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AHMAR MUSTIKHAN

I am a journalist of longstanding and have worked in the U.S., U.A.E. and Pakistan.
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Member Since: 12/2008Last Seen: 2/09/2010

British gays back Iran protesters

Tatchell and Adrian Tippetts at the London protest.

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Nearly 600 people – both straight and gay – attended last Friday's
demonstration in London in solidarity with the Iranian people's mass
protests for democracy and human rights, according to a message from
international human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell.

Tatchell has been one of the staunchest advocates for the oppressed
Baluch, Ahwazi, Sindhi and Kurdish people in southwest Asia and want their homelands freed.

One of the pictures carried by the gays showed terrorist-turned-president Mahmoud
Ahmednijad in Sarah Palin's red lipstick.

Tatchell said the rally was held outside the Iranian Embassy and included a gay
contingent comprising members of OutRage!, Iraqi LGBT and gay Muslims.

"Although there were a few awkward looks, we received a mostly warm
welcome from the predominantly straight Iranian protesters," said
human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell of OutRage!, who had encouraged
people to turnout on Thursday night, to coincide with the mass
protests in Tehran the same day.

"Some thanked us for joining the demonstration; others specifically
emphasised their support for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
(LGBT) rights. It was a very positive move to have a visible gay
presence at the rally. I think we generated considerable goodwill from
many of those in attendance.

"We joined the protest to show our solidarity with the heroic freedom
struggle of the Iranian people.

"We support Iranian LGBTs who demand an end to state-sponsored
homophobia, including the repeal of laws that result in the arrest,
imprisonment, flogging and execution of queers.

"We also support Iran's defiant women's rights activists, the jailed
trade unionists, the beaten and murdered students, the persecuted
Baha'is and Sunni Muslims, and Iran's oppressed ethnic minorities, the
Arabs, Kurds, Baluchs and Azeris. Their struggle is our struggle,
because human rights are universal.

"At a speech at Columbia University in New York in 2007, the man who
claims the Iranian presidency after the recent disputed election,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, boasted that there are 'no gays' in Iran.

"But now in his latest broadside against the pro-democracy protesters
in Tehran, he has accused his political opponents of 'officially
recognising thieves, homosexuals and scumbags' in order to win their
votes. The old tyrant has let the cat of the bag. Gay people exist in
Iran and they - and millions of others - voted against him. Hurrah!" said Mr Tatchell.

Though Iran continues to kill and persecute gays, most Iranians are privately very liberal about their sexual preferences.

Many Iranian gays visit Dubai to enjoy the secretive gay bars.

"This is like paradise," one Iranian gay told this correspondent many years ago at a bar in Dubai. "In Tehran there is nothing but darkness."

Downtown Dubai is divided by water and tourists can take a dhow cruise boat, called abraha, from one part to the other. Many of the boat captains are called bandari as they are from Bandar Abbas in Iran and are notorious for their penchant for anal sex.

Ever since the Ayatollah revolution in 1979, life for gays has become almost impossible.

[q url="http://www.globalgayz.com/country/Iran/IRN"]Transsexuality in Iran is legal if accompanied by a sex change operation; however, transsexuals still report societal intolerance. Any type of sexual activity outside of a heterosexual marriage is forbidden. Gay men are treated far more harshly under the law than lesbians[/q]

Prior to the 1979 revolution Iran was quite a gay country: some gays used to have holes in their baggy trousers to facilitate discreet homosexual relationship, according to local sources.

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Ahmar MustikhanDeleted
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Ahmar MustikhanDeleted
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Ahmar MustikhanDeleted
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Go mullahs go.

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Reply#4 - Mon Jun 22, 2009 9:14 AM EDT
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