Homophobic attacks have reached dangerous levels in sub-Saharan Africa
and must stop, Amnesty International has said in a report.
Goverments in Africa are everyday bring out new laws and draconian
penalties to make it sure and clear that lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender people are criminals, the report says.
Some of African leader state that homosexuality is un-African which made
the western world threaten to withdraw from any country which did not
give gay people there right of freedom to be and marry
However, Amnesty said US religious groups “actively fund and promote
homophobia in Africa”, while many of the laws were inherited from the
colonial era
Amnesty interview
Homosexual acts are still a crime in 38 sub-Saharan African countries it
said in a report titled “Making Love a Crime: Criminalisation of
same-sex conduct in sub-Saharan Africa”.
There is no specific legislation outlawing homosexual acts in 12 African
countries, mostly former French colonies, while gay rights are
recognised in South Africa.
In the last five years, South Sudan and Burundi have introduced new laws criminalising same-sex relations, it says.
The parliaments of Uganda, Liberia and Nigeria have draft laws before them, seeking to increase penalties.
“These poisonous laws must be repealed and the human rights of all Africans upheld,” Amnesty said.
“In some African countries political leaders target sexual orientation
issues to distract attention from their overall human rights records,
often marked by rampant discrimination and violence against women,
corruption and lack of media freedoms,” it added.
In South Africa, at least seven people, five of them lesbians, were
murdered between June and November 2012 in what appears to have been
targeted violence related to their sexual orientation or gender
identity, the report says.
This is despite the fact that homosexual acts are not illegal in South
Africa and the country boasts one of the most progressive constitutions
in the world, it adds.
In many instances, media reports also inflame hostility towards people not conforming to heterosexual norms, Amnesty says.
In 2010, Uganda’s Rolling Stone magazine published a photograph of gay
rights activist David Kato next to a headline reading “Hang Them”, it
says.
Just a month later, he was killed in his home, although the police have denied it was a hate crime.
In Cameroon, people are regularly arrested after being denounced as
being gay or lesbian because of their “appearance or conjecture, rather
than evidence”, Amnesty says.
Some individuals accused of same sex conduct in Cameroon have been imprisoned for three years without trial or charge, it adds.
Former detainees from Cameroon told Amnesty that they were subjected to
“invasive procedures such as forced anal exams” while in custody, the
report says.
In Kenya, people told Amnesty that sometimes the police threaten to
arrest them under provisions in the penal code related to same-sex
relations in order to obtain a bribe, the report adds.
“Extortionists also use the existence of these laws to demand money or
goods in exchange for not revealing real or even made-up private details
to the media, community or police,” Amnesty said.
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