Kuwait :You must past a "not gay physical" to visit!

Started by Cheshire Cat, October 12, 2013, 03:15:02 PM

Cheshire Cat

In what has got to be one of the most bizarre manifestations of anti-gay sentiments, it appears Kuwait has taken homophobia to new and greater heights.  Who in their right mind would submit themselves to such an examination to visit a place like Kuwait?  I wonder if the test will be done all all foreign diplomats.  lol

http://www.mintpressnews.com/visitors-must-pass-gay-test-before-entry-into-kuwait-qatar/170392/



Quote
Kuwait's director of public health announced the country will begin testing all visitors for homosexuality, banning those who fail the mysterious exam.

Yousuf Mindkar isn't quite sure how his department will go about testing visitors, but is adamant that those who do not pass will not be allowed to enter the country, or any other Gulf nations, including Qatar, which is in line to host the 2022 World Cup.

"This contradicts previous assurances given by FIFA by the Qatar government that everyone will be welcome and that there will be no discrimination," Peter Tatchell, an English LGBT advocate told the International Business Times. "FIFA now has no option but to cancel the world cup in Qatar. Allowing it to go ahead in these circumstances would involve FIFA colluding with homophobic discrimination."

The outrage from Tatchell and other pro-LGBT campaigners across the globe have fallen on deaf ears for those who institute such laws.

"We will take stricter measures that will help us detect gays," Mindkar said, according to a translation printed in Gulf News.

While the measures are sending shockwaves throughout the U.S., it's nothing new for Kuwait. In May, the Kuwaiti Times reported that 215 gay men and women were arrested after investigations.

The arrests were celebrated by the newspaper with the headline, "Over 200 homos, lesbians held in countrywide Net cafe raids." The story was accompanied by a photo of law enforcement officers receiving medals of appreciation from government officials.

In Kuwait, anyone under the age of 21 who is convicted of carrying out "homosexual acts" can received up to 10 years in jail. Just two years before the sweeping arrests of gays and lesbians, Kuwait's censorship board banned the Egyptian film, "Bedoon Rakaba" over lesbian scenes.

Kuwait already mandates that those entering the country partake in a background health check, but the new unknown test will take its screening measures to a new level.

Speaking to Kuwait's Al Rai newspaper, Mindkar was quoted as saying, "Health centers conduct the routine medical check to assess the health of the expatriates when they come into the GCC countries. However, we will take stricter measures that will help us detect gays who will be then barred from entering Kuwait or any of the other GCC member states."

Homosexuality is a crime in Kuwait, along with other Gulf Cooperation Countries (GCC), including Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. In all, 78 countries have banned homosexuality. In Saudi Arabia, homosexuality can be punished by death.
Diane Melendez
We're all mad here!

Charles Hunter

What physical test is there for homosexuality? 

Has FIFA responded?

Scrub Palmetto

Here's an article describing what are probably the same kind of "exams" as they've been happening in Lebanon for some time (and probably other parts of the Arab world as well):

http://www.worldcrunch.com/culture-society/in-lebanon-those-suspected-of-homosexuality-face-brutal-police-examination/c3s5615/

QuoteBEIRUT - In the austere police station, after they are asked to undress, they are told to lean forward or crouch, submitting to a medical examination to determine their sexual orientation. Who are they? People suspected of homosexuality, a punishable offense in Lebanon, a country considered far more tolerant than other Arab countries.

This humiliating practice - well-known in homosexual circles  - has recently been denounced by Lebanese associations. "We broke the silence," Nizar Saghieh says. He is a lawyer, activist and founder of the "Al-Moufakkira al-kanouniya" ("Legal Agenda") NGO, that organized a conference last month where these "examinations of shame" were denounced.

Saghieh explains that it all started with the ordeal of three men, arrested in April near the Beirut home of a Lebanese political leader. Were they spies, plotters, political activists? Police interrogation revealed that they were none of those things. The story should have stopped there. But one of the suspects was considered to be effeminate by the police officers. The three friends were driven to another police station, specialized in morals affairs; and after one night of custody, submitted to anal exams to determine whether or not they were homosexuals. "These young men hadn't done anything wrong, which shows how absurd this method is," says Saghieh.

Even more absurd is that these tests, which should be conducted only after an authorization from a prosecutor, don't have any scientific value. "Doctors admit that the shape of the anus is not a proof of homosexuality. According to them, only the presence of sperm in these areas can prove there was a sexual intercourse.  But in fact, they only take pictures, and under these conditions, their expertise isn't worth much. It's not only useless, it's a moral outrage," the lawyer continues.

So, why do the police maintain these tests if they have no value? "There's something perverse, some sort of sick pleasure, in submitting alleged homosexuals to such examinations," says Alexandre Paulikevitch, an artist and activist.

Forced confessions

The goal of the authorities is to humiliate, but also to intimidate. According to Human Rights Watch, which has denounced similar abuses in Egypt after mass arrests in a gay club in 2001, anal exams are akin to "acts of torture."

Saghieh says police officers want to show that they have the means of finding everything out. "The doctor's presence is mainly used to intimidate the suspects into confessing, by pretending that if the homosexuality is discovered during these tests, the punishment will be more severe," he explains.

Legal Agenda's mobilization campaign doesn't stop here. At the end of June, the NGO will turn its focus to the virginity tests carried out by the police on women suspected of prostitution. Such tests are also carried out when a man is accused of having sexual intercourse with an unmarried woman. "In most cases, the initiative comes from the woman's family, to launch proceedings in case of a broken marriage promise," Saghieh explains. "These tests are serious violation of privacy and physical integrity. And they don't prove anything."

Although homophobia is widespread in Lebanon, the revelations on these "examinations of shame" provoked outrage, particularly on social networks. Authorities remained silent on the subject. The remaining question is whether or not this scandal will start a public debate on the constitutionality of Article 534, which renders illegal "unnatural sexual relations."

"It is high time," says Alexandre Paulikevitch. "Other countries in this region are having revolutions, and here in Lebanon we are still talking about keeping Article 534."

Cheshire Cat

Quote from: Scrub Palmetto on October 12, 2013, 06:25:37 PM
Here's an article describing what are probably the same kind of "exams" as they've been happening in Lebanon for some time (and probably other parts of the Arab world as well):

http://www.worldcrunch.com/culture-society/in-lebanon-those-suspected-of-homosexuality-face-brutal-police-examination/c3s5615/


QuoteBEIRUT - In the austere police station, after they are asked to undress, they are told to lean forward or crouch, submitting to a medical examination to determine their sexual orientation. Who are they? People suspected of homosexuality, a punishable offense in Lebanon, a country considered far more tolerant than other Arab countries.

This humiliating practice - well-known in homosexual circles  - has recently been denounced by Lebanese associations. "We broke the silence," Nizar Saghieh says. He is a lawyer, activist and founder of the "Al-Moufakkira al-kanouniya" ("Legal Agenda") NGO, that organized a conference last month where these "examinations of shame" were denounced.

Saghieh explains that it all started with the ordeal of three men, arrested in April near the Beirut home of a Lebanese political leader. Were they spies, plotters, political activists? Police interrogation revealed that they were none of those things. The story should have stopped there. But one of the suspects was considered to be effeminate by the police officers. The three friends were driven to another police station, specialized in morals affairs; and after one night of custody, submitted to anal exams to determine whether or not they were homosexuals. "These young men hadn't done anything wrong, which shows how absurd this method is," says Saghieh.

Even more absurd is that these tests, which should be conducted only after an authorization from a prosecutor, don't have any scientific value. "Doctors admit that the shape of the anus is not a proof of homosexuality. According to them, only the presence of sperm in these areas can prove there was a sexual intercourse.  But in fact, they only take pictures, and under these conditions, their expertise isn't worth much. It's not only useless, it's a moral outrage," the lawyer continues.

So, why do the police maintain these tests if they have no value? "There's something perverse, some sort of sick pleasure, in submitting alleged homosexuals to such examinations," says Alexandre Paulikevitch, an artist and activist.

Forced confessions

The goal of the authorities is to humiliate, but also to intimidate. According to Human Rights Watch, which has denounced similar abuses in Egypt after mass arrests in a gay club in 2001, anal exams are akin to "acts of torture."

Saghieh says police officers want to show that they have the means of finding everything out. "The doctor's presence is mainly used to intimidate the suspects into confessing, by pretending that if the homosexuality is discovered during these tests, the punishment will be more severe," he explains.

Legal Agenda's mobilization campaign doesn't stop here. At the end of June, the NGO will turn its focus to the virginity tests carried out by the police on women suspected of prostitution. Such tests are also carried out when a man is accused of having sexual intercourse with an unmarried woman. "In most cases, the initiative comes from the woman's family, to launch proceedings in case of a broken marriage promise," Saghieh explains. "These tests are serious violation of privacy and physical integrity. And they don't prove anything."

Although homophobia is widespread in Lebanon, the revelations on these "examinations of shame" provoked outrage, particularly on social networks. Authorities remained silent on the subject. The remaining question is whether or not this scandal will start a public debate on the constitutionality of Article 534, which renders illegal "unnatural sexual relations."

"It is high time," says Alexandre Paulikevitch. "Other countries in this region are having revolutions, and here in Lebanon we are still talking about keeping Article 534."

Chilling!
Diane Melendez
We're all mad here!