Afghani gay sex

Fear, Secrecy and Peril a Way of Life for Afghan Gays

To be same-sex attracted in Afghanistan is to live in fear. Naveed and Rameen, young queer men in the capital Kabul hold lost count of the number of times they've been lured into risky situations on what they believed to be dates.

Both men describe being robbed, beaten up and blackmailed, and receiving death threats. They've even eluded police "honey traps" that could have seen them thrown in prison without ask for, simply on suspicion of being gay.

They know they could be killed, with impunity, if they reveal their sexuality. Rameen, 31, tells the story of his friend, Zabi, who was killed by his family after coming out as gay, a so-called "honor killing" usually reserved for young women.

"He was shaming the family by being reveal about it. They stabbed him so many times," Rameen said. "It was a warning for us, for other gays. Now we keep to ourselves; we live a hidden life. And a hidden animation is no animation at all."

Both men use fake names among gay friends, and said none of their relatives or colleagues realize the truth about their sexuality.

Meeting other gay men is difficult as there are no regular gathering places, and the need to be di

So drop the trousers and jockies and get the woodie out and enjoy! By the way David, This one is dedicated to you!

There I was, standing on the space between the Helo Pad and the military bunker in Kabul, Afghanistan. (Dudes, From period to time I'll cut you in on things that I believe you should know as the story continues. Here is the first note just between us. I'm writing this as if it was really me that is in for the action. No way, I want it were so, but it is something I lay together in my mind and is a compilation of things I heard from dudes who were really there and did the hot things that I am writing about.) My billet was supposed to be all arrange up for the military compound and large Bunker. I had just arrived on the daily Helo ride from Baghdad and still had six months to do before I was due for rotation. I'm a Lieutenant of Marines and complete some covert operate on my hold and report to an Intelligence authority where ever I am sent. I'm a hot six foot one inches tall and weigh 160 pounds and pack 6 1/2 inches when challenging. For any of you who call to mind I'm cut and love to create a little amusement about you uncut dudes. (Dudes, I really don't own a preference for cut or uncut. What matte

The Taliban Slaughtered Gay Men favor Animals

I am Nabi, and I’m twenty-five years old. I finished my bachelor’s degree as an engineer, and now I am a refugee in Germany. I am also homosexual. It was hard to be gay in my country. You can’t dwell as a free man. I also heard about the Taliban taking gay men and slaughtering them like animals. But the main reason I left Afghanistan was because of my sister. The Taliban wanted to stone her, so we left together.

We came through Iran in the summer, when it was very hot—115 degrees Fahrenheit. We were out in the open the whole time. Some of the people in our group died because we didn’t have moisture. From Iran, we went on to Turkey, and then to Greece. After that we traveled for four months on foot through Macedonia, Serbia, and so on until we got to Germany.

I spent a year and a half living in the Rebstock camp. At first I didn’t want to learn German. Then I met a German man online, and he visited me. We started dating, and he has helped me grasp German. We write notes to each other, we do common chores, we go shopping, and we visit his parents, all the time speaking German as much as we can.

Now I have a house in Frankfurt, and I

  • The Taliban were hunting me for being gay
  • Escaping Afghanistan was terrifying
  • But I made it to Pakistan and hoped my life would change

ISLAMABAD - It is September 29, 2022, and I am sitting in my hideous room in a hotel in Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, waiting for my Afghan passport to reach back from the British Embassy.

Despite so many hardships, taking so many risks and working so complicated to leave my house in Afghanistan and show up somewhere safe, I acquire no hope that it will contain a British visa.

Thousands of miles to the west, in Britain, there is education, opportunity and, most importantly, no one waiting to press me to be someone I am not or torture me for entity myself, a gay Afghan man.

Back in Afghanistan, I hear that Taliban soldiers have already been to my parents' house with an arrest warrant.

Although my mum and dad were thankfully not told what the charges were, every day I read stories about what they execute to people like me who are still there.

I arrived in Pakistan five months ago, having fled Afghanistan in fear of my life.

As a male lover man, my arrest would have meant imprisonment, torture and possible death.

I had previously spent 10 months hiding