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Afghanistan marriage and gay dating news

Search Search. There is no openly queer community in Kabul, explains Khalid in a telephone conversation over an encrypted messenger service. 1 Since the Taliban's extremist regime was overthrown in the U. LGBT people are trapped by Sharia law and can't even demand their right to exist, let alone marry who they truly love. 2 If people found out, the result would be death. In the middle of the street, he felt a sudden pain in his right shoulder. 3 Naveed, 24, said he recently turned up at one of Kabul's major hotels to get together with a man he'd met in a doctor's waiting room who had asked for his phone number. Sign In Create your free profile. 4 What little information there is pertains to gay men and male transvestites; the situation of lesbians, and that of bisexual, transgender or intersex individuals is largely undocumented. He no longer dares go outside. 5 He hasn't heard from her for a year. LGBTI individuals did not have access to certain health-care services and could be fired from their jobs because of their sexual orientation. 6 The loneliness, the darkness, the uncertainty and the constant fear of death got to him more and more. This video can not be played. 7 The few gay Afghan men who dared to speak of their sexuality described a struggle of confusion and guilt as they grew up trying to cope with feelings they didn't understand. Yes, I would like to receive news from the Human Dignity Trust about how my donation is making a difference. 8 60 LGBT Afghans from October to December Most of those interviewed were in Afghanistan, while others had fled to nearby countries where they remain in. He thought he was well prepared. 9 A gay student from Kabul tells Newsbeat how life has changed under the Taliban. The passage of the revised Penal Code in was praised by the UN for its compliance with international obligations, however there has been a return to strict Sharia law following the takeover of the Taliban in 10 To be gay in Afghanistan is to live in fear. Naveed and Rameen, young gay men in the capital Kabul have lost count of the number of times they've been lured. Khalid starts laughing briefly at this question. 11

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