Gay people living under radar in Qatar prepare warily for World Cup
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[November 19, 2022]
By Maya Gebeily and Andrew Mills
DOHA (Reuters) - A group of Arab friends
living in Qatar's capital Doha met up over cocktails and snacks last
week, exchanging opinions as they flicked through profiles of gay men on
dating apps Tinder and Grindr.
The phone of one flashed with a message from a suitor around the corner.
The man in his 20s leapt up from the table, leaving to meet his date
face-to-face.
The friends, who met up days before the soccer World Cup kicks off in
Qatar on Sunday, are part of a Doha gay scene that's managing to fly
under the radar in a nation where same-sex relations are illegal and
punishable by up to three years of jail-time.
"We socialize together. We go out for dinner. We go to parties. We go to
the beach," said another gay man, from the West, who has lived in the
wealthy country for over a decade. "We don't make-out with our
boyfriends in public or wave rainbow flags, but we certainly don't lower
our voices."
Reuters spoke to four gay men in Doha - the Westerner, two Qataris plus
an Arab from elsewhere in the region - who said they lived in the
country, a magnet for foreign workers, because they had well-paid jobs,
plus friends or family there.
All four spoke on condition of anonymity due to concern over possible
punishment from authorities. But they said they could live out their
lives to some extent, meeting potential partners at private parties or
via dating apps typically blocked in Qatar which they accessed via a VPN.
"It's not all suffering," said a 30-year-old gay Arab man who has lived
and worked in Doha for nearly 10 years.
In fact, the four expressed worries about the wave of international
criticism about gay rights in Qatar brought by the World Cup, fearing
they could lose the freedoms they do enjoy should the opprobrium lead to
a public backlash against the LGBT+ community once global attention
moves on.
"What about us, who have lived in Doha for years and made Doha queer?"
the Arab man said. "What happens when the World Cup is over? Does the
focus on the rights stop?"
These men present just one snapshot of life for gay people in the Gulf
nation - and the four recognise their relative freedoms are a product of
privilege; they can afford to live alone, host parties and meet partners
in high-end restaurants or nightclubs, where the strict rules of Qatari
society are often more relaxed.
It's not like that for everyone.
Other members of Qatar's LGBT community have reported being detained,
some as recently as September, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has said. The
group also accused authorities of ordering some transgender women to
attend conversion therapy.
A Qatari official criticised the HRW report as containing false
information and said the country does not license or operate conversion
centres.
Nas Mohamed, a gay Qatari physician who has lived in the United States
for about a decade, welcomed the attention the tournament has drawn to
Qatar's rights record, saying it prompted him to speak out widely about
his sexuality.
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A general view shows Pearl Island, an
artificial island spanning nearly four square kilometres, ahead of
the FIFA 2022 World Cup soccer tournament at Katara Cultural Village
in Doha, Qatar November 17, 2022. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch/
"When you're an LGBT person (in Qatar) and don't get to experience
being your full authentic self, then you just lose your sense of
self," Mohamed told Reuters this month at a clinic he operates in
San Francisco.
Other groups including Amnesty International have also criticised
Qatar for discriminating against the LGBT community.
A Qatari official said the country "does not tolerate discrimination
against anyone, and our policies and procedures are underpinned by a
commitment to human rights for all".
NO DISPLAYS OF AFFECTION
Qatar, a rich gas-producing nation, attracts workers from across the
region and the wider world. Qatari nationals make up just 380,000 of
its 2.9 million population, with the rest foreign workers, ranging
from low-income construction workers to high-powered executives.
The four men interviewed by Reuters said that there were strong
financial and career incentives to residing in the country, adding
that life for gay people there was better than in some other places
in the Middle East.
They cited Saudi Arabia and Iran, where men have been sentenced to
death for being gay..
"If you're an expat, you're able to live your life like you want,"
said the 30-year-old Arab man. "At the same time, I know I can live
like this because I am privileged. I know gay men in workers' camps
wouldn't be able to live the same way."
Qatari organisers of the World Cup have warned visitors against
public displays of affection but say that everyone, no matter their
sexual orientation or background, is welcome at the event.
During the tournament, medical practitioners will not ask patients
about their extramarital sex, religion or any other status,
according to the Yousef Al Maslamani, the healthcare spokesperson
for the FIFA World Cup.
In the 12 years since Qatar was named host of the 2022 tournament,
the country has faced intensifying criticism over its rights record
on laborers, women and the LGBT community.
The furore has been fuelled by comments from public figures
including former Qatar player and World Cup ambassador Khalid Salman
who told a German broadcaster that homosexuality was "damage in the
mind".
"Qatar and FIFA had over a decade to introduce fundamental
protections based on sexual orientation and gender identity, but
failed to do so," said Rasha Younes, LGBT+ researcher for Human
Rights Watch.
"In 2020, Qatar assured prospective visitors that the kingdom will
welcome LGBT visitors and that fans will be free to fly the rainbow
flag at the games. But it begged the question: what about the rights
of LGBT residents of Qatar?"
(Reporting by Maya Gebeily and Andrew Mills; Editing by Pravin Char)
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