights
work when it became clear that legal and illegal opposition groups would
not shake the powerful state. Since human rights groups are accused by the
state of following a Western agenda, they are often more anxious to gain
popular support than to take up controversial rights cases. Asked about his
position on the Queen Boat case, a leader of one legal aid association spoke
of "red lines" that human rights groups should not cross in their defense
of civil liberties. By toeing these self-imposed "red lines," some human
rights groups try to send a message to the regime that the rights movement
will stand by the state against foreign pressures.
MORE MONITORING AHEAD
When asked for an explanation of the May 11 assault, members of the local
gay community refer to the recent establishment of the Internet Crimes Unit
at the Interior Ministry. Gay men recount several incidents that took place
in the two months preceding the Queen Boat event, in which gay men were set
up for arrest through fake dates from the Internet. Several gay websites were
closed down, and most Egyptian gays now avoid gay chat rooms and matchmaking
websites. Gay men believe that the government has decided to step in after
months of monitoring their sites and clubs. The cyber-interaction of Egyptian
gay men with their Western peers seems to have led the former to become more
vocal about their rights. Given that any potential for citizen organization
is considered a threat to national security by the government, the Queen
Boat case could presage greater surveillance of the mounting number of young
Egyptians who use the Internet -- now more than 1.5 million. Lawyers
for the defense sound optimistic as they wait for the next session to begin
on August 15. But the local gay community has chosen to keep an even lower
profile until the storm passes overhead. Initial speculations that the Queen
Boat incident would turn into the Egyptian Stonewall have proven unwarranted.
Egyptian gay men lack the motivation to challenge a societal and religious
taboo, at the risk of losing their jobs, families, friends and social status,
as well as spending up to five years in prison, knowing that nobody will
support their struggle.
Mr. Bahgat Fired July 27, 2001
As a result of writing the article "Explaining Egypt's Targeting of Gays,"
Hossam Bahgat was fired by the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights (EOHR),
a non-governmental organization based in Cairo. EOHR has steadfastly
refused to condemn the arrest and trial of 52 alleged gay men. EOHR's secretary-general,
Hafez Abu Saada, has told the press that "Personally, I don't like the subject
of homosexuality, and I don't want to defend them." He has also stated that
he is considering writing a book explaining why sexual preference is not
a human right. To write the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights
and urge them both to respect and defend the rights of all people, in accordance
with international standards and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
send an e-mail to
eohr@link.com.eg.