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Gay
Africa News & Reports (All Africa) 1999-2006
Also
see:
Gay
Africa News & Reports 2007
Gay
Africa News & Reports 2008
Useful
websites for LGBT
Africa:
(1)
Behind the Mask
(2) More
All Africa News
Africa
is Dying from AIDS (1998 BBC)
New book
2007: Gay
Travels in the Muslim World, Edited by Michael Luongo (ch.
10 by GlobalGayz owner Richard Ammon)
See books review: Gay
City News
0
AIDS: The Agony of Africa 11/99 (Pulitzer prize-winning
8-part series of reports by Mark Schoof)
1
Breaking the Taboos - Homosexuality in Africa (Homophobic replies
to BBC talk show) 7/02
2 Christian's Dilemma Over Homosexual Affairs 4/03
3 Pink Refugees: African Gays Seek Refuge in South Africa 5/03
4 Catholic and Anglican Primates reject gay faithful 7/03
5 37 African bishops denounce gay bishops's appointment 8/03
6 An African continent-wide LGBTI forming 6/04
7 Devastated by AIDS, Africa Sees Life Expectancy Plunge 7/04
8 AIDS Now Compels Africa to Challenge Widows' 'Cleansing'--(Malawi, Zambia, Kenya) 5/05
9 Africa Conference on Sexual Health and Rights addresses gay issues 6/06
10 'Gender DynamiX’ First Transgender Association Established in Africa for Trans Issues 7/06
11 African Female Scholars Share Virtual Lifeline 12/06
The
Village Voice 50th Anniversary Special
New York
November
9, 1999
AIDS: The Agony of Africa (8-Part
series)
by
Mark Schoofs
Note: Mark
Schoofs won the 2000 Pulitzer prize in journalism for this
series of reports)
(Links
to the other 7 parts follow this article)
Part 1: The Virus Creates a Generation of Orphans
www.villagevoice.com/news/9944,schoofs,9665,1.html
Penhalonga, Zimbabwe—They didn't call Arthur Chinaka out
of the classroom. The principal and Arthur's uncle Simon waited
until
the day's exams were done before breaking the news: Arthur's father,
his body wracked with pneumonia, had finally died of AIDS. They
were worried
that Arthur would panic, but at 17 years old, he didn't. He
still had two days of tests, so while his father lay in the morgue,
Arthur
finished
his exams. That happened in 1990. Then
in 1992, Arthur's uncle Edward died of AIDS. In 1994, his uncle Richard
died of AIDS. In 1996, his
uncle Alex died of AIDS. All of them are buried on the homestead
where they grew up and where their parents and Arthur still live,
a collection
of thatch-roofed huts in the mountains near Mutare, by Zimbabwe's
border with Mozambique. But HIV hasn't finished with this family.
In April,
a fourth uncle lay coughing in his hut, and the virus had blinded
Arthur's aunt Eunice, leaving her so thin and weak she couldn't
walk without
help. By September both were dead.
The most horrifying part of this story is that it is not unique.
In Uganda, a business executive named Tonny, who asked that his
last name
not be used, lost two brothers and a sister to AIDS, while his
wife lost her brother to the virus. In the rural hills of South
Africa's
KwaZulu Natal province, Bonisile Ngema lost her son and daughter-in-law,
so she tries to support her granddaughter and her own aged mother
by selling potatoes. Her dead son was the breadwinner for the
whole extended
family, and now she feels like an orphan.
In the morgue of Zimbabwe's Parirenyatwa Hospital, head mortician
Paul Tabvemhiri opens the door to the large cold room that holds
cadavers.
But it's impossible to walk in because so many bodies lie on
the floor, wrapped in blankets from their deathbeds or dressed
in the
clothes
they died in. Along the walls, corpses are packed two to a shelf.
In a second cold-storage area, the shelves are narrower, so Tabvemhiri
faces a grisly choice: He can stack the bodies on top of one
another, which squishes the face and makes it hard for relatives
to identify
the body, or he can leave the cadavers out in the hall, unrefrigerated.
He refuses to deform bodies, and so a pair of corpses lie outside
on
gurneys behind a curtain. The odor of decomposition is faint
but clear.
Have they always had to leave bodies in the hall? "No, no, no," says
Tabvemhiri, who has worked in the morgue since 1976. "Only in
the last five or six years," which is when AIDS deaths here took
off. Morgue records show that the number of cadavers has almost tripled
since the start of Zimbabwe's epidemic, and there's been a change in
who is dying: "The young ones," says Tabvemhiri, "are
coming in bulk."
The wide crescent of East and Southern Africa that sweeps down
from Mount Kenya and around the Cape of Good Hope is the hardest-hit
AIDS
region in the world. Here, the virus is cutting down more and
more of Africa's most energetic and productive people, adults
aged 15
to 49. The slave trade also targeted people in their prime, killing
or
sending into bondage perhaps 25 million people. But that happened
over four centuries. Only 17 years have passed since AIDS was
first found
in Africa, on the shores of Lake Victoria, yet according to the
Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), the virus
has already
killed more than 11 million sub-Saharan Africans. More than 22
million others are infected.
Only 10 percent of the world's population lives south of the
Sahara, but the region is home to two-thirds of the world's HIV-positive
people, and it has suffered more than 80 percent of all AIDS
deaths.
Last year, the combined wars in Africa killed 200,000 people.
AIDS killed 10 times that number. Indeed, more people succumbed
to HIV
last year than to any other cause of death on this continent,
including malaria. And the carnage has only begun.
Unlike ebola or influenza, AIDS is a slow plague, gestating in
individuals for five to 10 years before killing them. Across
East and Southern
Africa, more than 13 percent of adults are infected with HIV,
according to UNAIDS. And in three countries, including Zimbabwe,
more than
a quarter of adults carry the virus. In some districts, the rates
are
even higher: In one study, a staggering 59 percent of women attending
prenatal clinics in rural Beitbridge, Zimbabwe, tested HIV-positive.
Life expectancy in more than a dozen African countries "will soon
be 17 years shorter because of AIDS-47 years instead of 64," says
Callisto Madavo, the World Bank's vice president for Africa. HIV "is
quite literally robbing Africa of a quarter of our lives."
In the West, meanwhile, the HIV death rate has dropped steeply
thanks to powerful drug cocktails that keep the disease from
progressing. These regimens must be taken for years, probably
for life, and
they
can cost more than $10,000 per patient per year. Yet in many
of the hardest-hit African countries, the total per capita health-care
budget
is less than $10.
Many people-in Africa as well as the West-shrug off this stark
disparity, contending that it is also true for other diseases.
But it isn't.
Drugs for the world's major infectious killers-tuberculosis,
malaria, and
diarrheal diseases- have been subsidized by the international
community for years, as have vaccines for childhood illnesses
such as polio
and measles. But even at discounted prices, the annual cost of
putting every African with HIV on triple combination therapy
would exceed
$150
billion, so the world is letting a leading infectious killer
for which treatment exists mow down millions.
That might be more palatable if there were a Marshall Plan for
AIDS prevention to slow the virus's spread. But a recent study
by UNAIDS
and Harvard shows that in 1997 international donor countries
devoted $150 million to AIDS prevention in Africa. That's less
than the
cost of the movie Wild Wild West.
Meanwhile, the epidemic is seeping into Central and West Africa.
More than a tenth of adults in Côte d'Ivoire are infected. Frightening
increases have been documented in Yaoundé and Douala, the
largest cities in Cameroon. And in Nigeria-the continent's most
populous country-past
military dictatorships let the AIDS control program wither, even
while the prevalence of HIV has climbed to almost one in every
20 adults.
Quite simply, AIDS is on track to dwarf every catastrophe in
Africa's recorded history. It is stunting development, threatening
the economy,
and transforming cultural traditions.
= Epidemics
are never merely biological. Even as HIV changes African society,
it spreads by
exploiting current
cultural and economic conditions. "The epidemic gets real
only in a context," says Elhadj Sy, head of UNAIDS's East
and Southern Africa Team. "In Africa, people wake up in
the morning and try to survive-but the way they do that often
puts them at risk for infection." For
example, men migrate to cities in search of jobs; away from
their wives and families for months on end, they seek sexual
release
with women
who, bereft of property and job skills, are selling their bodies
to feed themselves and their children. Back home, wives who
ask their
husbands to wear condoms risk being accused of sleeping around;
in African cultures, it's usually the man who dictates when
and how sex
happens.
Challenging such cultural and economic forces requires political
will, but most African governments have been shockingly derelict.
Lacking
leadership, ordinary Africans have been slow to confront the
disease. Few companies, for example, have comprehensive AIDS
programs. And
many families still refuse to acknowledge that HIV is killing
their relatives,
preferring to say that the person died of TB or some other
opportunistic illness. Doctors often collude in this denial. "Just the other
day," says a high-ranking Zimbabwean physician who spoke on condition
of anonymity, "I wrote AIDS on a death certificate and then
crossed it out. I thought, 'I'll just be stigmatizing this person,
because
no one else puts AIDS as the cause of death, even when that's what
it is.' "
Why is AIDS worse in sub-Saharan Africa than anywhere else
in the world? Partly because of denial; partly because the
virus
almost
certainly
originated here, giving it more time to spread; but largely
because Africa was weakened by 500 years of slavery and colonialism.
Indeed, historians lay much of the blame on colonialism for
Africa's
many
corrupt and autocratic governments, which hoard resources that
could fight
the epidemic. Africa, conquered and denigrated, was never allowed
to incorporate international innovations on its own terms,
as, for example,
Japan did.
This colonial legacy poisons more than politics. Some observers
attribute the spread of HIV to polygamy, a tradition in many
African cultures.
But job migration, urbanization, and social dislocation have
created a caricature of traditional polygamy. Men have many
partners not
through marriage but through prostitution or sugar-daddy arrangements
that
lack the social glue of the old polygamy.
Of course, the worst legacy of whites in Africa is poverty,
which fuels the epidemic in countless ways. Having
a sexually transmitted disease
multiplies the chances of spreading and contracting HIV, but
few Africans obtain effective treatment because the clinic
is too expensive
or too
far away. Africa's wealth was either funneled to the West or
restricted to white settlers who barred blacks from full participation
in
the economy. In apartheid South Africa, blacks were either
not educated
at all or taught only enough to be servants. Now, as the country
suffers one of the world's most explosive AIDS epidemics, illiteracy
hampers
prevention. Indeed, AIDS itself is rendering Africa still more
vulnerable to any future catastrophe, continuing history's
vicious cycle.
Yet AIDS is not merely a tale of despair. Increasingly, Africans
are banding together- usually with meager resources-to care
for their sick,
raise their orphans, and prevent the virus from claiming more
of their loved ones. Their efforts offer hope. For while a
crisis of this magnitude
can disintegrate society, it can also unify it. "To solve HIV," says
Sy, "you must involve yourself: your attitudes and behavior
and beliefs. It touches upon the most fundamental social and cultural
things-procreation
and death."
AIDS is driving a new candor about sex-as well as new efforts
to control it, through virginity testing and campaigns that
advocate sticking
to one partner. And slowly, fitfully, it is also giving women
more
power. The death toll is scaring women into saying no to sex
or insisting on condoms. And as widows proliferate, people
are beginning
to see
the harm in denying them the right to inherit property.
The epidemic is also transforming kinship networks, which have
been the heart of most African cultures. Orphans, for example,
have always
been enfolded into the extended family.
But
more than 7 million children in sub-Saharan Africa have lost one
or both parents,
and the virus
is also killing their aunts and uncles, depriving them of
foster parents and leaving them to live with often feeble grandparents.
In response,
communities across Africa are volunteering to help orphans
through home visits and, incredibly, by sharing the very
little
they
have. Such volunteerism is both a reclaiming of communal
traditions and
their adaptation into new forms of civil society.
But even heroic efforts can't stop the damage that's already
occurred here in the hills where Arthur Chinaka lost his
father and uncles.
The worst consequence of this epidemic is not the dead, but
the living they leave behind.
= Rusina
Kasongo lives a couple of hills
over from
Chinaka. Like a lot of elderly rural folk who never went
to school, Kasongo can't calculate how old she is, but
she can
count her
losses: Two of her sons, one of her daughters, and all
their spouses died
of AIDS, and her husband died in an accident. Alone, she
is rearing 10
orphaned children.
"Sometimes the children go out and come home very late," says Kasongo, "and
I'm afraid they'll end up doing the same thing as Tanyaradzwa." That's
the daughter who died of AIDS; she had married twice, the
first time in a shotgun wedding. Now, the eldest orphan,
17-year-old
Fortunate,
already has a child but not a husband.
Few people have conducted more research on AIDS orphans
than pediatrician Geoff Foster, who founded the Family
AIDS Caring
Trust (FACT).
It was Foster who documented that more than half of Zimbabwe's
orphans
are
being cared for by grandparents, usually grandmothers who
had nursed their own children to the grave. But even this
fragile
safety net
won't be there for many of the next generation of orphans.
"Perhaps one-third of children in Zimbabwe will have lost a father or
mother-or both-to AIDS," says Foster. They are more
likely to be poor, he explains, more likely to be deprived
of education, more
likely to be abused or neglected or stigmatized, more likely
to be seething with all the needs that make it more likely
that a person
will have unsafe sex. "But when they get HIV and die,
who cares for their children? Nobody, because they're orphans,
so by
definition
their kids have no grandparents. It's just like the virus
itself. In the body, HIV gets into the defense system and
knocks it out.
It does
that sociologically, too. It gets into the extended family
support system and decimates it."
Foster's chilling realization is dawning on other people
who work in fields far removed from HIV. This year, South
African
crime
researcher Martin Schönteich published a paper that begins by noting, "In
a decade's time every fourth South African will be aged between 15
and 24. It is at this age group where people's propensity to commit
crime is at its highest. At about the same time there will be a boom
in South Africa's orphan population as the Aids epidemic takes its
toll." While some causes of crime can be curtailed, Schönteich
writes, "Other causes, such as large numbers of juveniles in the
general population, and a high proportion of children brought up without
adequate parental supervision, are beyond the control of the state." His
conclusion: "No amount of state spending on the criminal justice
system will be able to counter this harsh reality."
More AIDS and more crime are among the most dramatic consequences
of the orphan explosion. But Nengomasha Willard sees damage
that is harder
to measure. Willard teaches 11-and 12-year-olds at Saint
George's Primary School, located near the Chinakas and
the Kasongos.
Fifteen of Willard's
42 pupils have lost one or both of their parents, but he's
particularly worried about one of his students who lost
his father and then,
at his mother's funeral, cried inconsolably. "He doesn't want to
participate," says Willard. "He just wants to be alone."
"I see thousands of children sitting in a corner," says Foster. "The
impact is internalized-it's depression, being withdrawn." In
Africa, says Foster, the focus on poverty eclipses research
into psychological
issues, but he has published disturbing evidence of abuse-emotional,
physical, and sexual. Meanwhile, the orphan ranks keep
swelling. "We're
talking 10 percent who will have lost both parents, maybe
15 percent. Twenty-five percent who will have lost a mother.
What does that do
to a society, especially an impoverished society?"
=
Among his students, Willard has noticed that some of the
orphans come to
school without
shoes or, in Zimbabwe's cold winter, without a sweater.
Sometimes their stepfamilies put them last on the
list, but often it's because
grandmothers
can't scrape together enough money.
Among economists, there has been a quiet debate over
whether HIV will harm the economy. Some think it won't.
With unemployment
rates
in sub-Saharan
Africa between 30 and 70 percent, they reason that
there are plenty of people to replenish labor losses.
One scenario
is
that economic
growth might slacken, but population growth will also
dwindle, so per capita GNP might hold steady or even
rise. Then,
says Helen Jackson,
executive director of the Southern Africa AIDS Information
Dissemination Service (SAfAIDS), Africa might face
the grotesque irony of "an
improvement in some macroeconomic indicators, but the
exact opposite at the level of households and human
suffering."
But evidence is mounting that the economy will suffer.
Between 20 and 30 percent of workers in South Africa's
gold mining
industry-the mainstay
of that country's economy-are estimated to be HIV-positive,
and replacing
these workers will cut into the industry's productivity.
In Kenya, a new government report predicts that per
capita income
could
sink by 10 percent over the next five years. In Côte
d'Ivoire, a teacher dies every school day.
Then there are the effects that can't be quantified. "What does
AIDS do for the image of Africa?" asks Tony Barnett, a veteran
researcher on the economic impact of AIDS. To lure investors, the continent
already has to battle underdevelopment and racism, but now, he says,
many people will see Africa as "diseased, sexually
diseased. It chimes in with so many stereotypes."
Beneath the corporate economy, millions of Africans subsist
by cultivating their own small plot of land. When someone
in the
family comes down
with AIDS, the other members have to spend time caring
for that person, which means less time cultivating crops.
And
when death
comes, the
family loses a crucial worker. Studies have documented
that among rural AIDS-stricken families, food production
falls,
savings
dwindle, and
children are more likely to be undernourished.
For Kasongo and her 10 orphans, food is a constant problem,
but now it has become even harder. On her way back from
the fields,
carrying
a basket of maize on her head, Kasongo tripped and fell.
Her knee is swollen, her back is aching, and cultivating
the fields
is close
to
impossible. Here, under the radar of macroeconomic indicators,
Kasongo's ordeal shows how AIDS is devastating Africa.
This is the context in which one of Africa's most agonizing
debates is taking place: Should doctors administer drugs
to pregnant
women that sharply reduce the chances that a baby will
be born with HIV?
So far, the debate has centered on the cost of the drugs,
but a new, inexpensive regimen has pushed thornier arguments
to
the surface.
The "vaccine for babies," as it is sometimes called, does
not treat the mother and so does nothing to reduce the chances the
baby will become an orphan. That's why Uganda's Major Rubaramira Ruranga,
a well-known activist who is himself infected with HIV, opposes it. "Many
children in our countries die of malnutrition, even with both parents," he
argues. "Without parents, it's almost certain
they'll die."
Isn't it impossible to know the fate of any given child
and presumptuous to decide it in advance? "That's sentimental," he
snaps. Even
Foster, who believes "every child has a right to be born
without HIV," wonders whether the money is best spent on the "technical
fix" of giving drugs to the pregnant women. The medicine is only
a part of the cost, for women can infect their children during breast
feeding, which raises expensive problems such as providing formula
and teaching mothers how to use it safely in places where clean water
may not exist. Would all that money, Foster wonders, be better spent
alleviating the root causes of why women get infected in the first
place? "It's very difficult to stand up and make such an argument
because you get portrayed as a beast," he says. In fact, such
arguments testify to how the epidemic is forcing Africans to grapple
with impossible choices.
= Weston
Tizora is one of thousands of Africans who are trying to give orphans
a decent life. Just 25 years old, Tizora
started as a gardener at Saint Augustine's Mission and threw
himself into volunteering in the mission's AIDS program, called
Kubatana, a
Shona word meaning "together." Next year he will
take over the program's leadership from its founder, British
nurse Sarah
Hinton.
Kubatana's 37 volunteers care for homebound patients, and
they help raise orphans by, for example, bringing food to
Rusina
Kasongo's brood.
Just a few steps from Kasongo live Cloud and Joseph Tineti.
They're 14 and 11, respectively, and the oldest person in
their home
is their 15-year-old brother. They are, in the language of
AIDS workers,
a
child-headed household. Who's in charge? "No one," Joseph
answers-and it shows. Their one-room shack is strewn with
dirty clothes, unwashed
dishes, broken chairs. On the table, a roiling mass of ants
feasts on pumpkin seeds and some kind of dried leaves.
The troubles run deeper. Their father, who had divorced their
mother before she died, lives in nearby Mutare. Does he bring
food? "Yes," says
Joseph, "every week." It's not true, Tizora maintains.
Kubatana members have even talked with the police in their
effort to convince
the father to take in his children or at least support them.
But the police did not act, explains Tizora, because the
father is
unemployed
and struggling to provide for the family of his second wife.
Once a month-sometimes not even that often-he brings small
amounts of
food,
so the orphans depend on donations from Kubatana volunteers.
But if little Joseph's version isn't true, it's what an orphaned
kid would want: a father who at least brings food, stops
by frequently, and acts a little like a dad. And his mother:
What
does Joseph
remember of her? The question is too much, and he starts
crying.
Kubatana volunteers are supposed to look after the Tineti
orphans, so why is their home so unkempt? There used to be
two volunteers
in this area, explains Tizora. One has been reassigned to
work in the
nearby mining village, ravaged by AIDS. The other has been
away at her parents' home for two months, attending to a
family funeral
and
to her own late-stage pregnancy.
And everyone in these villages has their hands full. Standing
in a valley, Tizora points to the hillsides around him and
says, "There
are orphans in that home, and the one over there, and there by the
gum trees. And see where there's that white house? They're taking care
of orphans there, too." By the time he finishes, he has pointed
out about half of the homesteads. When the Kubatana program started,
in 1992, volunteers identified 20 orphans. Now they have registered
3000. In many parts of Africa, notes Jackson of SAfAIDS, "It
has actually become the norm to have orphaned children in
the household rather than the exception."
Foster makes some quick calculations: Given the number of
volunteers in the Kubatana program, there's no way they can
care for all
their orphans. So when a volunteer gets pregnant, has a family
emergency,
or gets sick, kids like Cloud and Joseph fall through the
cracks. Says Foster: "You can't lose a quarter of your
adult population in 10 years without catastrophic consequences."
In his office, Tizora has a wall of photographs showing the
original 20 orphans. One is a girl who looks about 12. She
lost her parents
and then she lost the grandma who was caring for her. At
that point, she started refusing to go to school, hiding
on the
way there.
Now, she's run away and, Tizora says, "we don't know
where she is."
(Note:
some of the following links redirect to the Village Voice archive
and will not connect; if access is desired, go to the Village voice
archive and use their search function. The articles are all there.) AIDS:
The Agony of Africa
Part 2: A Tale of Two Brothers
by Mark Schoofs
November 10 - 16, 1999
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9945,schoofs,9850,1.html
AIDS:
The Agony of Africa
Part 3: Africa Responds
Bereft of medicine and money, traditional cultures mobilize in a new way.
by Mark Schoofs
November 17 - 23, 1999
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9946,schoofs,10034,1.html
AIDS: The Agony of Africa
Part 4: The Virus, Past and Future
There Are Two AIDS Epidemics—and More May Be Coming
by Mark Schoofs
November 24 - 30, 1999
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9947,schoofs,10344,1.html
AIDS:
The Agony of Africa
Part 5: Death and the Second Sex
by Mark Schoofs
December 1 - 7, 1999
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9948,schoofs,10565,1.html
AIDS: The Agony of Africa
Part 6: Ending the Epidemic
African Prostitutes May Play a Crucial Role in Developing an HIV Vaccine
by Mark Schoofs
December 15 - 21, 1999
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9950,schoofs,11002,1.html
AIDS: The Agony of Africa
Part 7: South Africa Acts Up
Building a Movement on the Ruins of Apartheid
by Mark Schoofs
December 22 - 28, 1999
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9951,schoofs,11212,1.html
AIDS:
The Agony of Africa
Part 8: Use What You Have--Treating AIDS Without Money
by Mark Schoofs
December 29, 1999 - January 4, 2000
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9952,schoofs,11382,1.html
Behind
the Mask/BBC
http://www.mask.org.za/SECTIONS/AfricaPerCountry/ABC/all%20africa/all%20africa_8.htm
July
4, 2002
1
Breaking the Taboos - Homosexuality in Africa (Homophobic replies to BBC
talk show)
Homosexuality
is a taboo subject in many parts of Africa - but on Wednesday Africa
Live! (TV) tackled it head on.
One
e-mail said Mugabe's attitude to gays was the only thing he agreed
with. A caller
from Uganda displayed some of the vitriol that
exists towards homosexuals. "It's
totally wrong...we should help these people regain themselves, they
are sick people, who need treatment," he said. A common theme
from callers, and within emails, was that homosexuality is un-African
and does not exist on the continent.
Hilarius
called from the Ghana-Togo border with this comment "Homosexuality shouldn't be accepted,
it's not the plan of God ...it's completely bad and I don't think
it originates from Africa. "I think it is Satanic and controlled
by evil spirits". It can be difficult for gay people to speak
out. Guests
with our roving reporters in Ghana and Kenya alluded to having
gay friends, but no one at either location was openly homosexual.
But evidence of gay practise did emerge. A caller from Sierra
Leone talked of how he had numerous approaches from gay men and Kofi
in
Ghana described the realities of life as a gay man there. "Nobody's
saying we want to have gay pride in the streets. It would be comfortable
to be safe and be part of society...I've had people call me names,
friends have been attacked and even in some cases people have been
blackmailed; even if someone else makes a pass at you, you would
be doubtful of their intentions."
Kofi
- not his real name - would only appear on Africa Live with his
name changed and voice
disguised. This though was not the case for the gay men who the
programme spoke with in South Africa, which has the most progressive
gay legislation
in the world.
June
28, 2002: The issue of homosexuality has excited deep and often
extreme reactions in Africa. In Uganda,
for example, the pracitce - referred to as "carnal knowledge of another against
the order of nature" - has been outlawed by president Museveni,
while Zimbabwe's president Robert Mugabe claimed homosexuals were "worse
than pigs and dogs."
But
South Africa has the most permissve gay rights legislation in the
whole world, and also hosts several
successful Gay Pride marches. Meanwhile events such as the
Gay Games are well-attended by people from throughout the continent.
The
views of readers:
Henry
Williams, Sierra Leone
"Adam and Eve, not Adam
and Steve. Human beings believe they are superior to animals
like dogs,
cats etc. Why do we have to go below them through our behaviors
like homosexuality? A homosexual, I believe, is a person who
belongs
to
another planet not ours and therefore should be treated
that way may be to be taken to a different planet. They do not
belong
on this
planet Earth. They are strange and foreign beings. Are
they from Mars, Jupiter? You tell us!" Osa
Davies, United Kingdom
"Africa
and Africans should not respect or entertain homosexuality in
any form or fashion. Gay recognition and rights is a Western
thing. African
culture and tradition does support nor encourage such things...
if I may go further here, neither does almight God support
such a sinful
act."
Gabriel
Carrier Walker, Canada
"Of
the many things that are stymying progress and development in the
continent
of Africa,
certainly ignorance
and disrespect for the lives of others are chief amongst
them. I don't think the African continent can afford itself the
luxury
of
being hateful and intolerant. There is far more at stake
than any vapid "principles of moral conduct". Homosexuality
is neither an abhoration nor an affront to anything. It is surprising
that in
a continent such as Africa, a continent that has known
the lash of senseless discrimination, some people continue to
view the dehumanisation
of a particular group of human beings as legitimate or
acceptable. Fools."
Abubakar
Ibrahim, Accra, Ghana
"Much
as society sees everything wrong with homosexuality, there is more
to blame on society
than the individual(s). For instance when one is about 24
without a girlfriend
people with start assuming the person is gay. The bottom
line is that sometimes one is just so serious with attaining
a goal in life
that chasing girls as well as attaining that goal will
mean making difficult choices. Obviously, one can't look
into one bottle with
two eyes. Like I say everyday, there are two sins in
life; to be poor and live poor. Avoid one."
Josie
Welty, USA
"South
Africa Does
homosexuality really not exist in any traditional
African societies? Or have the traditional societies simply turned
a blind eye to it,
therefore, not politicising the issue as Western
societies
have recently done? This is an important question. Many
people seem to think that
homosexuality is a Western import to Africa, whereas
I suspect it is a part of every society, it's just a matter
of how widespread
the awareness and the understanding of it is."
Anonymous
Kenyan in the USA
"On
a personal level, I think homosexuality is extremely immoral.
But it is not up to me to decide what others
should do and believe, therefore I do not think anyone should
be denied
something that does
not directly harm another. Homosexuals will
not go away
just because they have been denied some rights. We
were all created with free
will - and everyone is accountable for their
actions. So I think that all should mind their ps and qs when
it comes
to personal matters
such as these. Bottom line is that everyone
of us is human
before they are anything else."
John
Ernest Tokpah, Liberian in Minnesota,
USA
"I personally feel that homosexuality
does not have a role in our society, therefore this is no right
for
homosexual
in the first
place in Africa to be respected. Homosexuality
is a
curse and I think God will punish those who are engage
this act, just as God reacted
to the people of Sodom and Gomorroh in the
Bible."
Kemoh
Rogers, UK
"I dont know what makes people homosexuals but after
talking to a
few close friends who are gay, I think
that it
is not their choice to be gay. Denying them their rights
to live the
way they
have to
is total deprivation of their rights to
live as human beings. That is exactly what is hapening to gay people
in
Africa.
I think
the
african society should face up to reality
and accept that some men are just homosexuals and nothing else.
Democratic
governments
have
a big role to play by making it unlawful
to discriminate and chastise gay men and lesbians."
Andrew
A. Daramy, USA
"If Africa is willing
to throw away its culture and ethics
only to
the
Western
culture and principles and be a fool for the
second time, then yes, Africa
should to respect the right of the homosexuals.
But the continient should be ready to face more health
problems than
ever. To be in
the safer side I suggest that African
governments should go all out to suppress the practices and the
rights
of those people until there
are enough medical facilities are in
place. Othewise
do not attempt because there will be no way out
poverty and diseases."
Jauda
Kinge Zane, Nigeria
"Sexual desire or behavior
directed
toward a person
or persons of one's own sex is a detestable
behavior in Africa. Although this preference
between members of
the same sex is not completely
alien to Africa, it is generally considered
immoral and
as a perversion of the Creator's original
intention. Although homosexuality continues
to be a subject of controversy even
within
the Christian community in the West, it has been
consistently condemned
as a practice in
Christianity and African Traditional
Religions in Africa. We are aware that there
are persons who
have formed homosexual
behavior,
or have that orientation toward persons
of the
same
sex by either poor parenting or hormonal activities
during development. We sympathize
with them, but we don't give them any
rights or respect their behavior. We respect
them as human
beings created
in God's
image, but we literally
disrespected and reject their pseudo-dichotomy
of homosexual
orientation and homosexual desires as opposed
to the Creator's original will.
Principles of moral conduct must not
be changed with time in the name of tolerance
or
human rights. I
therefore call on
the whole
world to disrespect homosexuality and
all its privileges. James D Hallowanger,
Liberia
Africa has no
right to respect
gays at all according
to African tradition and even the Bible.
In fact the act of gay is immoral and should
be condemmed
by all
civilized
nations
of the world."
African
Church Information Service,
http://allafrica.com/stories/200304280850.html April 28,
2003
2
Christian's Dilemma Over Homosexual Affairs
by Joyce Mulama,
Nairobi - One of
the most hotly debated issues in Africa today is homosexuality.
Its exposure on the continent has excited deep and often extreme reactions.
Some observers dismiss the habit as a western culture, yet it is spreading
through the continent like a wild bush fire.
Still,
African traditions do not accept it, and one can almost be cursed at
the mention of the word, reports Joyce Mulama. A number of African countries
have openly condemned homosexuality and anything that goes with it.
In Uganda, for example, the practice, which is also referred
to as "carnal knowledge of another against the order of nature",
has been outlawed.
Zimbabwe's
president, Robert Mugabe, was once reported to have said that homosexuals
were "worse than pigs and dogs." Reports indicate that South
Africa has the most permissive gay rights legislation in the world,
and also hosts several successful Gay Pride Marches (promotional gay
events), which are well attended. Behavioural experts contend that in
environments where homosexuality is not acceptable, its tendencies exist
but are concealed. "In such areas, homosexuals do it quietly
and do not express themselves because of fear," observes Dr
Maxwell Okonji, a psychiatrist in Nairobi. He adds that in cultures
where the habit is accepted, homosexuals will have voices, mostly through
unions.
Opponents
of homosexuality say it is unnatural. They note that it is wrong in
the context of Christianity. "God didn't create man and man, he
created man and woman; Adam and eve," says 27 year old Selina Babazi,
a staunch Christian. She describes homosexuality as obscene, adding,
"there is no justification for one to choose that way of life."
A 70 year-old village elder in Western Kenya, Waukhila Kasili, exclaims,
"I simply do not understand how someone can become a homosexual.
These are not normal people." He adds: "True African traditions
do not, and will never accept such weird behaviour." Other
idealists against homosexuality maintain that it is a western ideology
that has been imported into the continent.
But Dr
Okonji differs, saying: "This is a universal biological predisposition
which gets inhibited in certain cultures, where it is not acceptable."
He adds, "how it comes out, it is the society that determines."
Rev Dr Ishmael Noko, General Secretary of the Lutheran World Federation
(LWF), concurs that homosexuality is known in Africa as it is elsewhere.
"It is part of every society," he says, adding, "The
only difference is how people react to it, how widespread the awareness
of it is." Medical experts grade homosexuality as a sexual deviation.
They explain that there is a biological make-up to sexual orientation,
and it is dependant on sex hormones. By the time an individual is born,
the sexual orientation is already present. "In a few people, something
goes on with their sexual orientation such that individuals feel that
the biological sex they have is wrong, and that they should have the
other sex.
They then
develop a psychological orientation despite their genital orientation,"
notes Okonji. "The individual now starts to be attracted to members
of the same sex," explains Okonji, adding that in this attraction,
there is a passive and aggressive partner. The aggressive one behaves
like the man, while the passive partner plays the role of a woman.
However,
whether homosexuality is a psychiatric problem or not, remains a controversial
issue. Dr Okonji asserts that homosexuality is much more a problem
of society than anything else. Nevertheless, there are those who
view it as a medical problem, others say it is genetic. Head of Theology
and Interfaith Desk at the All Africa Conference of Churches, Rev Arnold
Temple, poses: "If truly it is [a medical problem], then why shouldn't
medical experts seek ways of correcting it?"
Realising the complexity of homosexuality, the Church in Africa has
been deliberating on how to handle the issue, which analysts
term as fragile. Early in the year, Archbishop of the Anglican Church
of the Province of Southern Africa (CPSA), Njongonkulu Ndungane, called
on Southern Africa's 10 million Anglicans to address the issue of homosexuality
in a manner that would generate mutual understanding and bring people
out of their corners of conviction. His call came following a resolution
adopted after an Anglican Synod late last year, which noted pastoral
needs of the homosexually oriented. It is in this regard that Archbishop
Ndungane circulated a discussion document on Human Sexuality to the
clergy in South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, Mozambique, Namibia and
Angola, all which fall under his province. "People
are hurting as they continue to feel rejected, despised, misunderstood,
demonised and 'unchurched' because of their orientation and convictions,"
states part of the eight-paged document.
At the
1998 Anglican Lambeth Conference, a resolution on sexuality failed primarily
because of the African vote.
It wanted to allow same-sex unions and for the ordination of practising
homosexuals. Rev Temple underlines that the subject of homosexuality
requires much reflection, and that there are many sides to be looked
at, for the Church to come up with one voice. He points out that the
Church's ethical view, traditional and Biblical standpoints are areas
that need to be considered. "In Africa, I do not know of any
church that has actually taken a position on homosexuality,"
he says. The 1998 Lambeth Resolution on human sexuality includes clauses
like "we commit ourselves to listen to the experience of homosexual
persons and we wish to assure them that they are loved by God and that
all baptised, believing and faithful persons, regardless of sexual orientation,
are full members of the Body of Christ." Rev Temple assents, adding
that even though homosexuality is abnormal, and not God's will for humankind,
people in that kind of sexual orientation should not be discriminated
against.
"I
do not think any of God's children should be discriminated against because
of race, tribe, gender or sexual orientation." The CPSA homosexuality
discussion document underlines that homosexuals should be welcomed,
and sexuality should not infringe on the roles they play in Church.
But on the issue of ordination, Rev Temple maintains: "Homosexuality
is a sexual perversion and sexual perverts should not be ordained."
He, however, adds: "If they are able to overcome the sexual
perversion, then they should be ordained." Rev Noko underscores
the need for deep theological study on homosexuality, and pastoral care
for those practising it. "If someone declares their gay status,
we have to emulate how Christ acted when he met 'outcasts'," he
states, referring to the humble nature of Jesus and how he received
even those who had been condemned by society.
Rainbow
Network (U.K. glbt)
http://www.rainbownetwork.com/content/Feature.asp?featid=13214
May 7,
2003
3
Pink Refugees: African Gays Seek Refuge in South Africa
by Adam Levin,
Planet Syndication
Sunday
night at the Summit Club in Hillbrow, Johannesburg
Anita,
a pint-sized Whitney Houston lookalike in white micro-mini and fuck-off
platforms, is belting out a flawless lip-synch of Miss Whitney's classic,
'It's not right, but it's OK'. Anita's upturned almond eyes sparkle
as the red stage light brushes her high, honeyed cheekbones. She gyrates,
bends, touches her toes, and flashes that impossibly broad white smile.
Her energy is total. The audience - mostly black, male and heterosexual
- chug down their Black Labels and cheer raucously. Little do they realise
the title of the song has a certain hidden poignancy.
First
up, Anita is not a woman, but a young Nigerian man called Azubike
Udogo, known to his friends as Azu. Azu is currently in the process
of applying for refugee status in South Africa on the grounds of his
sexual orientation. "I can't go back to Nigeria," he fumes
over a glass of Lemon Twist in his Troyeville apartment.
"I'll
go somewhere else if I have to. Anywhere. If I go back to Nigeria
they'll kill me or they'll throw me in jail and that's it."
Just how well founded this claim is, however, is a matter for the adjudicators
at South Africa's Department of Home Affairs. As a signatory of a 1951
United Nations Convention on Refugees, South Africa is obliged to grant
refugee status to asylum seekers who have been victims of systematic
persecution in their home countries. Not only must they offer proof
of this persecution; they must show the inability or unwillingness of
their governments to offer them protection.
While asylum
seekers await judgement, which can take anything up to six years, they
live half-lives without ID books or access to bank accounts. Although
they are entitled to work, the asylum seeker's permit must be renewed
every three months. Given the transience of this legal status, it is
extremely difficult to secure employment or even a lease.
But luckily,
Azu is a fighter. He has a day job in the call centre of a Randburg
attorney's office, while at night Anita fills the breadbasket. Azu studies
French, performs, socialises. Yet, having first presented his case in
June 2000, he is, understandably, feeling rather frustrated at this
stage. Azu was born 29 years ago in Lagos, the economic capital of Africa's
most populated country. Though he realised he was gay from an early
age, he was always too frightened to admit this to anyone.
Not only
would his family reject him, thanks to a strict Victorian penal code,
homosexuality is still illegal in Nigeria, and two men found having
sex are liable for up to 14 years' imprisonment. Furthermore, it is
alleged that in Lagos there are private groups of vigilantes who
prey on gay men, humiliating and harassing them. Worse still, in
the country's Northern states - where Islamic or sharia law has recently
been implemented - homosexuality is punishable by execution.
While at least one gay man has been flogged publicly, last year a young
man in Kebbeh province - accused of having sex with a male minor - was
sentenced to death by stoning. Even in Lagos, Nigerian society is a
long way from liberated when it comes to gay rights.
While historically
it was customary for powerful Hausa men to share their wealth with young
male lovers as well as their female harems, in Post-Colonial Nigeria
it is almost impossible to be an out homosexual. According to the
affidavit of Adolph Mabunda, a young, gay Nigerian in Johannesburg,
"I am regarded as a public disgrace [in Lagos]. At University,
I was often insulted by being called derogatory names like [H]'Omo Detergent'.
I was rejected and excluded from the mainstream... I am an enemy to
my family because they say I have brought shame on them".
Ironically,
the situation is so dire that Lagos Alliance Rights, an underground
gay organisation, which cannot be registered, spends much of its
resources helping persecuted gay Nigerians to leave the country. Azu
worked as a travel agent in Lagos. He drove a decent car and enjoyed
a relatively high standard of living. As his family was from River State,
where Ken Saro-Wiwa had recently been killed, Azu participated
in some peaceful anti-government demonstrations.
Secretly
he had also begun dressing in drag. Armed with fierce dancing skills
and that killer smile, he had won two major titles in the city's underground
drag contests - Miss Lagos and Miss Nigeria. He had also
established a secret relationship with a man but this had ended when
- under extreme pressure from his family - the man had been persuaded
to marry.
It was
back in 1996, while walking one evening on the streets of Lagos, that
Azu was arrested on suspicion of homosexuality - a charge that carries
a seven-year sentence in its own right. The police held Azu in the
cells without laying a formal charge. They beat him. Indeed, he still
has the mark on his back from where he was whacked with a policeman's
baton. Eventually, after a week behind bars, the charge was changed
to "Late Wandering." Azu paid a fine and was released.
Around
two years later, Azu was visiting what he calls a "Man to Man"
bar in Lagos. Though nothing as overt as a gay club, the venue was
known to have a partly gay clientele. Late that night, police raided
the premises, throwing more thirty patrons into a van and yelling "You
are worse than dogs!" Had Azu not had sufficient money to grease
the officers' palms, he would have been imprisoned again.
It was
then that he decided to flee the country. "If I couldn't
be who I really was," he recalls. "I didn't want to live anymore".
Azu had read on the Internet about South Africa's progressive stance
on homosexuality. As the only African country with anti-discrimination
laws in its constitution and strong gay rights movement, it seemed a
likely place of refuge. And so he gave up everything he'd established
in Lagos and began the long journey, by road, through Cameroon, Congo,
Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Swaziland, arriving eventually in Johannesburg
in late 1998.
As he
had no idea that sexual orientation was grounds for asylum, Azu
applied on political grounds. With an asylum seeker's permit granted,
he began making his life in Johannesburg. He made new friends and got
accustomed to the liberty of living openly as a gay man. "Finally,
I didn't have to hide," he says. "I could just be myself and
feel safe. It was magic." Azu also began making his name on
the drag circuit, belting through Jennifer Holiday and Aretha Franklin
at Monte Casino and private parties. At one point, he was flown down
to Cape Town to perform at a Camps Bay restaurant.
It was
only after two years in the country that Azu heard, via the grapevine,
of Abeeda Bhamjee, a young Moslem and Legal Counsellor for Refugees
at Wits Law Clinic. "Azu came and told us his story,"
says Avida. "And we took his case to Home Affairs". Azu is
not the first gay African to apply for asylum here. Wendy Isaack, Legal
Advisor at the National Coalition for Gay & Lesbian Equality,
has processed around ten similar cases in the past few years. They have
included nationals from Zambia, Zimbabwe, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Liberia
and the Democratic Republic of Congo. While nine have been successful
as asylum seekers, only one has actually been granted refugee status
so far.
In October
2001, Azu was summoned for an adjudicators' hearing at Home Affairs.
Four months later, he received a letter of response. His application
had been declined. Home Affairs had not accepted his claims of persecution.
They also stated that he was able to take legal action against antagonists
back home - though the fact that Nigeria's legal system runs against
the liberal tenets of our constitution was ignored. The implication
- and one that I, as a gay man, find offensive - was that he should
return to Nigeria and simply live in the closet.
Understandably,
Home Affairs is in a difficult position. There are more than six
hundred million people on this continent. At least half of them live
in countries where human rights abuses occur and the modern liberties
we have become accustomed to are but a dream. Toss in the needs
of our own indigent population and the hordes of economic migrants creeping
desperately over our borders and it is clear that the refugee question
is one of the major challenges facing this country.
Furthermore,
as Bhamjee points out, during the Apartheid years African countries
offered residence to exiled South African activists and helped them
mobilise against the regime. Surely, given Thabo Mbeki's grand NEPAD
drive, there is room for some reciprocity? In the nine years that have
passed since democracy however, South Africa has been less than generous
in its stance towards those who are fleeing. We have accepted
around 70 000 asylum seekers, of which 18-20 000 have been granted
refugee status.
While this
may sound like a large number, it compares feebly with much poorer
countries like Tanzania, which have camps housing up to a million people
at a time. In South Africa, we have no refugee camps. Asylum
seekers are housed in urban areas and are offered very little support
from the government. Furthermore, while refugees are legally entitled
to apply for citizenship after five years in a country, according to
Abeeda Bhamjee, "to my knowledge, none has been granted."
While Home
Affairs protest that a high workload prevents them from processing cases
quickly, Bhamjee says the amount of time most asylum seekers wait for
judgement is unreasonable. Indeed, there have also been various allegations
of bribery at Home Affairs - specifically that asylum seekers are required
to pay bribes to renew their permits. When they are granted refugee
status however, they do not require renewals, and this alleged under-the-counter
income dries up.
If this
is true, it is in the interests of corrupt Home Affairs officials to
prolong the process. In March 2002, Avida Bhamjee launched an internal
appeal at Home Affairs. If this fails, Azu could take his case to the
High Court at a minimal cost of around R15 000. If that fails, Azu
may need to return to Nigeria, where he may be in greater danger after
having lodged such a public appeal.
Indeed,
other clients of Bhamjee`s have decided against lodging applications
based on sexual orientation for fear of rejection from their communities.
Whether or not Azu is entitled to refugee status remains a very tricky
ethical question. When I discuss his experience of harassment with a
black, gay, local friend, he exclaims, "Well, who wasn't? The guy
should go home and fight for gay civil rights in Nigeria. They need
him."
For me,
however, the ultimate reckoning lies neither in the degree of persecution
Azu could suffer back home nor in the unlikeness of his finding protection.
For me, the mere fact that Azu cannot be who is in Nigeria is a gross
violation of a basic human right to individuality and self-expression
and should, alone, be grounds for asylum. It is clear from their correspondence
that Home Affairs has little experience in dealing with such cases.
The fact that adjudicators asked Azu to "prove" he is gay
displays an insensitivity to the complex issues of sexuality. Ultimately,
whether or not Azubike Udogo is granted refuge, the onus lies on brave
gays and lesbians here and throughout this continent to stand up, roll
up their sleeves, toss their fists in the air and state, "It`s
not right!"
East African
Standard, Nairobi, Kenya ( http://www.eaststandard.net )
http://www.eastandard.net/headlines/news14072003020.htm
July 14,
2004
4
Catholic and Anglican Primates reject gay faithful
by Patrick
Wachira and Ben Agina
Catholic
Archbishop Ndingi Mwana a' Nzeki and Anglican Primate Benjamin Nzimbi
yesterday spoke with one voice against gays and lesbians. Ndingi
told Kenya's Christians to reject and fight against homosexuality and
lesbianism. Nzimbi, who was the first clergyman to voice opposition
to gay bishops in the local church, stood firm in his opposition to
such relationships. Ndingi said that the emergence of the so-called
lifestyles was a big scandal that must be prevented from taking root
in the country and continent. Ndingi said that there was need to discuss
the matter and find a lasting solution, adding that the issue should
not be deferred for any reason.
"We
should not say 'it is not here yet'. The idea is to hit it before it
comes!" said he. Ndingi said the youth especially should be at
the forefront in fighting against homosexuality and lesbianism. The
storm over the proposed marriage by an Anglican priest to a man has
by grown leaps and bounds, with purists questioning the sincerity of
such marriages and their impact on the family set-up, with all its attendant
values. The admission by the priest that he was gay was in itself a
development of scandalous proportions and an unprecedented occurrence
in the church hierarchy. Said Ndingi yesterday: "We need to act
now and not tomorrow. What you can do today, do not wait until tomorrow."
Saying
that Africa's great enemy would be despair, the Primate added that the
will to live must supersede all else. "If two people are on the
point of death, and one loses the will to live, he will die while the
one that will harbour the strong will to live will, indeed, outlive
the other," he added. Ndingi said Christians should practice their
faith, all the time, argue for it and live according to it. He was speaking
at Dagoretti Corner when he officially opened Shalom House after presiding
over a graduation ceremony of 24 graduands in peace-building and
reconciliation.
The graduands,
drawn from Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan and Burundi, were hosted for
the course, lasting six months, under the aegis of the Africa Peace
Point. Nzimbi maintained his uncompromising stand that the Anglican
church will not accept the admission of homosexuals into the fold. Speaking
at the All Saints Cathedral after the installation of the Rev Peter
Mwangi as the new Provost, Nzimbi said the ACK does not believe in a
man-to-man relationship.
The Archbishop
said the recent attempted consecration of a gay bishop in the UK
frauds the mainstream Anglican teaching on human sexuality. Noting
that same sex marriages go against biblical principles, Nzimbi said
the Church cannot allow such practices that would endanger the unity
of the Anglican communion. But as Nzimbi was giving his stand, the visiting
Anglican Church Bishop of Liverpool, James Jones, said debate on the
issue, which has flared at the Church's headquarters in England and
Kenya, should be allowed to go on.
Jones said
the issue of admitting gays into the church was contained in a report
prepared by the church's headquarters in Canterbury but had not been
debated. Like Nzimbi, Jones was speaking outside the All Saints Cathedral
after attending the installation of Mwangi. He said he was in the country
to listen to the views of Kenyans and the ACK in particular on the issue
of homosexuality. Jones, who is attending the week-long Evangelical
Fellowship of Anglican Communion (Efac) workshop in Limuru, said he
hopes that this issue will not break up the Anglican Church.
"We
need to pray together so that we remain united. The more united we are
the better," said Jones. Last month, Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan
William said that the gay clergy Rev Jeffrey John's appointment did
not violate Church of England teaching. But days later it was reported
that John had planned to seek permission from Queen Elizabeth II to
withdraw his acceptance of his appointment as Bishop of Reading in the
Diocese of Oxford. The issue of homosexuality has recently flared up
elsewhere in the world-wide Anglican Communion; with the election last
month of a gay priest, the Rev Canon Gene Robinson, as Bishop of
Hampshire in the United States.
Toronto
Star, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Artic
le_Type1&c=Article&cid=1060467904813&call_pageid=968332188492&col=9687058990
August
10, 2003
5
37 African bishops denounce gay bishops's appointment
by Marc Lacey,
New York Times
Anglican
leaders across Africa, where homosexuality is publicly scorned, have
denounced the decision of the Episcopal Church in the United States
to elect an openly gay bishop and they predict a schism within the
global Anglican Communion unless that election is overturned. "It's
wrong and it's against the Bible," said the Rev. Joseph Mutie Kanuku,
bishop of the Machakos diocese, east of Nairobi, Kenya. "How
can we go against God's words?
Two men
being joined is contrary to nature and contrary to the Bible. "You
in the West may not consider it a sin but we in Africa do. We stand
with the Bible. When we are wrong, those in the West should tell us.
We are telling them this is wrong." Opposition was just as fierce
in Asia, where bishops said they might meet this week to discuss cutting
ties with the 2.3 million members of the Episcopal Church in the United
States.
"Practising
homosexuality is culturally and legally not acceptable here," said
Bishop Lim Cheng Ean, leader of the Anglican Church of West Malaysia.
Homosexuals in Africa remain closeted in all but South Africa, where
there is somewhat more openness. From pulpit and presidential mansion,
African leaders regularly condemn homosexuality as a corrupt lifestyle
that is being exported by the West. Faith healers regard it as the product
of an evil spirit. "I'm not denying that it is here," said
Kanuku.
"But
it's not in the open. It's taboo. It's against the teachings of the
Bible and we know it. Those who do it, do it in shame." Such beliefs
are difficult to ignore by a church that finds most of its growth in
the developing world. Some of the fiercest opposition has come from
the archbishop of the 17.5-million-member Anglican Church of Nigeria,
the Most Rev. Peter Akinola. In June, Akinola ordered his church to
sever relations with the Vancouver diocese after officials there ratified
a liturgy for same-sex marriages and presided at the marriage of a gay
couple.
The bishop
of the diocese that covers North Africa, Ethiopia, Eritrea and Somalia,
the Rev. Mouneer Anis, also portrayed the controversy as grave. "The
communion now faces a crisis over what holds us together and indeed
whether we can remain together if we hold not merely adverse but contradictory
views of the Scripture and what it teaches," he said.
lgbtmuslim@yahoogroups.com
June 2004
6
An African continent-wide
LGBTI forming
An African
continent-wide network
entity is in it's very nascent stages. The entity is called The
African Muslim Gay Organisation
[AMGO].
The four chapters are: Eastern Africa [EA_MGO], Northern
Africa NA_MGO], Southern Africa [SA_MGO] and Western
Africa [WA_MGO]. All area chapters have not concluded their meetings to date.
Once that has been done, a full AMGO meeting will be held - most
likely
in Nairobi for ease of travel and being a central hub for
all chapter organisers. However, Johannesburg is being considered
as
an option
as well.
The purposes
of AMGO will be worked through at this plenary meeting.
However, for now, chapters are looking at the
following
as their foci: Advocacy on LBGTI issues for Muslim
people amongst the various regional countries
and bodies representing regions and the continent [e.g.
ECOWAS, AU, SADC]. Input into policies
affecting
citizens, in particular LBGTI Muslims, for example,
recent legislation in Zanzibar. Establishing a
Trust Fund for LBGTI individuals
struggling in their countries as gay Muslims to establish themselves
and who
may require some assistance to enter formal education and
allied
institutions.
A continent
wide network of Muslim
LBGTI organisations primarily and secondarily,
to build synergies with other established and still to
be established entities in African countries
-
muslim
and non-muslim. The Southern African Chapter may be reached
via sa_mgo@yahoo.com.
Kindly spread this e-message as widely as you are able.
If you are, or know of, a Muslim LBGTI individual in other African
countries
who may contribute or benefit from the work of AMGO,
kindly pass
this message along.
New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/16/international/africa/16afri.html?ex=1090950800&ei=1&en=cdc043dac22f4eb1
July
16, 2004
7
Devastated by AIDS, Africa Sees Life Expectancy Plunge
by Celia
Dugger
Africa is getting poorer and hungrier as life expectancy
continues its steep decline in the countries hardest hit by the AIDS
pandemic, according to a United Nations report released Thursday.
It said infants born now in seven nations with high rates of H.I.V.
infection
could expect to live less than 40 years.
The report,
by the United Nations Development Program, also said the sub-Saharan
African region as a whole was getting poorer, with the prospect that rising numbers
of Africans will subsist on less than $1 a day in the years to
come. Last year, the United Nations Development Program projected
that
it would take Africa more than 140 years to halve the number of
people living in extreme poverty. But this year, as even that slight
progress
is gone, its annual Human Development Report states that "no date
can be set because the situation in the region is worsening, not improving."
As
Africa struggles with the world's heaviest AIDS burden, South
Asia and East Asia are making rapid progress in reducing poverty
and hunger,
driven mainly by the advances of China and India, the two most
populous countries, the report found.
Africa's setbacks are a break
from recent
decades of progress. From 1960 to 2000, for example, life expectancy
in developing countries rose to 63 years from 46. Africa was
part of that progress until the mid-1990's, when AIDS began seriously
eroding
its gains. The bleak statistical portrait of sub-Saharan Africa,
drawn from the 2004 Human Development Report, does not spare South
Africa,
the region's economic powerhouse, which celebrated a decade of
post-apartheid democracy this year. It is a discouraging portrait
that the South African
government sharply disputed Thursday.
The
report's summary measure of well-being - gauged by life expectancy,
literacy,
school enrollment
rates and per-capita income - shows that South Africans are
worse off today than they were when apartheid ended. That finding
is largely
driven by falling life expectancy because of AIDS, which the
United
Nations Development Program set at 48.8 years for South Africa
in this year's calculation. Joel Netshitenzhe, a spokesman for
the South African
government, called the United Nations' life expectancy estimate "nonsensical."
South
Africa's Medical Research Council, a government-financed
independent body, estimated that life expectancy in South African
had fallen much
less severely, to 55 in 2000 from 57 in 1995. According to
the South African government's assessment of its people's well-being,
based on
the higher, national calculations of life expectancy, South
Africans are better off than they were a decade ago. "We have interacted
with the U.N.D.P. and demonstrated that some of the data they used
to come to their conclusions are inaccurate," Mr. Netshitenzhe
said.
Fu Haishan,
a statistician with the United Nations Development Program, said
the Human Development Report relied on statistics from
the World Bank and United Nations agencies that specialize
in education, hunger and population "to ensure minimum and common standards
are used." Mark Malloch Brown, administrator of the program, said
in an interview that he had had difficult exchanges with South Africa
over the report's findings. He called the life
expectancy data for South Africa "catastrophic," even as he recognized post-apartheid
improvements in education, electricity and water provision.
As to
what South Africa needs to do, Mr. Malloch Brown said, "Fix the AIDS
problem." South Africa's president, Thabo Mbeki,
has been criticized at home and abroad for being slow
to aggressively tackle AIDS. More
than five million South Africans are infected with H.I.V.
And unlike neighboring Botswana, which started an effort
to provide drug treatment
to people with AIDS in 2001, South Africa's treatment
effort just got under way this year. The South African
government spokesman, Mr. Netshitenzhe,
defended the government's AIDS effort, saying it had
the continent's biggest prevention program and expected
to be providing drug treatment
to 53,000 people by March.
New York Times
May 11, 2005
8
AIDS Now Compels Africa to Challenge Widows' 'Cleansing'--(Malawi,
Zambia, Kenya)
by Saron LaFranieremchnji
Malawi - In the hours after James Mbewe was laid
to rest three years ago, in an unmarked grave not far from here, his 23-year-old
wife, Fanny, neither mourned him nor accepted visits from sympathizers. Instead,
she hid in his sister's hut, hoping that the rest of her in-laws would not find
her.
But they hunted her down, she said, and insisted that if she refused to exorcise
her dead husband's spirit, she would be blamed every time a villager died. So
she put her two small children to bed and then forced herself to have sex with
James's cousin.
"
I cried, remembering my husband," she said. "When he was finished,
I went outside and washed myself because I was very afraid. I was so worried
I would contract AIDS and die and leave my children to suffer."
Here and in a number of nearby nations including Zambia and Kenya, a
husband's funeral has long concluded with a final ritual: sex between the widow
and one
of her husband's relatives, to break the bond with his spirit and, it is said,
save her and the rest of the village from insanity or disease. Widows have long
tolerated it, and traditional leaders have endorsed it, as an unchallenged tradition
of rural African life.
Now AIDS is changing that. Political and tribal leaders
are starting to speak
out publicly against so-called sexual cleansing, condemning it as one reason
H.I.V. has spread to 25 million sub-Saharan Africans, killing 2.3 million last
year alone. They are being prodded by leaders of the region's fledging women's
rights movement, who contend that lack of control over their sex lives is a major
reason 6 in 10 of those infected in sub-Saharan Africa are women.
But change is coming slowly, village by village, hut by hut. In a region where
belief in witchcraft is widespread and many women are taught from childhood not
to challenge tribal leaders or the prerogatives of men, the fear of flouting
tradition often outweighs even the fear of AIDS.
"
It is very difficult to end something that was done for so long," said Monica
Nsofu, a nurse and AIDS organizer in the Monze district in southern Zambia, about
200 miles south of the capital, Lusaka. "We learned this when we were born.
People ask, Why should we change?"
In Zambia, where one out of five adults is now infected with the virus,
the National
AIDS Council reported in 2000 that this practice was very common. Since then,
President Levy Mwanawasa has declared that forcing new widows into sex or marriage
with their husband's relatives should be discouraged, and the nation's tribal
chiefs have decided not to enforce either tradition, their spokesman said.
Still, a recent survey by Women and Law in Southern Africa found that in at least
one-third of the country's provinces, sexual "cleansing" of widows
persists, said Joyce MacMillan, who heads the organization's Zambian chapter.
In some areas, the practice extends to men.
Some Defy the Risk
Even some Zambian volunteers who work to curb the spread of AIDS are reluctant
to disavow the tradition. Paulina Bubala, a leader of a group of H.I.V.-positive
residents near Monze, counsels schoolchildren on the dangers of AIDS. But in
an interview, she said she was ambivalent about whether new widows should purify
themselves by having sex with male relatives.
Her husband died of what appeared to be AIDS-related symptoms in 1996. Soon after
the funeral, both Ms. Bubala and her husband's second wife covered themselves
in mud for three days. Then they each bathed, stripped naked with their dead
husband's nephew and rubbed their bodies against his.
Weeks later, she said, the village headman told them this cleansing ritual would
not suffice. Even the stools they sat on would be considered unclean, he warned,
unless they had sex with the nephew.
"
We felt humiliated," Ms. Bubala said, "but there was nothing we could
do to resist, because we wanted to be clean in the land of the headman."
The nephew died last year. Ms. Bubala said the cause was hunger, not AIDS. Her
husband's second wife now suffers symptoms of AIDS and rarely leaves her hut.
Ms. Bubala herself discovered she was infected in 2000.
But even the risk of disease does not dent Ms. Bubala's belief in the need for
the ritual's protective powers. "There is no way we are going to stop this
practice," she said, "because we have seen a lot of men and women who
have gone mad" after spouses died.
Ms. Nsofu, the nurse and AIDS organizer, argues that it is less important to
convince women like Ms. Bubala than the headmen and tribal leaders who are the
custodians of tradition and gatekeepers to change.
"
We are telling them, 'If you continue this practice, you won't have any people
left in your village,' " she said. She cites people, like herself, who have
refused to be cleansed and yet seem perfectly sane. Sixteen years after her husband
died, she argues, "I am still me." Ms. Nsofu said she suggested to
tribal leaders that sexual cleansing most likely sprang not from fears about
the vengeance of spirits, but from the lust of men who coveted their relatives'
wives. She proposes substituting other rituals to protect against dead spirits,
like chanting and jumping back and forth over the grave or over a cow.
Headman Is a Firm Believer
Like their counterparts in Zambia, Malawi's health authorities have spoken out
against forcing widows into sex or marriage. But in the village of Ndanga, about
90 minutes from the nation's largest city, Blantyre, many remain unconvinced.
Evance Joseph Fundi, Ndanga's 40-year-old headman, is courteous, quiet-spoken
and a firm believer in upholding the tradition. While some widows sleep with
male relatives, he said, others ask him to summon one of the several appointed
village cleansers. In the native language of Chewa, those men are known as fisis
or hyenas because they are supposed to operate in stealth and at night.
Mr. Fundi said one of them died recently, probably of AIDS. Still, he said with
a charming smile, "We can not abandon this because it has been for
generations."
Since 1953, Amos Machika Schisoni has served as the principal village cleanser.
He is uncertain of his age and it is not easily guessed at. His hair is grizzled
but his arms are sinewy and his legs muscled. His hut of mud bricks, set about
50 yards from a graveyard, is even more isolated than most in a village of far-flung
huts separated by towering weeds and linked by dirt paths.
What Tradition Dictates
He and the headman like to joke about the sexual demands placed upon
a cleanserlike Mr. Schisoni, who already has three wives. He said tradition dictates that
he sleep with the widow, then with each of his own wives, and then again with
the widow, all in one night. Mr. Schisoni said that the previous headman chose
him for his sexual prowess after he had impregnated three wives in quick succession.
Now, Mr. Schisoni, said he continues his role out of duty more than pleasure.
Uncleansed widows suffer swollen limbs and are not free to remarry, he said. "If
we don't do it, the widow will develop the swelling syndrome, get diarrhea and
die and her children will get sick and die," he said, sitting under an awning
of drying tobacco leaves. "The women who do this do not die."
His wives support his work, he said, because they like the income: a
chicken
for each cleansing session. He insisted that he cannot wear
a condom because "this
will provoke some other unknown spirit." He is equally adamant in refusing
an H.I.V. test. "I have never done it and I don't intend to do it," he
said.
To protect himself, he said, he avoids widows who are clearly quite sick . Told
that even widows who look perfectly healthy can transmit the virus, Mr. Schisoni
shook his head. "I don't believe this," he said. At the traditional
family council after James Mbewe was killed in a truck accident in August 2002,
Fanny Mbewe's mother and brothers objected to a cleanser, saying the risk of
AIDS was too great. But Ms. Mbewe's in-laws insisted, she said. If a villager
so much as dreamed of her husband, they told her, the family would be blamed
for allowing his spirit to haunt their community on the Malawi-Zambia border.
Her husband's cousin, to whom she refers only as Loimbani, showed up at her hut
at 9 o'clock at night after the burial.
"
I was hiding my private parts," she said in an interview in the office of
Women's Voice, a Malawian human rights group. "You want to have a liking
for a man to have sex, not to have someone force you. But I had no choice, knowing
the whole village was against me."
Loimbani, she said, was blasé. "He said: 'Why are you running away?
You know this is our culture. If I want, I could even make you my second wife." He
did not. He left her only with the fear that she will die of the virus and that
her children, now 8 and 10, will become orphans. She said she is too fearful
to take an H.I.V. test. "
I wish such things would change," she said.
http://www.baywindows.com/
June 29, 2006
9
Africa Conference on Sexual Health and Rights addresses gay issues
About 400 delegates gathered in Nairobi last
week for the second Africa Conference on Sexual Health and Rights reports
the South Africa-based The Mercury newspaper. The first meeting was
held in Johannesburg in 2004.
Seeking to improve policies and programs
on sexuality in Africa, the conference drew together many organizations
such as the Forum for the Empowerment of Women as well as the Coalition
of African Lesbians.
“We are here in Africa. We live in the mainstream, we pay taxes
like everybody else, we relate with people in the mainstream. We are
a naturally occurring phenomenon in the universe,” said activist
Donna Smith, according to The Mercury.
Smith represented the Forum for the Empowerment of Women, a
lesbian organization out of Johannesburg. In addition to discrimination and
societal stigmatization, many countries in Africa still have anti-gay
legislation, such as Kenya where homosexuality is punishable by 14
years in jail, The Mercury reported.
“A number of rape and assault cases have been reported to police
stations. When one reports, the police respond by asking why one is
a lesbian,” Fikile Vilakazi said to The Mercury, citing an example
from a lesbian who was killed in Cape Town earlier this year.
From:
Ines Gontek
[mailto:ines@ilga.org]
14 July 2006
10
‘ Gender DynamiX’ First Transgender Association Established in Africa
for Trans
Issues
The gender question, "is it a boy or a girl?", immediately follows
any birth. A non-profit organisation catering to the needs of transgendered
people has been formally established with the intent of addressing this question
in
the broadest sense.
Gender DynamiX is an organisation that works towards a world in which each person
has the freedom to express their own gender, whether it corresponds to their
born sex or not.
Explains Robert Hamblin, Vice-Chairperson of the Management Committee: "Gender
DynamiX is an organisation whose time has come; we are here to support transgendered
people and to change the way society thinks about men and women"...
Read more
http://www.ilga.org/news_results.asp?LanguageID=1&FileID=851&ZoneID=2&FileCategory=1
Help us keep making a difference!
Go to http://www.ilga.org/donate.asp
and make a one-time donation, or you can make a monthly pledge for as little
as 5 euros (or dollars) per month to help us continue the struggle for equality
for LGBT people worldwide.
Ines Gontek
M.A. African Studie, Specialised in Lesbian Issues in South Africa -
University of Cologne, Germany Contact: igontek@yahoo.de
Women's eNews (womensenews.org)
http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2998/context/cover/
December 17, 2006
11
African Female Scholars Share Virtual Lifeline
by Gretchen L. Wilson, WeNews correspondent
Female faculty are rare at African universities, but the Internet helps university women exchange ideas and moral support. It provides what some participants call a "virtual feminist university." First in a series on higher education in Africa.
Cape Town, South Africa - When Dr. Sylvia Tamale spoke out a few years ago in favor of gay rights in Uganda--where homosexuality is illegal and regularly prosecuted--the fallout was fierce. Local news media quoted members of the public who said she should be "lynched" and "crucified" for suggesting such a thing. She says politicians, fellow academics, even friends turned against her.
"I felt extremely isolated and lonely," says Tamale, 44, who in 2003 suggested Uganda's proposed Equal Opportunities Commission prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. But Tamale, a law professor at Kampala's Makerere University, wasn't entirely stranded. For support she turned on her computer and sent e-mails to an online network called Strengthening Gender and Women's Studies for Africa's Transformation, or GWS-Africa.
About 200 academics are subscribed to the list, and members use it daily to announce job postings, report on emerging issues on the ground, profile women's achievements or, in Tamale's case, save morale. Tamale reported what she was going through and in response, she received messages of solidarity from feminist academics and activists across Africa who had met through the African Gender Institute (AGI) at South Africa's University of Cape Town. "Most of the support and encouragement that I received came from sisters at the AGI and the broader GWS-Africa list serve," she says. "The AGI introduced me to a network of feminist scholars around the continent that have served as an invaluable support base in my intellectual and activist work."
Universities Male-Dominated
Women are more visible on African university campuses than a generation ago, but Tamale says universities remain male-dominated and male-structured. That can be particularly true in sub-Saharan Africa, where 20 million girls are denied any education due to discrimination, poverty and conflict according to a 2005 Save the Children report. While there are no continent-wide figures on women's representation at universities, post-apartheid South Africa is widely agreed to be a Mecca. But even there, senior women faculty are scarce. At Johannesburg's venerable University of the Witwatersrand, for instance, women accounted for only 19 percent of associate professors and 17 percent of full professors in recent years, according to Dr. Hilary Geber, a professor there.
In South Africa, female faculty of color are particularly rare. At the University of Cape Town, women account for 35 percent of the school's overall academic staff of 779. But only 59--or 8 percent--are women of color, according to Nazeema Mohammed, who oversees the school's transformation from the apartheid system.
But women say representation at universities is just part of the problem. "Obviously, concerns about simply getting the numbers of African women into higher education--as both students and staff--are critical and a first point of advocacy," says Lynne Muthoni Wanyeki, former executive director of the African Women's Development and Communications Network--known as FEMNET--a collective of African women's organizations in Nairobi, Kenya. "But the insufficient support for the production, dissemination and use of African feminist knowledge and theory, in all fields, is surprising."
Groups such as the African Gender Institute are using technology as a major tool to overcome those hurdles. Dr. Elaine Salo, a senior lecturer at the African Gender Institute, says online connections to other female thinkers and advocates helps make up for the camaraderie that's often lacking for women at African universities; it's a loneliness that may lead many to leave the continent to pursue graduate-level studies. "The Internet and technology play a big role in breaking the isolation," says Salo. "We are doing work here that will result in a generation of scholars who will say: 'We can do work here that is relevant to our society.'"
Bringing Feminist Scholars Together
Tamale became involved with the African Gender Institute in 2002, when she attended a workshop of African feminist scholars to assess African teaching and research in gender and women's studies. Later, she took advantage of an institute program that offers visiting academics and activists stints of research and writing for a few months at the Cape Town campus. "Most importantly, what the AGI does is give African women academics the chance to meet each other and to work as though their minds are serious," says Dr. Jane Bennett, head of the African Gender Institute.
The institute was founded in 1996, two years after South Africa's transition from apartheid to democracy, to expose African researchers and intellectuals to the importance of gender equity and to support those engaged in that process. Housed in offices at the University of Cape Town, it offers undergraduate and graduate academic programs in gender and women's studies. Three core teaching faculty also raise up to $1 million a year from international foundations to offer programs for African scholars committed to gender equity.
Through formal instruction, research networks, publications and special projects, the institute regularly reaches hundreds of women across the continent from Ethiopia to Nigeria as well as African scholars in North America and Europe. Academics from |