8.8.07
Los Angeles Times
by Molly
Hennessy-Fiske
Since
the U.S.-led invasion, homosexuals have been increasingly targeted by
militias and police, human rights groups say.
BAGHDAD — Samir Shaba sits in a restaurant, nervously describing gay life in
Iraq. He speaks in a low voice, occasionally glancing over his shoulder.
The heavyset, clean-shaven Christian says that before the U.S.-led invasion
in 2003, he frequented the city's gay blogs, online chat rooms and dance
clubs, where he wore flashy tight clothes, his hair long and loose to his
shoulders.
After the invasion, he and other gays and lesbians were driven underground
by sectarian violence and religious extremists. Shaba, 25, packed his flashy
clothes away, started wearing baseball caps and baggy T-shirts and stopped
visiting clubs and chat rooms. But he couldn't bear to cut his hair.
"I cannot change everything immediately," he said, fingering his black
ponytail. "I suffered because I didn't cut it."
Recently, Shaba said, police commandos spotted his hair as he was riding in
a taxi through a checkpoint in central Baghdad. Suspecting that he was gay,
the four commandos dragged him out of the taxi by his hair, and forced him
into an armored car. They demanded his cellphone, cash and sex.
When he refused, they beat him with a baton and gang-raped him. He rubbed
the back of his shirt, feeling for the scars.
"They got what they wanted because I thought otherwise I would lose my
life," Shaba said, and he began to weep. "They threatened me that if I told
anyone, they would kill me."
Heightened attacks
Human rights groups say that Iraqi gays are increasingly targeted by
militias and police. The United Nations and State Department have issued
reports documenting some of the more recent killings.
A U.N. report in January cited attacks on gays by militants, as well as the
existence of "religious courts, supervised by clerics, where homosexuals
allegedly would be 'tried,' 'sentenced' to death and then executed."
Iraqi leaders dismiss those allegations, and Middle East experts say it's
difficult to tell whether the attacks are state-sanctioned.
"Nobody's paying attention to this issue," said Ali Dabbagh, spokesman for
Prime Minister Nouri Maliki. "It is not the custom of the people of Iraq.
Not only Iraq, but the whole region."
In October 2005, Iraq's leading Shiite Muslim cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali
Sistani, issued a fatwa, or religious decree, on his website
forbidding homosexuality and declaring that gays and lesbians should be
"punished, in fact, killed."
"The people involved should be killed in the worst, most severe way," the
decree said.
The fatwa against gay men was removed from Sistani's website last
year, but it was not revoked, said Ali Hili, an Iraqi gay-rights activist
living in London who petitioned Sistani's office to remove it.
Hili compiles details of the killings of homosexuals, including
photographs of victims, and posts them online. Included in his list of
victims are:
• Anwar, 34, a taxi driver who ran a safe house for gays in the southern
city of Najaf. Hili said Anwar was shot execution-style after he was stopped
at a police checkpoint in March.
• Nouri, 29, a tailor in the southern city of Karbala who had received
death threats for being gay and was beheaded in February, Hili said.
• Hazim, 21, of Baghdad also received threats, Hili said, and after police
seized him at home in February, his body was found with several gunshots to
the head.
Shaba said his cousin Alan, 26, who also was gay, was shot in the head one
day when he went to answer the door while the two were having lunch.
Although Alan might have been targeted because he was working as an
interpreter with U.S. forces in the Green Zone, Shaba said he thought his
cousin was killed because he was openly gay.
"There are other translators in our neighborhood, and nobody killed them,"
he said.
Difficult to discern
Given the pervasiveness of sectarian violence in Iraq, it's hard to tell
whether such men are targeted for being gay, said filmmaker Parvez Sharma, a
gay Muslim based in New York. Sharma just finished filming a documentary
called "A Jihad for Love," set in Iraq and a dozen other Middle Eastern
countries. It is to be released this fall.
Sharma's film concentrates on the prosecution of 52 gay men arrested in 2001
aboard a floating nightclub on the Nile; they became known as the "Cairo
52." No similar incident has been documented in Iraq, Sharma said.
"It's very difficult to tell whether there is a pogrom of any sort to kill
gay men," he said, but the environment for gays in Iraq has clearly soured.
In the 1980s, Baghdad and Cairo were gay social centers, Sharma said. Many
Iraqi gays settled into straight marriages and had families, but many
continued to have homosexual relationships on the side.
Although President Saddam Hussein shut down many of Baghdad's gay bars in
the 1990s and passed a law against sodomy in 2001, Iraqi gays and lesbians
still socialized.
After the 2003 invasion, a man who gave his name as Ahmed still cruised
Rubaie Street, a once popular gay thoroughfare in the eastern Baghdad
neighborhood of Zayuna, but he was not openly gay, he said.
A year and a half ago, one of the men he'd met there showed up at his
apartment wearing an Iraqi army uniform. He threatened to tell fellow
soldiers that Ahmed was gay unless he paid a bribe of 160,000 dinars, about
$135.
That was a probable death sentence, he said.
Ahmed paid, fled the country for Amman, Jordan, and considers himself among
the lucky ones.
A 31-year-old gay pharmacist in the mostly Sunni west Baghdad neighborhood
of Amiriya, said several of his friends were killed for being gay. He is
often followed and stopped at checkpoints, he said. He spoke on condition of
anonymity, for fear that he might be attacked.
He dreams of getting a visa to Sweden, Germany or the Netherlands, which
have accepted the bulk of Iraqi refugees, and then applying for asylum
because of political persecution.
The United States has recognized asylum claims by gays and lesbians since
1994, but the applications of only about 14% of lesbians and 16% of gay men
have been approved, according to the San Francisco-based Asylum
Documentation Program of the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights
Commission.
In Iraq, the wait for visas is long. Fake travel documents cost at least
$15,000 on the black market, out of the pharmacist's price range.
"I'm just looking for salvation," he said. "Maybe next month you will call
and my family will say, 'Oh, he is killed.' "
'A cultural issue'
A U.N.
spokesman said it was difficult to determine how many gays have been
targeted and whether the Iraqi government is trying to help them.
"They have said they are trying to improve human rights for all Iraqis, but
they are not even willing to say there are gays in Iraq. This is a cultural
issue," U.N. spokesman Said Arikat said.
Wijdan Mikaeil, Iraq's minister of human rights, said her office had not
received reports of attacks on gays. She said that gays may be afraid to
come forward but that the United Nations is over-emphasizing the problem.
"The Iraqi people have been attacked all across Iraq — not because they are
gay, but because of the sectarian issue," she said.
The State Department has urged Iraq to prevent attacks on gays,
spokeswoman Janelle Hironimus said, but the insurgency and sectarian
violence have made it difficult for the government to protect human rights.
Gabor Rona, international legal director at New York-based Human Rights
First, said the chaos shouldn't stop the U.S. government from pressuring
Iraqi authorities to hold security forces accountable for abusing gays.
"We may not have any ability to do anything about suicide bombings and
insurgent attacks, but we may have the ability to influence the Iraqi
government if they have a hand in this," Rona said.
Some U.S. legislators are demanding that the State Department act.
Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) and Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), both openly gay
lawmakers, sent a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in June
demanding that she investigate attacks on Iraqi gays and pressure Maliki to
respond.
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) has sponsored legislation that would
prioritize gay Iraqi refugees in an expanded Iraqi refugee program.
Ahmed, now living in Amman, said U.S. forces in Iraq should investigate
reports of assaults on gays and ensure that those responsible are punished.
"At least if they catch one of them, they may be afraid to do it again."