A Tunisian court has sentenced six teenage boys to prison for homosexuality, their attorney told The Independent.
The court in the central-Tunisian city of Kairouan on Thursday sentenced six flatmates, ages 18 and 19, to three years in prison for homosexual activity after their neighbors reported them to police, who found the condoms and women’s clothing at their apartment that were used as evidence against them.
The court will hear an appeal of the ruling in three weeks, the teenagers’ lawyer, Boutheina Karkni, told The Independent Monday.
Ms Karkni feels the sentence — the maximum penalty for homosexuality in Tunisia — is “a little exaggerated”, but does not oppose the North African nation’s homosexuality ban.
“It’s the law, and that law is based on religion,” she said. “God forbids” homosexuality, she added.
Ms Karkni said that she will argue for a commuted sentence, but does not plan to ask the court to overturn the conviction.
Homosexuality remains illegal in Tunisia, even after the 2011 revolution resulted in an overhaul of the country’s government and Constitution. Tunisia has been hailed by international media as the only democracy to emanate from the revolutions that swept the region five years ago.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee in October awarded Tunisia’s National Dialogue Quartet, a group of civil society groups that oversaw the restructuring of the Tunisian government in the aftermath of the revolution, a Nobel Peace Prize.