SUPPORT ISRAEL BY SHARING OUR ARTICLES

Post Image
svgadminsvgOctober 8, 2013svgNews

Kuwait Proposes Test to ‘Detect’ Gays, Ban their Entry

“Health centers conduct the routine medical check to assess the health of the expatriates when they come into the GCC countries,” Mindkar was quoted as saying by Al Rai. “However, we will take stricter measures that will help us detect gays who will be then barred from entering Kuwait or any of the GCC member states.”

Last month, the government of Oman sued the editor of a weekly tabloid and suspended it from publication after it ran a story about gays in the Gulf Arab state. The article was deemed to be sympathetic to homosexuals, according to BBC news.

The publisher, Saleh Zakwani, said the Ministry of Information had told him not to publish the September 5 issue, but it was not clear how long the suspension was for. “No harm was intended by the story,” he told Reuters.

The article in The Week, which distributes 51,000 copies in the Gulf sultanate, suggested that Oman was more tolerant about people’s sexuality than other Gulf states.

The article was denounced across online social networks in Oman and the newspaper was forced to apologize.

In Bahrain, lawmakers, wary of the growing number of gays coming into the country, had pushed for a crackdown, including the adoption of tougher immigration measures and prompt deportations.

svgIsraeli Technology a New Step in Finding a Parking Spot
svg
svgPeres Protests European Resolution on Circumcision