Tunisian student gets a year in jail for homosexuality

Tunisian police officers in Sousse, Tunisia. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

Tunisian police officers in Sousse, Tunisia. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

A Tunisian court has sentenced a student to a year behind bars on charges of homosexuality, in a judgement condemned by local rights groups, AFP reports.

The youth had been detained on September 6 in the Mediterranean resort area of Sousse for questioning in connection with a murder after his telephone number was found on the victim, lawyer Fadoua Braham said.

He denied any involvement in the murder but admitted to having had sexual relations with the victim. “Another statement was drawn up and my client had to undergo an anal exam against his will,” she said.

The youth was sentenced Tuesday, Fadoua added, but the court could not be reached for comment.

The young man told AFP through the lawyer: “I don’t understand why I was sentenced… nor why I was detained for six days without being allowed to contact my lawyer.”

“I want to get out and resume a normal life,” he said. “I wonder what I’m going to do about my job and studies. I don’t want to be rejected by society.”

Local rights groups ATSM and Shams condemned the judgement, calling anal exams “scandalous.”

They call for decriminalising homosexuality in Tunisia by revising Article 230 of the penal code, according to which sodomy between consenting adults is punishable by up to three years in prison.

In the same context, in July, a Swedish man was given two years behind bars in Tunisia for “homosexual acts.”

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