Gay men can go cruising - a term for picking up partners - and socialize in male-only sections of cafes and restaurants. In Saudi Arabia, where men and women are strictly separated, there is some space for gay life.
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"Unless it's a VIP house - if the party is at the home of one of the princes or one of the sheiks then you're protected." "I've been invited to private parties for gay men in Jeddah, but I never go because I know what would happen if we were caught," Samir told ABC News.
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In a recent case they apprehended one man at a Jeddah shopping mall, suspecting he was gay from his tight jeans and fitted shirt. Arrests by the religious police are far more arbitrary. Homosexuality is illegal in Saudi Arabia, but the charge calls for four witnesses to make a case. He and his friends are constantly wary of officers from the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, the kingdom's religious police, who patrol for and punish men they suspect of being gay. Samir occasionally goes to Saudi cafes known to be popular gay hangouts, but his public engagements stop there. "Before you make a move you have to think." "You can't let a word slip that makes you seem gay-friendly or gay," he says. At work, Samir watches his words, careful not to arouse the suspicion of colleagues.
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They constantly set him up with women they consider potential wives. He says his mom would kill herself if she found out. Samir's parents don't know of his lifestyle.
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To feel free he takes long vacations to Thailand, where he has a boyfriend, and spends weekends in Lebanon, which he regards as having a more gay-tolerant society.īut at home in Saudi Arabia, he is vigilant. Samir, like many gay men in the Arab world, guards his sexual orientation with a paranoid secrecy. But I know that I'm gay and I'm living as one, so I can't see a clear vision for the future." "I pray to God to help me be straight, just to avoid hell. I know it's forbidden, but I can't help it," he tells ABC News, clearly conflicted. He lives in Mecca, the holiest city according to Islam, and is acutely aware of the stigma that surrounds his gay lifestyle. No comment was immediately available from Twitter.Īl Jazeera is the flagship broadcaster for Qatar, which is the target of a diplomatic and economic boycott by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain, in a stand-off that is endangering stability in the region.DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, - For Samir*, a 34-year-old gay man living in Saudi Arabia, each day is a denial.
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The account later resumed, with a message saying: "We bring the attention of our followers to the fact that our main al jazeera account is now working again." On another of its Twitter feeds, the broadcaster had earlier tweeted: "The account of al Jazeera on twitter is currently suspended due to what seems to be an organised campaign and we are doing the necessary work to get the service back." It did not say who was behind the alleged campaign. Pan-Arab satellite network Al Jazeera said on Saturday the Twitter account for its main Arabic language channel was back up and running after briefly being suspended.Ī source at the Qatar-based broadcaster, which is caught up in an economic and diplomatic dispute between Qatar and other Arab powers, said a technical issue had been to blame.