Gay sex video police

Saudi Arabia police arrest men over 'gay wedding' video

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Police in Saudi Arabia speak they have arrested several young men who last week appeared in a video of what was described as a "gay wedding scene".

In the video, the men are sprayed with confetti as they amble side by side on a carpet at an outdoor venue. One of them seems to be wearing a long bridal veil.

On Monday night, Mecca Police said they had identified "the cross-dresser and other people involved in the incident".

They had been arrested and their case referred to prosecutors, it added.

The oblige did not identify the men or say what charges they faced.

Saudi Arabia has no written laws concerning sexual orientation or gender identity, but judges use principles of Islamic commandment to sanction people suspected of extra-marital sexual relations, gay sex or other "immoral" acts, according to US-based Human Rights Watch.

The country's anti-cybercrime statute also criminalises online activity impinging on "public order, religious values, public morals and privacy".

The Mecca Police said the "gay wedding scene" had taken place

A Police Officer at My Common High School Told Me I’m Going to Hell Because I’m Gay

My name is Liv Funk, and I’m writing this to explain why I want changes to how LGBTQ students are treated at North Bend Elevated School in Oregon.

This is very personal for me. I’m about to graduate from North Tilt, but I’m continuing to speak up so that nobody else has to go through what I went through. When freshmen show up in the collapse, I want them to have a different experience: a school where everybody feels welcome and safe, no matter who they are or whose hand they happen to hold.

I had hoped to be treated just like anyone else after I came out before my sophomore year. But I suppose I was untrue. Back in 2015, when I held my then-girlfriend’s hand in the hallway on the first day of university, I couldn’t even count how many people gave us weird looks and how many whispers filled the breeze. I even heard teachers make hurtful comments.

I knew coming out wasn’t going to be uncomplicated. But I didn’t expect it to be this difficult. After being subjected to slurs and teasing, I became anxious and paranoid. I started to wonder: What if something is really wrong with me? What if who I am really isn’t ok?

Thi

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transsexual Liaison Unit (LGBTLU)

The Queer woman , Gay, Bisexual and Genderqueer Liaison Unit (LGBTLU) is a team of committed officers that focuses on the public safety needs of the gay, queer woman , bisexual, transgender and their allied communities.  They actions public education campaigns on issues related to abhor crimes and public protection.  Their primary focus is to gain the belief of the community and seek out information that leads to the closure of hate crime and violent crime within the LGBT community.  They behavior patrol functions and respond to all citizen complaints.

Contacting the Lesbian, Gay, Attracted to both genders and Transgender Liaison Unit (LGBTLU)

For immediate police service, always dial 9-1-1.
Emergency call takers can treat calls in multiple languages and can accommodate members of the deaf and hard-of-hearing community.  Once police are on the scene, you may request an on-duty affiliate or Liaison Officer be contacted.

Contacting a Specialized Unit for Normal Police Business

For other police service, such as to request an affiliate or Liaison Officer attend a meeting or to confer other non-emergency issues, please contact th

What happened when a gay Jet man joined the Metropolitan Police in London

As a young infant, Gamal ‘G’ Turawa was brought up in a white foster family in Kent. He didn’t give much thought to organism Black until he moved to London with his biological father, where a Metropolitan Police officer spewed a racist insult at him. Why then did he end up aspiring to get an officer with the alike police force? Recounting his life’s story with riveting candour, Turawa explores how a deep-seeded yearn for ‘to be as white as possible’ led him to a career at the Metropolitan Police, the racism he experienced there and even perpetrated himself as an officer, and how coming out of the closet as a gay man ultimately led him down a path of self-acceptance and self-understanding. Intimately captured by the UK director Cherish Oteka, the documentary The Dark Cop: A Villain, a Victim and a Hero is both a troubling account of institutional racism in the UK and, through Turawa, a deeply moving portrait of the complexities of identity.

Director: Cherish Oteka

Producer: Emma Cooper

Website: Guardian Documentaries

7 March 2022