BEIRUT – Lebanon’s culture minister moved to ban the film “Barbie” from cinemas saying it “promotes homosexuality” and contradicts religious values.
Minister Mohammad Mortada is backed by powerful Shi’ite armed group Hezbollah, whose head Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has ramped up his rhetoric against the LGBT community, referring in a recent speech to Islamic texts that call for punishing offenders with death.
Mortada’s decision said the film was found to “promote homosexuality and sexual transformation” and “contradicts values of faith and morality” by diminishing the importance of the family unit.
Based on Mortada’s move, Interior Minister Bassam Mawlawi in turn asked General Security’s censorship committee, which falls under the interior ministry and is traditionally responsible for censorship decisions, to review the film and give its recommendation.
Kuwait has also banned “Barbie” and “Talk to Me” films to protect “public ethics and social traditions,” the state news agency said early on Thursday.
The Gulf country followed in the footsteps of Lebanon, which on Wednesday also moved to ban the film “Barbie” from being screened in the country.
Lebanon was the first Arab country to hold a gay pride week in 2017 and has generally been seen as a safe haven for the LGBT community in the broadly conservative Middle East.
But the issue has come into sharper focus recently, sparking tensions. Mawlawi last year took a decision to ban events “promoting sexual perversion” in Lebanon, understood to refer to LGBT-friendly gatherings.
In a speech last month, Nasrallah called on Lebanese authorities to take action against materials he deemed to be promoting homosexuality, including by “banning” them.
He said homosexuality posed an “imminent danger” to Lebanon and should be “confronted”. In the case of a homosexual act, Nasrallah said in late July, “from the first time, even if he is unmarried, he is killed”.
On Tuesday, Lebanon’s cabinet urged citizens to “cling” to family values following a meeting with the country’s top Christian cleric Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rai, although it did not mention the LGBT community specifically.
Ayman Mhanna, executive director at the non-profit civic Samir Kassir Foundation, told Reuters that Mortada’s move came amid “a wave of bigotry.”