Egyptian
police have raided a Cairo hammam (bathouse) and arrested at least 33 men for
"perversion" or "debauchery", according to local reports.
Those
arrested were loaded on to trucks, stripped naked, according to witnesses who
posted pictures on social media. Along with police were Central Security
forces, an army forces formed of raw recruits. Homosexuality is not explicitly
banned in Egypt, so they were arrested in connection with the charge of
"perversion" instead.
General
Ali al-Demerdash, head of the Cairo security directorate, said the 33 men were
arrested in "a common public bathhouse in the Azbakeya neighborhood of
Cairo for practising debauchery".
A
journalist working for pro-government al-Qahira wal Nas news channel, Mona
Iraqi, was reportedly tipped off about the raid and entered the hammam ahead of
the arrival of security forces.
After
the incident, she boasted on her Facebook page of an exclusive on "the
biggest den of group perversion in the heart of Cairo," according
to a translation by renowned LGBT activist Scott Long. The
journalist said the full programme will be shown on Wednesday with the
"whole story of the dens for spreading Aids in Egypt".
The
arrests are just the latest episode in Egypt's growing crackdown on LGBT people
in the country. In September, seven Egyptian men were arrested and accused of debauchery after appearing
in a gay wedding video which was posted online.
The
video – which appears to show a group of men celebrating a mock gay wedding on
a Nile riverboat –was recorded in April but posted on YouTube only in August.
According
to the public prosecutor, the images of the footage were "humiliating, regrettable
and would anger God," and "constituted a criminal act".
But
the latest case appears to be even more high-profile than the "gay wedding
video, according to Scott Long.
"What's
clear is that another pro-Sisi media organ is working in close collusion with
security forces, to produce a sensational show about sex with appalling and
terrifying images, to invade privacy and engorge the prisons and destroy
innocent people's lives," he wrote on his blog A Paper
bird.
In
October, gay rights supporters organised an online campaign to protest against the
Egyptian government's persecution of homosexuals.
The
organisers are using Twitter hashtags #StandForEgyptLGBT and
#SolidarityWithEgyptLGBT to call for demonstrations
against homophobic attacks.
(ibtimes.co.uk, 8/12/2014)
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