OutRage!: The Talibanisation of Iraq...
pirate | 04.09.2006 14:10 | Gender | Repression | Social Struggles | World
OutRage! highlights the greatly increasing threat to lgbt people in Iraq from extremist muslim group(s).
(Cue..rant from 'Twiglet'..?)
(Cue..rant from 'Twiglet'..?)
OutRage! news service Sept 4.
Homophobic terror: The Talibanisation of Iraq
Peter Tatchell reveals the targeted execution of gay Iraqis by
Islamist death squads
Tribune - London, UK - 1 September 2006
Parts of Iraq, including some Baghdad neighbourhoods, are now under
the de facto control of Taliban-style fundamentalist militias. They
enforce a savage interpretation of Sharia law, summarily executing
people for ‘crimes’ like listening to western pop music, wearing
shorts or jeans, drinking alcohol, selling videos, working in a
barber’s shop, homosexuality, dancing, having a Sunni name, adultery
and, in the case of women, not being veiled or walking in the street
unaccompanied by a male relative.
Iraq is sliding fast towards theocracy and is likely to end up similar
to Iran. The power and influence of fundamentalist militias is growing
rapidly. Two militias are doing most of the killing. They are the
armed wings of major parties in the Blair-backed Iraqi government.
Madhi is the militia of Muqtada al-Sadr, and Badr is the militia of
the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), which is
the leading political force in Baghdad’s ruling coalition. Both
militias want to establish an Iranian-style religious dictatorship.
Despite this goal of clerical fascism, the Socialist Workers Party and
the Stop The War Coalition support Muqtada al-Sadr. They invited his
representative to speak at the anti-war rally in London on 18 March.
Not to be outdone, the July issue of the left-wing monthly Red Pepper
gave over a whole page to white-washing al-Sadr’s crimes against
humanity.
The terrorisation of gay Iraqis by these Islamist death squads is
symptomatic of the fate that will befall all Iraqis if the
fundamentalists continue to gain influence.
Under Saddam Hussein discrete homosexuality was usually tolerated.
Since his overthrow, the violent persecution of gay people is
commonplace. It is actively encouraged by Iraq’s leading cleric, the
British and US-backed Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. He issued a
fatwa ordering the execution of gay Iraqis. His followers in the
Islamist militias are now systematically targeting lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people, as indicated by the following
reports received from my clandestine gay activist contacts inside
Iraq:
Wissam Auda was a member of Iraq’s Olympic tennis team. His dream was
to play at Wimbledon this year. He had been receiving death threats
from religious fanatics on account of his homosexuality. On 25 May,
his vehicle was ambushed by fundamentalist militias in the al-Saidiya
district of Baghdad. Wissam, together with his coach Hussein Ahmed
Rashid and team mate Nasser Ali Hatem, were all summarily executed in
the street. Their crime? Wearing shorts. An Iraqi National Guard
checkpoint was about 100m from the site of the ambush, but the
soldiers did nothing, according to eye-witnesses.
The father of 23 year old Baghdad arts student, Karzan, has been told
by militias that his son has been sentenced to death for being gay. If
his father refuses to hand over Karzan for execution, the militia has
threatened to kill the family one by one. This has already happened to
Bashar, 34, an actor. Because his parents refuse to reveal his hiding
place, the Badr militia murdered two of his family members in
retribution.
Nyaz is a 28-year old dentist who lives in Baghdad. She is terrified
that her lesbian relationship will be discovered, and that both she
and her partner will be killed. They have stopped seeing each other.
It is too dangerous. To make matters worse, Nyaz is being forced by
the fundamentalist Mahdi militia to marry an older, senior Mullah with
close ties the Mahdi leader, Muqtada al-Sadr. If she does not agree to
the marriage, or tries to run away, Nyaz and her family will be
targeted for ‘honour killing’ by Sadr’s men.
Gay Iraqis cannot seek the protection of the police. Iraq’s security
forces have been infiltrated by fundamentalists, especially the Badr
militia. They have huge influence in the Interior Ministry and the
police, and can kill at will and with impunity.
Fourteen year old Ahmed Khalil was accused of corrupting the community
because he had sex with men. According to his Baghdad neighbour, in
April four men in police uniforms arrived at Ahmed’s house in a
four-wheel-drive police pick-up truck. They wore the distinctive face
masks of the Badr militia. The neighbour saw the police drag Ahmed out
of the house and shoot him at point-blank range, pumping two bullets
into his head and several more bullets into the rest of his body.
In the chaos and lawlessness of post-war Iraq, hundreds of young boys
are being blackmailed into the sex industry. The sex ring operators
lure the boys into having gay sex, photograph them and then threaten
to publish their photos unless they work as male prostitutes. If their
gayness was publicly revealed, the boys would be executed by the
Islamist militias. They are trapped.
Wathiq, aged 29, a gay architect, was kidnapped in Baghdad in March.
Soon afterwards, the Badr militia sent his parents death threats,
accusing them of allowing their son to lead a gay life and demanding a
£11,000 ransom. The parents paid the money, thinking it would save
Wathiq’s life. But he was found dead a few days later, with his body
mutilated and his head cut off.
The UK gay rights group OutRage! is working to support our counterpart
organisation in Baghdad, Iraqi LGBT. Despite the great danger
involved, Iraqi LGBT has established a clandestine network of gay
activists inside Iraq’s major cities, including Baghdad, Najaf,
Karbala, Hilla and Basra. These courageous activists are helping gay
people on the run from fundamentalist death squads; hiding them in
safe houses in Baghdad, and helping them escape to Syria and Lebanon.
The world ignores the fate of LGBT Iraqis at its peril. Their fate
today is the fate of all Iraqis tomorrow.
* Iraqi LGBT is appealing for funds to help the work of their members
in Iraq. They don’t yet have a bank account. The UK gay rights group
OutRage! is helping them. Cheques should be made payable to
“OutRage!”, with a cover note marked “For Iraqi LGBT”, and sent to
OutRage!, PO Box 17816, London SW14 8WT.
More info on Iraqi LGBT: http://iraqilgbtuk.blogspot.com/
Ends
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Homophobic terror: The Talibanisation of Iraq
Peter Tatchell reveals the targeted execution of gay Iraqis by
Islamist death squads
Tribune - London, UK - 1 September 2006
Parts of Iraq, including some Baghdad neighbourhoods, are now under
the de facto control of Taliban-style fundamentalist militias. They
enforce a savage interpretation of Sharia law, summarily executing
people for ‘crimes’ like listening to western pop music, wearing
shorts or jeans, drinking alcohol, selling videos, working in a
barber’s shop, homosexuality, dancing, having a Sunni name, adultery
and, in the case of women, not being veiled or walking in the street
unaccompanied by a male relative.
Iraq is sliding fast towards theocracy and is likely to end up similar
to Iran. The power and influence of fundamentalist militias is growing
rapidly. Two militias are doing most of the killing. They are the
armed wings of major parties in the Blair-backed Iraqi government.
Madhi is the militia of Muqtada al-Sadr, and Badr is the militia of
the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), which is
the leading political force in Baghdad’s ruling coalition. Both
militias want to establish an Iranian-style religious dictatorship.
Despite this goal of clerical fascism, the Socialist Workers Party and
the Stop The War Coalition support Muqtada al-Sadr. They invited his
representative to speak at the anti-war rally in London on 18 March.
Not to be outdone, the July issue of the left-wing monthly Red Pepper
gave over a whole page to white-washing al-Sadr’s crimes against
humanity.
The terrorisation of gay Iraqis by these Islamist death squads is
symptomatic of the fate that will befall all Iraqis if the
fundamentalists continue to gain influence.
Under Saddam Hussein discrete homosexuality was usually tolerated.
Since his overthrow, the violent persecution of gay people is
commonplace. It is actively encouraged by Iraq’s leading cleric, the
British and US-backed Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. He issued a
fatwa ordering the execution of gay Iraqis. His followers in the
Islamist militias are now systematically targeting lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people, as indicated by the following
reports received from my clandestine gay activist contacts inside
Iraq:
Wissam Auda was a member of Iraq’s Olympic tennis team. His dream was
to play at Wimbledon this year. He had been receiving death threats
from religious fanatics on account of his homosexuality. On 25 May,
his vehicle was ambushed by fundamentalist militias in the al-Saidiya
district of Baghdad. Wissam, together with his coach Hussein Ahmed
Rashid and team mate Nasser Ali Hatem, were all summarily executed in
the street. Their crime? Wearing shorts. An Iraqi National Guard
checkpoint was about 100m from the site of the ambush, but the
soldiers did nothing, according to eye-witnesses.
The father of 23 year old Baghdad arts student, Karzan, has been told
by militias that his son has been sentenced to death for being gay. If
his father refuses to hand over Karzan for execution, the militia has
threatened to kill the family one by one. This has already happened to
Bashar, 34, an actor. Because his parents refuse to reveal his hiding
place, the Badr militia murdered two of his family members in
retribution.
Nyaz is a 28-year old dentist who lives in Baghdad. She is terrified
that her lesbian relationship will be discovered, and that both she
and her partner will be killed. They have stopped seeing each other.
It is too dangerous. To make matters worse, Nyaz is being forced by
the fundamentalist Mahdi militia to marry an older, senior Mullah with
close ties the Mahdi leader, Muqtada al-Sadr. If she does not agree to
the marriage, or tries to run away, Nyaz and her family will be
targeted for ‘honour killing’ by Sadr’s men.
Gay Iraqis cannot seek the protection of the police. Iraq’s security
forces have been infiltrated by fundamentalists, especially the Badr
militia. They have huge influence in the Interior Ministry and the
police, and can kill at will and with impunity.
Fourteen year old Ahmed Khalil was accused of corrupting the community
because he had sex with men. According to his Baghdad neighbour, in
April four men in police uniforms arrived at Ahmed’s house in a
four-wheel-drive police pick-up truck. They wore the distinctive face
masks of the Badr militia. The neighbour saw the police drag Ahmed out
of the house and shoot him at point-blank range, pumping two bullets
into his head and several more bullets into the rest of his body.
In the chaos and lawlessness of post-war Iraq, hundreds of young boys
are being blackmailed into the sex industry. The sex ring operators
lure the boys into having gay sex, photograph them and then threaten
to publish their photos unless they work as male prostitutes. If their
gayness was publicly revealed, the boys would be executed by the
Islamist militias. They are trapped.
Wathiq, aged 29, a gay architect, was kidnapped in Baghdad in March.
Soon afterwards, the Badr militia sent his parents death threats,
accusing them of allowing their son to lead a gay life and demanding a
£11,000 ransom. The parents paid the money, thinking it would save
Wathiq’s life. But he was found dead a few days later, with his body
mutilated and his head cut off.
The UK gay rights group OutRage! is working to support our counterpart
organisation in Baghdad, Iraqi LGBT. Despite the great danger
involved, Iraqi LGBT has established a clandestine network of gay
activists inside Iraq’s major cities, including Baghdad, Najaf,
Karbala, Hilla and Basra. These courageous activists are helping gay
people on the run from fundamentalist death squads; hiding them in
safe houses in Baghdad, and helping them escape to Syria and Lebanon.
The world ignores the fate of LGBT Iraqis at its peril. Their fate
today is the fate of all Iraqis tomorrow.
* Iraqi LGBT is appealing for funds to help the work of their members
in Iraq. They don’t yet have a bank account. The UK gay rights group
OutRage! is helping them. Cheques should be made payable to
“OutRage!”, with a cover note marked “For Iraqi LGBT”, and sent to
OutRage!, PO Box 17816, London SW14 8WT.
More info on Iraqi LGBT: http://iraqilgbtuk.blogspot.com/
Ends
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
pirate
Comments
Hide the following 13 comments
Your fault !
04.09.2006 14:28
You help justify genocide then decry the same genocide - shame on you. Tell me again how many recent Outrage articles and actions have been demonising Irans attitude to gays compared to Saudi Arabia. You are no pirate, you are the Royal Navy itself.
Danny
Danny the liar
04.09.2006 16:00
Qwerty
Tale wags the dog
04.09.2006 17:20
"Peter Tatchell consistently OPPOSED the war in Iraq"
That is true on the surface. Ann Clywd also opposed the invasion of Iraq, on the surface. However their continual , and timely for New Labour, criticism of Iraq pre-invasion was useful in muddying the waters for NuLab spin-doctors to exploit in justifying the invasion. Now Tatchell differentiated himself from Clywd only by the nature of his criticisms of Saddam - specifically anti-gay legislation introduced by Saddam in the year before the invasion, whereas Ann focussed on the more general human right abuses. You have to realise though that the Saddam dictaroship was only forced into adopting so-called Islamic legislation to shore up domestic support in the face of international criticism of his imaginary WMD. The Ba'ath party was secularist by tradition and intent, even in the hands of the dictator.
"and it is a complete lie to say that Outrage used the persecution of gays (which in any event only started long after the war) as an excuse to start the war. So it is not only a lie, but an illogical one."
C'mon, try harder. If the persecution of gays only started after the war then why did Tatchell single out Iraq for intense criticism before the war? Doesn't that make you suspicious of his motives ? A 'Labour Friend of Iraq' ? Or do you doubt Iraq was especially and relatively unfairly criticised by Outrage! before the invasion ? If the latter case, a simple Google would inform you otherwise.
If you, Pyrate Qwerti or whoever, report your own views here then I will treat them with respect even as I argue against them, but Tatchell is 'damaged goods' imo and simple reprints from Outrage deserve no more respect than press releases from any other obvious NuLab source. The simple fact is while Outrage criticises all anti-gay regimes, it demonstrably criticises more regimes that are official enemies of NuLab, and it's criticism of so-called 'friendly regimes' like Saudi Arabia - which is in fact more abusive of gays than either Saddam was or Iran is -is markedly more muted. So in my view Outrage! is a compromised witness. In effect a liar, though I hate to criticise someone elses veracity without proof.
I never used to believe this, it was only because I wanted to rubbish 'Twilight's view of Outrage! that I took the time to investigate the facts. And the facts are quite damning - if Clywd and Outrage! aren't on Blairs payroll then they certainly should be. They have blood on their hands, including the blood of the gays you now mourn. So thanks for that Twilight, if you toned down your rhetoric then you could probaby teach me more stuff that I'd eventually learn anyway. And Pirate - post your own opinions sometimes too if you want to be taken seriously here. Reprints are for minions.
Danny
Agree with Danny on this one
04.09.2006 20:22
This sort of thing is I think particularly dangerous because instead of discussing the pros and cons of actions to stop a war, it diverts people into a discussion of humanitarian intent. I can't count the number of times I've had ridiculous discussions with people who defend the occupation of Afghanistan because George Bush wants to help women (presumably he's a feminist in his spare time).
Even better are the people who think that it's important for American troops, South African corporate mercenaries, and the British Army to combat "foreign fighters" in Iraq, and that the main violence in the country comes from the (admittedly violent and sometimes near-fascistic) resistance. This conversation usually stops very quickly when it's pointed out that the US government has had to step up production of rifle ammunition by between 300-500 million bullets per year, because pre-war production levels were inadequate. This output is projected to continue for the next five years, which says quite a bit about the chief source of violence in Iraq and Afghanistan. See the attached web link for more info on this, or do a search on "SNC Lavalin" and "Indymedia".
A bit more effort on the part of those who are supposedly "against the war" wouldn't go amiss.
smee
Homepage: http://www.beirut.indymedia.org/ar/2004/11/1919.shtml
Evidence please
05.09.2006 08:55
Please provide a single reference to Tatchell _specifically_ citing anti-gay legislation in the year before the Iraq war. I think you'll find that Tatchell's argument all along was that an uprising of the Iraqi people should be supported so that change could come from within, but that an invasion by outside forces would we the worst idea possible.
I also find it quite scary that you seem to think that brutal dictators should not be criticised in case the US or the UK decides to depose them. If you're so concerned about the lives of innocent civilians, why weren't you concerned about those same civilians when Saddam Hussein was butchering them?
The whole foundation of your argument appears to be "remain silent about women being stoned to death in Iran because complaining - even if you explicitly oppose a war - will help the Bush/Blair agenda."
Well done for having such clarity on whose lives are expendable. I don't. But tell me, how many women, trade unionists, homosexuals, political and religious dissidents, apostates, secularists, socialists, trade unionists can be jailed, tortured and executed before we're allowed to complain? How many ethnic minorities can be "cleansed" before we protest? I eagerly await your guidance.
Qwerty
Bullets
05.09.2006 09:01
GASP!!! So you're saying more bullets are used during a war than in peace time? Wow, I'm stunned.
Qwerty
qwerty
05.09.2006 09:06
Is that what he said? My reading was that he said the US/UK military industrial complex were using the bullets - geddit?
Comrade Blob
Another gasp!
05.09.2006 12:58
GASP!!! Oh, so bullets are actually *used* during a war. Sorry, I didn't realise that. I though cream pies were thrown around. Now I geddit. Thanks!
Qwerty
Clarifying Qwerty
05.09.2006 15:16
Tatchell and Outrage! are guilty as charged, they are New Labour's Fifth Column and modern day Mary Whitehouses, who seek to impose their own morality on the rest of us. Witness the prosecution of Glasgow Firemen for refusing to support Glasgow Gay Pride, an unarguably explicit political event. Could you imagine the out cry if a Scottish Tory local authorities had ordered gay council employees to leaflet a political rally in support of section 28 and then disciplined them when they refused?
Tatchell and Outrage! are fighting for their rights and freedoms while screwing ours. It is not going to be forgotten or forgiven. Tachell has built his entire career slagging off the working class people of Bermondsey. Meanwhile our MP remains defiantly bi-sexual, (we all thought he was gay so it came as a surprise) and people still vote for him, funny that if we are all the homophobes.
Bermondsey Bill
"Clarification"
05.09.2006 16:55
I didn't say that at all, let alone "seriously".
Qwerty
Blair and Tatchell
06.09.2006 01:37
that pesky hamster again
Bermondsey Bill is a Demented Homo-hater
07.09.2006 05:46
Caz
same old guff
08.09.2006 19:01
If you critisise Tatchell your a homophobe.
Not-Caz