Bertho Makso. The prison conditions experienced by members of the LGBTQI community are directly linked to the discrimination that they face. This discrimination is omnipresent throughout all their interactions with the prison service, from their arrest to after their release. The morality police target the LGBTQI community, as well as prostitution- and drug-related infractions. As soon as an LGBTQI person is arrested, they are shamed and insulted. In some cases, they are held in police custody for several months, even though the maximum legal limit is 48 hours, with the possibility to renew this once.
Unless they can pay a bribe or have the support of an influential member of Lebanese society, LGBTQI individuals are soon forgotten within the prison system.
They are often tortured or subjected to physical and/or psychological abuse. They have to take mandatory drug and HIV tests. Anyone testing positive for HIV is sent to the “blue building”, a psychiatric prison hospital with a special cell for LGBTQI prisoners. These prisoners are therefore in daily contact with people suffering from major psychological problems.
Prisoners who test negative for HIV are placed in a prison based on their physical appearance. For example, if a transgender woman still has male genitalia, she will be sent to a men’s prison, where the prison staff will cut her hair and she will be subject to constant abuse. Conversely, a transgender woman with female genitalia will be sent to a women’s prison, where she will face rejection from her fellow prisoners and violence if her gender identity becomes known.
Some prison governors reportedly refuse to accept LGBTQI individuals in their prisons, claiming “My prison is clean”. During one of my prison visits, a warden told me he had refused to accept a gay person in his prison. This person was then rejected by three other prisons, before ending up in the central prison in Roumieh.
LGBTQI prisoners also experience sexual violence. They are forced to provide sexual services to their fellow prisoners. The victims, who are referred to as “rabbits”, often do not have enough money to buy food.