Diabolic Digest
Attack
the machinery, not the machinations
By Khaled Diab
March 2002
Backed by UK media celebrities including Elton John, Eddie Izzard, Ian McKellen and Emma Thompson, and over a hundred fellow MEPs, former British soap opera star MEP Michael Cashman formally presented Egypt’s EU ambassador last week with a petition addressed to President Hosni Mubarak, the only man who can grant a pardon in the case.
The 23 men were convicted in November for
allegedly lewd behaviour in public, habitual debauchery, denigrating
monotheistic faiths and propagating deviant ideas. They were among 52 men
arrested by police last May on the Queen Boat, a well-known gay hangout in
Cairo. The other 29 were subsequently released without charge.
While the Egyptian ambassador to the EU has
argued that the case has nothing to do with their sexual orientation, since
being gay is not outlawed in Egypt, the petitioners and international human
rights groups insist that all the charges, which they say evidence for which is
lacking, are euphemisms for homosexuality.
Legal terms and hair-splitting semantics aside,
there is little doubt that the men’s sexual orientation was the reason behind
their arrest and subsequent conviction. However, previous efforts by human
rights groups, gay activists, US and European politicians have not yet secured
the men’s release.
Cashman, who is understandably concerned about
the plight of these men, has suggested that, if diplomatic initiatives fail,
the EU should suspend its association agreement with Egypt on human rights
grounds. I would, however, argue that coming to blows over this case is merely
attacking the symptoms of a more serious malaise that has been growing
alarmingly over the past couple of years.
Throughout a good part of the 1990s, Egypt seemed
to have finally found the path to economic prosperity and to be earnestly
pursuing a process of democratisation. However, a dramatic reversal of Egypt’s
economic fortunes has seen a deterioration in its human rights record. Its
animosity towards its most powerful and organised political rival, the outlawed
Muslim Brotherhood, after a period of toleration, has re-emerged. Using the
pre-text of anti-terrorism, thousands of brotherhood members, who employ
peaceful political means, and other, more militant, Islamists are currently
lingering in detention centres and prisons or are the victims of torture.
As part of its efforts to minimise the social
fallout of its political detentions and deflect attention from rising
unemployment and poverty, it is attempting to take over some of the Islamist
platform, while appearing to offer a more secular alternative. Many
commentators believe the government has cynically attempted to placate the
public with sensational, high profile cases of defending national security and
the faith against corrupt intellectuals and social activists. It is in the
context of the government’s ‘moral cleanup’ and its growing existential
paranoia that the Queen Boat case was presented to the public as some sort of
decadent cult bent on tearing apart Egypt’s social fabric.
On the face of things, Islamists, secular
activists and homosexuals have little in common. However, there is a common
thread that links them all. They are all cases that would not stand the
scrutiny of Egypt’s independent judiciary but have all been tried by emergency
state security and military courts. These tribunals exist under a
twenty-year-old ‘state of emergency’ that has been in place since the late
President Anwar Sadat was assassinated. Apart from questions being raised by
Egyptians about how a country can exist in perpetual emergency, it would
confirm European public fears of the corrosive effects on human rights of
proposed sweeping anti-terrorism laws that may, too, one day prove difficult to
shrug off.
The EU, which views Egypt as a key strategic
ally and prestigious regional player, has voiced, at best, muted criticism of
these draconian emergency laws and of Cairo’s handling of political opponents,
particularly Islamists. Gays are indeed victims of state heavy-handedness, but
they are not the only ones. Ordinary Egyptians may greet with suspicion EU
pressure to release these 23 men while thousands more prisoners of conscience
languish behind bars.
Cashman says that if his current drive does not
work he and his associates will launch an international petition and, if all
else fails, call on the European Commission to suspend its association
agreement with Egypt – signed last summer but not yet ratified by either side –
arguing that the EU cannot “bankroll” human rights abuses. The European Union,
however, is unlikely to jeopardise so openly its ties with what it views as a
key player and reformer on the Middle Eastern and African stage.
However principled his stance may seem, such a
confrontational approach is unlikely to help these men’s case, particularly in
the court of public opinion. In a country where heterosexual sex out of wedlock
is still a hot topic of debate in conservative circles, gay sex is largely a
taboo subject. In short, Egyptian society has a problem coming to terms with
sexuality – whatever its persuasion. Even straight but unmarried couples have
to exercise a certain amount of discretion.
Although gays in Egypt tend to live beneath
society’s radar, most Egyptians don’t wish them harm and leave them in peace.
People know exactly where the gay hangouts are and who their gay friends,
colleagues, and even ministers are – they just don’t often advertise it in the
public sphere. However, if quizzed publicly about it, many people will say its
wrong or fudge the issue. This has made Egypt’s embattled civil society and
liberals – already facing hard times fighting for other rights – reluctant to
take up the banner of gay rights.
It is important for Cashman and his supporters
to see through the government smoke screen and campaign against the
infrastructure that make such abuses possible, thereby tapping into the
groundswell of popular opinion. If they wish to be courageous defenders of
human rights, I believe they must press the government to resume its stalled
democratisation drive by abolishing emergency laws, releasing all civilians
convicted in exceptional courts and dismantling the state security apparatus
that has made life for a large number of Egyptians more perilous.
Calling only for the release of these 23 men
will play into the hands of conservatives who often claim that homosexuality is
a western ‘import’ designed to ‘weaken’ the fabric of society. It will also
further weaken the cause, in the public eye, of the Egyptian human rights movement
which the government has been trying to paint as unpatriotic and the mouthpiece
of foreign powers.
It may not be the kind of direct gay lib
activism that Europe has become used to, but most Egyptian homosexuals will be content
to go back to living, as they have traditionally done, discreetly, away from
centre stage, and most Egyptians will be glad to let them be until society is
one day ready to face up to its various sexual identities. It took Europe long
decades of hard graft to bring about its sexual revolution and sustain it.
Egypt’s own revolution is still pre-pubescence.
ã2004 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.