Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 16
Turkey, Egypt Deny Docking to 1,900-Passenger Gay Cruise Over 'Moral Values'
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 16

Turkey, Egypt Deny Docking to 1,900-Passenger Gay Cruise Over 'Moral Values'

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 16

Summary

  • The Scarlet Lady, chartered by LGBTQ vacation company Atlantis Events, was blocked from docking in Turkey on July 7 and then in Egypt on July 9, leaving the ship circling the Mediterranean.
  • Turkey’s Aydin provincial authorities said the cruise was organized by groups whose behavior did not fit “the structure of our society” and cited “moral values”; Egypt gave no reason, though Atlantis said it suspected a similar motive.
  • Just four hours from Alexandria, the ship lost its backup stop, spent a day at sea and then continued to Crete, a previously scheduled port on the 10-day itinerary.
  • The vessel was carrying 1,900 passengers, mostly Americans and predominantly gay men, underscoring how Turkey and Egypt’s recent crackdowns have pushed much gay life in both Muslim-majority countries underground.

Insights

As nations deny entry to LGBTQ+ travelers, what international recourse exists beyond a refunded port fee?
How will this incident reshape the global map for safe LGBTQ+ travel and tourism investment?
What precedent does this set for travel when tourism clashes with a nation’s official “moral values”?