ONE leaflet showed a wooden doll hanging from a noose and suggested
burning or stoning homosexuals. “God Abhors You” read another. A third
warned gays: “Turn or Burn”. Three Muslim men who handed out the
leaflets in the English city of Derby were convicted of hate crimes on
January 20th. One of them, Kabir Ahmed, said his Muslim duty was “to
give the message”.
That message—at least in the eyes of religious purists— is
uncompromising condemnation. Of the seven countries that impose the
death penalty for homosexuality, all are Muslim. Even when gays do not
face execution, persecution is endemic. In 2010 a Saudi man was
sentenced to 500 lashes and five years in jail for having sex with
another man. In February last year, police in Bahrain arrested scores of
men, mostly other Gulf nationals, at a “gay party”. Iranian gay men are
typically tried on other trumped-up charges. But in September last year
three were executed specifically for homosexuality. (Lesbians in Muslim
countries tend to have an easier time: in Iran they are sentenced to
death only on the fourth conviction.)
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