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Cry for Help from Refugee Sheds Light on Desperation of Gays in Iran
February 22, 2008
by Ann Turner

Los Angeles, CA - A poignant plea for help from a gay Iranian refugee in Malaysia is shedding light on the desperation and fear experienced by homosexuals in Iran and those who have fled their home country to seek refugee status in other countries.

The letter, penned by a young gay man calling himself Sepehr, contains a heartbreaking tale of life as a homosexual in Iran and the suffering caused by the necessity of fleeing to another land to escape persecution and possible death.

The cry for help from another gay Iranian refugee echoes the plight of other gays & lesbians who remain trapped in Iran under threat of death because of their sexual orientation—as well as the fear and desperation faced by Iranian refugees attempting to escape from the country's harsh anti-gay regime.

Just this week, Mehdi, a 19-year-old gay Iranian who fled from the United Kingdom last year to prevent deportation back to Iran went on a hunger strike in protest of the decision by a Netherlands court to return him to the UK. If he is forced back to the United Kingdom, he will likely be sent back to Iran immediately and he fears he will end up with a death sentence if that occurs. Mehdi lived in England for two years while studying on a student visa. While in the UK, he learned his former boyfriend had been executed as a suspected homosexual and is believed to have revealed his relationship with Mehdi under torture before being killed.

In another related story, members of the Union of Students in Ireland called on the Iranian government this week to halt the planned executions of two men suspected of being homosexuals. The two young men, identified as Tayyeb Karimi and Yazdan (surname unknown), have been condemned under Article 110 of Iran's Penal Code stating that men who have gay sex "will be executed."

Last September, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in a speech at New York's Columbia University that "In oour country we don't have homosexuals like in your country. This does not exist in our country."

In 2005, Iran faced public outcry after the public hanging execution of two gay teenagers. According to the London Times, the two teen boys were held in prison for 14 months prior to being killed and were tortured and beaten repeatedly.

Below is the text of the letter published this week from a gay Iranian who fled his country for fear of being tortured or executed. The man, going only by the alias of Sepehr, ended up in Malaysia where he applied for asylum and registered with the Office of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees. The letter was sent to the Iranian Queer Organization in Toronto, which published it on Thursday.

My name is Sepehr [alias used]. I was born and raised in Iran, a country that kills people for falling in love. My government kills homosexuals by asserting we are an enemy of GOD. My president denies us even our existence as human beings when he claimed there are no homosexuals in Iran during his speech at Columbia University.

If he can say there are no homosexuals in Iran, it is because we cannot show ourselves. We stay hidden because if we are visible they will lash us; they will hang us; they will kill us.

They tell us that we are fighting with GOD by falling in love with the same sex. I want to understand that if this is the case, then why has GOD created us like this? I have had great difficulty in Iran and have never felt attracted to the opposite sex and my whole life I have been confronted insecurity about this.

I have always felt like an outsider and friends and acquaintances have often discussed my difference but I could never change how I feel. When I began high school, the abuse started. This left emotional scars.

Then I met someone from school who changed my life. The feeling that existed between us finally gave new meaning to my life. But this came at the cost of handcuffs and the hard punches of the Basiji.

My period of dejection began from there. I understood that my feelings are sinful. I was afraid of everyone and everything. I tried to straighten my life. I went to University and learned English and this kept my thoughts occupied for a while, in a new place and with new people who didn’t know me.

I eventually went to see a doctor and realized that this is my nature and not a virus of some sort. But still I was looking for answers to so many questions. I read books to understand how I should relate to myself and my feelings.

It was at this point that I realized that I have a right to a life of my own. I met a friend and together we tried to put the past behind us. In a new town and with a new life, I finally entered into a few good years.

But the effects of my sexual identity had me trapped again and this good period of my life came to an end. Again sadness; again loneliness. Am I sick? Do I have a disease? My family abandoned me, and just because I love people of the same sex as me.

Leaving Iran

I left Iran by bus to Pakistan because I was being threatened. If arrested, I risked being killed in a public execution with no trial.

From Pakistan I went to Zimbabwe and finally ended up in Malaysia in May 2007 where I applied for asylum and registered with the Office of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees.

Almost a year later, I have completed my second interview and am now awaiting the results of this process.

For about eight months I have been suffering here in Malaysia. In order to get money to eat, I went to the hospital to sell one of my kidneys but they told me that it is illegal to sell body parts in Malaysia. However, I have few options as I am not allowed to work so acquiring those basic needs for survival are therefore difficult.

I am staying in a small town 45 kilometres from the capital city with no money to eat, and living accommodations that leave me vulnerable to millions of insects that suck my blood every night. I do not know what to do. I don’t even have money to buy soap to wash my clothes.

I sit here now in this dying body to write this letter to you. I am praying. I am crying. I am begging my GOD to help me. I am planning to commit suicide but if I do that I will lose so much, over 10 years of study, hard work and self-reflection to figure out who I am.

I had plans. I wanted to write books. I wanted to share my experiences. I wanted to help gay men to better understand who they are.

I wanted to speak with people to help them to understand that I deserve to live too. But this is my life now and as I am writing this letter my life is over. But what I can't understand is what I have done so wrong that I deserve to have my body burnt by cigarettes. I can’t understand what I did wrong that I must be beaten with a gun. But this is life.

I cannot make my plans with an empty stomach. I cannot continue this life. I need your help now. Please help to show me a more just life. I am still young. I want to be alive but I don't know how. Please contact me and show me the way.

HELP ME NOW, TOMORROW IS TOO LATE. I beg you.

I AM TIRED.

For more information, visit the Iranian Queer Organization website.

Article in part courtesy of UK Gay News.


Copyright 2008 GayWired.com, All Rights Reserved
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Comments: Comment Order:
2/29/2008 8:36 AM
Doug

Huh?
2/28/2008 11:10 AM
Doug

To borrow Pereze's "seperated at birth" gag-
Hal and Edith Massey
<See video below>
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i-tipuaAg2Y& feature=related



2/28/2008 10:57 AM
Doug

Tell us, Hal- regarding your profile, do you go after little boys because they tend to be more gullable and naive than people closer to your age? Do "illuminate" us, please
2/28/2008 10:51 AM
Doug

Hal, did you forget to take your medication today?
Who here is "protecting" Ahmadinejad?
Your'e just bitter because everyone thinks yet another one of your "ideas" is crap
2/26/2008 4:54 PM
C.T.

No surprise. It is quite obvious that the degree of religiosity in any society is inversely proportionate to the respect of human rights in that society. This is especially true for the three Abrahamic religions.
2/25/2008 9:52 AM
Gabe

WM says >>>And is parting with a few dollars so painful that you can't offer a little help? So stereotypical! Yet you won't bat an eye on shelling out $600 for a Prada purse. Gimme a break.<<<

WM, that presumptuous Prada comment is as perfect an example of stereotyping as you can get. Don’t foolishly assume you’re the only gay man on Connexions who financially supports human right’s organizations. Give us a break.
2/25/2008 9:02 AM
Gabe

I had a crazy weekend and I'm still a little too hung over and nauseous to be reading Hal comments. Jesus that was BAD. Jake - I blame you. No feeding the animals!
2/24/2008 10:08 PM
Doug

I agree, Ryan and Todd- and Hal whines that we should be blocked and/or removed for our comments.
2/24/2008 7:45 PM
todd

hal,

im afraid you've thought this through too much and it's a bit scary......not funny but scary.
2/24/2008 4:57 PM
Nima

I am so lucky my parents left.
2/24/2008 3:23 PM
Ryan

I'm sending Connexion a cleaning bill...I just threw up all over myself after reading Hal's comment.
2/24/2008 11:41 AM
Doug

Wm- Calm down- not all of us are that superficial- incidentally, my favorite bag is a messenger bag that my sister got me from Old Navy- holds everything I need for work- and it's in University of Michigan colors- since I am a Wolverine fan
I can understand some being somewhat suspicious of this kind of solicitation- there are lots of so called "charities" out there that turn out to be nothing more than a scam. I am sure some of us have gotten the mysterious lottery or Nigerian prince emails. However, I am not suggesting that this is one of those types of letters- what is happening there is absolutely deplorable, but Gabe has a point- how can this man be given assylum in this country, when it's own lgbt citizens (while not being tortured, jailed or killed) are still being treated like second class citizens.
2/24/2008 11:22 AM
Wm

how can so many of you be suspicious? It's documented and it's real. And is parting with a few dollars so painful that you can't offer a little help? So stereotypical! Yet you won't bat an eye on shelling out $600 for a Prada purse. Gimme a break.
2/24/2008 1:54 AM
Jake

Matthew, E Harmoney and Iran have butts3cks with each other.
2/23/2008 9:19 PM
John

I agree with Rudy and Doug. Going by the current spate of ballots denying equal rights we may soon find the US no different from Iran.
2/23/2008 6:22 PM
Jake

Hal, that comment was AWESOME
2/23/2008 2:36 PM
DAViD

i said i was sad about this... but my buddy told me he's gotten emails like this before and people asking for money..
can't trust anything these days.. plus why doesn't he just keep it in his pants, earn some money in iran and get the hell out of there.. they wont know youre gay unless you eat a keilbasa sausage...
i mean jeeeez dude.
2/23/2008 1:27 PM
Gabe

Eugene says >>>The focus should be on the fact that extreme persecution of LGBT people exists throughout the world. Not to speak for others, but I think that what people are trying to get at is that the US needs to be a leader on this issue and we need to have politics that are friendly to providing leadership at the international level in these matters. We should have a UN representative who will advocate for sexual expression to be a protected human freedom. We should provide robust support to asylum seekers who will be persecuted for their orientation. We need to reestablish our eminence as a country that protects marginalized classes and that won’t happen at an international level unless we have the national leadership to make it so.<<<

The U.S. isn't going to do anything like that while gays are treated like second class citizens in our own country. I'm presiding over a commitment ceremony for two friends in a few months, because they can't do it in a court house or hire the justice of the peace like any straight couple, and they're not religious, so they don't want a minister to do it. So who's supposed to do it? It's so sad. One of them has a full time job with benefits, but he won't be able to ad his house husband to his health insurance, because our GOVERNMENT doesn't recognize our relationships as valid. These issues should be at the top of every gay person's list EVERY presidential election. Because as soon as our country recognizes us and our love relationships as equal, we can begin to help gays and lesbians being killed and imprisoned in other countries.
2/23/2008 1:19 PM
Gabe

WM - Way to go. That's really awesome that you took action with a donation. I am going to donate on my next pay day. (lately, all my extra money has gone to Hillary's campaign...and DAMN i want those kenneth coles. guess they'll have to wait another few weeks)
2/23/2008 11:16 AM
Ryan

It's devastating to know that there is a legitimate holocaust happening today...we need to do something before its too late and the numbers reach 7 million+....
2/23/2008 9:21 AM
Wm

Sad story. Broke my heart. Just made a donation at www.irqo.net. Everyone do the same.
2/23/2008 7:37 AM
rudy

how lucky? im sorry but we are not lucky. we are on the same road unless we are given equal rights which we do not have in this country. so people get out there and campaign for gay right and dont forget to vote
2/23/2008 12:35 AM
LEO

There was a documentary on Sundance a few years back about a large group of gay and lesbians who go hide out in the mountains of Tehran once a month and engage in gay behavior because they would be jailed. It was a real eye opener and made me realize how lucky we are here.
2/22/2008 9:50 PM
Nick

i hate that this world disgusts me so.
2/22/2008 8:34 PM
Jake

Brandon:"it's ILLEGAL to be gay on the island where Malibu Rum is bottled. Just remember that when next you're at the bar with the boys sipping a Malibu and pineapple (which is gross anyway)."

Oh god damnit, I have a huuuuuuge bottle of rum in my closet. Now everytime I drink it I'm supporting jailing fags. Great. Fuckin' backwards islanders. Anyone who jails gays for just being gay should be jailed themselves...in a concentration camp. That's right I went there.
2/22/2008 8:31 PM
Jake

RYAN: "That said, it's interesting to note that Iran has taken steps to fund gender therapies for those wishing to change their sex, thus expressing support for the "T" community while condemning the "L," "G," and "B" parts of that term."

Very true, but I think the way they view it is to change one's sex to them "straight." I believe the deal is is you are caught engaging in gay behaviors, either you can undergo a sex change, or have a choice of one of four deaths (being hung, stoned, sliced in half, or dropped from the highest perch). So that's why you see a lot of sex change operations in Iran. It's just their crude way to make you "straight." I wouldn't give them any credit. But perhaps from so many operations, they've perfected the technique and made lots of beautiful uterus-less women who now have to cover their face with cloths.
2/22/2008 5:51 PM
Brandon

I pretty much echo everything Gabe says, so I'm not going to reiterate any of that aside from saying "Right On"

But, for those of you booze-bags who didn't know: it's ILLEGAL to be gay on the island where Malibu Rum is bottled. Just remember that when next you're at the bar with the boys sipping a Malibu and pineapple (which is gross anyway).
2/22/2008 5:16 PM
Ryan

Not to quibble here, but "transgender" and "transsexual" are generally not separated in the term "LGBT" in this country. Transgender is more of an umbrella word that includes both those who have had sex reassignment surgery (transsexual) and those who have not or have no desire to (genderqueer, drag queens, androgynes, etc.). There are, of course, differing opinions on this, but "transgender" as an umbrella term is more generally accepted.

That said, it's interesting to note that Iran has taken steps to fund gender therapies for those wishing to change their sex, thus expressing support for the "T" community while condemning the "L," "G," and "B" parts of that term.

http://tinyurl.com/2xqds2
2/22/2008 4:25 PM
John

That just goes to show you that we are blessed in more ways than one. When we start complaining about what we want and what we don't have, think about this guy. He has no food to eat, no clean clothes and no peace of mind.

It is sad to know that there are people in the world living like this. To be honest, I got a little emotional reading the letter.
2/22/2008 4:02 PM
DAViD

I agree with Evan. Crazy to even try to imagine being in a situation like that.
2/22/2008 3:57 PM
todd

thanks.

the more you know!
2/22/2008 3:42 PM
todd

eugene,

what's the Q stand for? it seems im behind on my letters.

LGBT.............Q?
2/22/2008 3:31 PM
DAViD

why are people comparing this situation to american politics?
a bunch of complainers.... this is sad and terrifying. if it's real that is......
2/22/2008 2:45 PM
Ken

Even under Clinton, the asylum process was totally fbxred... theres a good book by Fauziya Kassindja (I forget the title) about her experience with the system when she was trying to avoid female circumcision, rape, and forced marriage.
2/22/2008 2:42 PM
Ken

Eh, gay equality isn't at the top of my list... that said there's a pretty big gap between say... not being able to marry... and being summarily executed. I'd put healthcare and access to food first, then comes the other stuff. The guy who is going to die tommorow from lack of food or medicine doesn't really need you to think of him more positively... he needs food or medicine.
2/22/2008 1:57 PM
todd

i agree.
everyone has their own personal checklist for what's important to them this election cycle. we all have our own list of priorities in what we would like to see accomplished. obviously, my priorities are different from yours but neither is better than the other.
2/22/2008 1:42 PM
Gabe

You're right. I'm speculating, because our government doesn't keep track of how many gay people seeking asylum are denied and deported. But since we do know that the number of people who have fought our government in court (under the Bush administration) is "in the hundreds" according to the law firms who have represented them, and many of them lost their court battles and were shipped back to be hung, imprisoned, tortured, etc. It's a perfectly reasonable assumption to believe that until we have equal rights for gay and lesbian Americans, our government will be less inclined to protect gay and lesbian foreigners.
2/22/2008 1:21 PM
todd

your sure it's in the thousands huh? sounds like a guess to me.
but anyway it still doesn't change my stance.
2/22/2008 12:38 PM
Billy

Para-phrased
Borat: "In my country, homosexuals is stoned to death."
Texan: "We're trying to make that happen here, too."

I could get behind Bush invading Iran if this genocide was the reason, just like I could have gotten behind him if Hussein's genocide was the reason. Of course, then he'd have to hit Darfur, and there's no oil there.

Sadly, I don't think the position of gay people in Iran would be much improved under the Bush regime.
2/22/2008 12:14 PM
Jeffery

Such a tragic letter. I can't imagine a life where you feel that there is truly no hope at all. My heart goes out to this poor man.

As for Ahmadinejad, he is naive to think that homosexuality doesn't exist in his country. I knew a guy in college...a VERY hot guy in college from Iran. But that's another story...
2/22/2008 12:10 PM
Gabe

Todd - The United States grants asylum to people with a well-founded fear of being persecuted because of their race, religion, nationality, political opinion or social group. That does *not* include sexual orientation. The Immigration and Naturalization Service does not keep figures on how many people seek or receive asylum based on their sexual orientation, but the agency and lawyers who represent gay asylum seekers say there are hundreds. <--that last sentence was cut and pasted directly from www.sodomylaws.org/usa.

Interestingly, under the Clinton administration, Janet Reno instructed immigration officers and courts to grant asylum to gay people, but it has been during the Bush administration that officials have gone back to denying it. In fact, since 2001 (Clinton's last year in office), the number of gays who have had to battle in court to get asylum has grown exponentially. The number is in the hundreds. (straight out of sodomylaws.org) Can you imagine how many more couldn't afford the lawyer?! I'm sure it's in the thousands. These people are KILLED when they get back to their countries. If you don't know that, you can do a google search for "gay asylum" and read story after story. Iran isn't the only country that kills or imprisons homosexuals.
2/22/2008 11:26 AM
todd

gabe,
it is extremely important to me. i never said differently. your the one who's assuming you know what i think. bad call.

so please back up your arguement showing the number of gay asylum seekers being deported back to iran. because unless you show us some numbers then it doesn't hold water to the thousands of iraqi civilians being killed on a daily basis.
2/22/2008 11:22 AM
todd

doug,

ha ha. simma down.............now? i have nothing to simma down about cause there's nothing on here to get heated up over. this article isn't about the election and im not about to hijack it.
2/22/2008 11:21 AM
Gabe

well said, Doug.

Todd - It's good to know equal rights is extremely important to you.

Right now, gay asylum seekers are routinely deported from this country. Do you know what happens when a gay man is deported to Iran? He's killed. Just like ending Dubya's illegal war, equal rights for gays in this country would save innocent lives as well.
2/22/2008 11:09 AM
Doug

Alright, boys, simma down- I know you guys aren't enemyies, but there is the expression "The enemy of my enemy is my friend", considering how important this election year is, I would think that we should start focusing on our "enemy" in this country, aka, the Republican party- and how to legally keep them from controling this country for another 4-8 years
2/22/2008 11:03 AM
todd

gabe,

im not sure which todd your talking about but putting equality as my numero uno priority in this election doesn't help this poor guy one bit or his cause.

gay equality is extremely important to me but the ending of an illegal war and the killing of innocent civilians in the name of democracy concerns me more. so deal with it.
2/22/2008 10:04 AM
Gabe

That was one of the most heartbreaking letters I've ever read. I wish I could afford to fly out there and rescue that man myself. *sigh.

Funny that people like Austin and Todd actually believe gay equality shouldn't be at the top of anyone's list of priorities when choosing the next president. The pendulum swings BOTH ways, people, and until we have our full equality, we're at risk for LOSING even more rights. Wake up!!!!!!!
2/22/2008 9:48 AM
Ken

Reason number 5,645,989 that God and Government shouldn't mix.
2/22/2008 9:46 AM
Joe

America under Mike Huckabee
2/22/2008 5:34 AM
Doug

Sigh, that's what happens in a theocratic government- I am sure things would be the same here, if the Evangelicals had their way

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