'Boxers must know the morality of supporting Saudi'
The Guardian|May 13, 2024
Five days before Fury v Usyk in Riyadh, exile Wajeeh Lion explains how Saudi Arabia's LGBTQ+ nationals live in fear 
Lewis Watson
'Boxers must know the morality of supporting Saudi'

The moment I accepted I was gay was the moment I also accepted that I could be killed at any moment," says Wajeeh Lion with little hesitation. Born Abdulrahman Alkhiary, Wajeeh was granted asylum in the United States in 2018, but still lives a life of discomfort with daily death threats and a constant fear of being kidnapped by his homeland.

"I know the Saudi government want me dead," he says. "But this is not just my story. This is the ongoing story of intolerance faced by the entire LGBTQ+ community in Saudi Arabia, where homosexuality is illegal and punishable by death penalty." As a 10-year-old boy, Wajeeh, whose name means "honourable" or "noble" in Arabic, witnessed beheadings and tortures on the streets he walked and quickly became numb to the methods used by the Saudi government to control and silence their citizens.

After being forced by his parents to admit he was gay in 2016, Wajeeh was threatened with a return to Saudi Arabia to undertake a course of conversion therapy. He had been living in the US since 2005 while his mother and father were granted the King Abdullah Scholarship Program for higher education, and this exposure to the western world enabled him to better understand his suppressed desires. With help from LGBTQ+ services at Kansas State University, where he was a student, Wajeeh escaped his family for a safe house and, eventually, unearthed a new community of friends.

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