Cairo - An Egyptian court jailed eight men for three years on
Saturday over a video prosecutors claimed was of a gay wedding, which
went viral on the Internet.
Homosexuality is not specifically
banned under Egyptian law, so the men, arrested in September, were
charged with "inciting debauchery and offending public morality."
The court also sentenced the eight to three years of probation once they have served their terms.
The
video, filmed aboard a Nile riverboat, shows what prosecutors said was a
gay wedding ceremony, with two men in the centre kissing, exchanging
rings and cutting a cake with their picture on it.
The video went viral on social media websites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.
One of the defendants, prior to their arrest, told a television talk show that the video was recorded during a birthday party.
At
the last hearing, on 11 October, a spokesperson for the justice
ministry's forensics department insisted the men were innocent.
"The
medical test showed that the eight defendants have not practised
homosexuality recently or in the past," Hesham Abdel Hamed told AFP.
"The entire case is made up and lacks basis. The police did not arrest them red-handed and the video does not prove anything."
He was referring to anal examinations, a long-standing practice in Egypt that New York-based Human Rights Watch has condemned.
HRW has demanded that the men be released.
In
the past, Egyptian homosexuals have been jailed on charges ranging from
"scorning religion" to "sexual practices contrary to Islam", the
country's dominant religion.
Thursday, 11 December 2014
EGYPT JAILS EIGHT GAY MEN FOR THREE YEARS
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