26 men, weeping and protesting innocence, face trial in Egypt over 'gay activities'

An Egyptian court on Sunday tried 26 men for alleged debauchery after accusing them of homosexual activity at a Cairo public bathhouse in a case that sparked international condemnation.
The handcuffed defendants, many of them crying, arrived in court with their heads bowed as police pushed them inside a metal cage.
“I am innocent. I was in the hammam for therapy, I swear in the name of Allah,” said a defendant as he wept inside the cage, indicating that he was in the steam room of the bathhouse to treat back pain.
“The police beat us every day and force us to sleep on our stomachs,” said another.
Egyptian law does not expressly ban homosexuality, but gay men have previously been arrested and charged with debauchery instead.
The defendants were arrested on December 7 in a night raid on a hammam in central Cairo’s Azbakeya district.