Homosexuality may soon cease being a crime in the North African country of Tunisia, where gay sex is currently punishable by up to three years in prison.

The decriminalization of homosexuality was one of several progressive changes recommended to Tunisian President Beji Caid Essebi by the country’s Individual Freedoms and Equality Committee (also known by the acronym COLIBE), a presidential commission comprised of legislators, professors and human rights advocates.

Tunisia's President Beji Caid el Sebsi is welcomed by a honor guard of Bavarian Mountain Shooters as he arrives at the Munich Residence, in Munich on June 7, 2015. Armin Weigel / EPA file

In its final report, the committee also recommended abolishing the death penalty, giving women more rights and dismantling patrilineal citizenship and inheritance.

“Some laws pose an assault on the sanctity of individuals’ privacy, including their sexual relations,” the report, published earlier this month, states. The report specifically cites article 230 of the country’s penal code, which criminalizes same-sex sexual activity.

Bochra Belhaj Hmida, a member of Tunisia’s parliament and the president of the COLIBE committee, told NBC News the report's top recommendation regarding homosexuality “is the outright repeal of article 230.” The committee did, however, propose a second option that would amend article 230 by lowering the punishment from three years in prison to a cash fine of 500 dinars (around $200) and no risk of jail time.

“The state and society have nothing to do with the sexual life amongst adults … sexual orientations and choices of individuals are essential to private life,” the COLIBE report states. “Therefore the commission recommends canceling [article 230], since it violates the self-evident private life, and because it has brought criticism to the Republic of Tunisia from international human rights bodies.”

Neela Ghoshal, acting director of the LGBTQ rights program at Human Rights Watch, said article 230 is a holdover from Tunisia’s French colonial period.

“There is little record of its early enforcement, but we do know that since at least the mid-2000s, when LGBT civil society groups began to operate in Tunisia and started tracking arrests, Tunisian law enforcement officials have prosecuted people under article 230 much more aggressively than in many other countries, where such laws are a colonial holdover that are rarely implemented,” Ghoshal explained.

According to the U.S. Department of State’s most recent report on human rights in Tunisia, “authorities occasionally use [article 230] to detain and question persons about their sexual activities and orientation, reportedly at times based on appearance alone.”

Ghoshal said Tunisian authorities have demonstrated a “somewhat schizophrenic approach” toward LGBTQ rights.

“They have allowed some LGBT events to take place, such as Mawjoudin’s Queer Film Festival in January 2018, but they have shut down other events, such as a demonstration in support of personal freedoms that was attended by secular and LGBT activists, also in January 2018,” she said.

Ghoshal also noted Tunisia is still one of the only countries that uses “forced anal examinations, a thoroughly discredited method of attempting to find ‘proof’ of anal intercourse.” The United Nations called on Tunisia in June 2016 to stop the practice, which Physicians for Human Rights calls a form of “rape.” Last year, Tunisia said it would cease conducting forced anal exams, but activists say it still occurs.

According to Bouhdid Belhedi, executive director of Tunisian LGBTQ rights group Association Shams, gay Tunisians face not only government discrimination but also “discrimination based on sexual orientation at the social level.”

“Family rejection, violence in public spaces, violence within families, suicide ... and issues that affect institutional rights such as access to justice and access to public service,” are also issues impacting the country’s LGBTQ population, said Belhedi, who added that he is pessimistic about Tunisia repealing article 230.

Bouhdid Belhadi, director of "Shams Radio", the first LGBT radio in the Arab region, poses in the studio prior to doing a live broadcast during the opening of the radio station on December 18, 2017 in Tunis. Fethi Belaid / AFP - Getty Images file

While Tunisia has a long way to go in order to reach equal rights for LGBTQ people and women, its post-revolution government has pursued more aggressive human rights and equality legislation over the past several year. In 2016, Tunisia passed a bill that calls for gender parity in elections. The country already has the highest percentage of women legislators of any Arab parliament.

Like Belhedi, Ghoshal said she is not optimistic about the chances for a full repeal of article 230. However, she said the COLIBE report “provides fuel for the dynamic LGBT rights movement in Tunisia, and it will strengthen activists’ message that it is time for change.”

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