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You are here: Home / Democracy News Headlines / International Democracy / Egypt’s LGBT Crackdown Expands to Stifle Journalists

Egypt’s LGBT Crackdown Expands to Stifle Journalists

January 28, 2019 by DC Editors Leave a Comment

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Egypt’s LGBT Crackdown Expands to Stifle Journalists
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From Human Rights Watch

An Egyptian television anchor was unexpectedly sentenced to one year in prison for interviewing a gay man on TV last week. The conviction of Mohamed Al-Ghaity, a host on the satellite channel LTV, reveals the lengths the government will go to shut down discussions on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) issues particularly, because al-Ghaity is known as a staunch supporter of Egypt’s government and, based on his past anti-gay comments, apparently shares the government’s hostility towards LGBT rights.

During the segment that landed him in jail, Al-Ghaity asked his unidentified gay guest to discuss his experience as a sex worker. Al-Ghaity’s questions and comments seemed designed to paint a negative picture of sexual minorities – portraying homosexuality as “deviance” and a disease and conflating sexual orientation with sex work.

Yet simply for conducting the interview, a court for minor offenses convicted al-Ghaity of contempt of religion, incitement to debauchery, and immorality, sentencing him to one year in prison and a fine, as well as placing him under police probation for an additional year. He is appealing the sentence.

LTC was also suspended by the Supreme Council for Media Regulation, a government body that in 2017 issued an order prohibiting the “promotion or dissemination of homposexual slogans.” The order states that “it is forbidden for homosexuals to appear in any media outlet…except when they acknowledge their wrong conduct and repent for it” and refers to homosexuality as “a pure, great and eternal evil that must be rooted out.”

This order violates the right to freedom of expression, protected in Egypt’s Constitution, the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. It closes space for LGBT rights advocacy and shuts discussions which could contribute to understanding and acceptance.

Read full report here.

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Filed Under: International Democracy Tagged With: Egypt, Journalism and Free Speech, LGBT People and Democracy, Middle East

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