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Gay Cape
Verde
News & Reports
Not much
current news about gays in Cape Verde
but some information appears on the Internet:
As of
2004, homosexuality is legal in Cape Verde.
Cape Verde won its independence from Portugal in 1975. The new government
kept the Portuguese Penal Code of 1866, which de facto criminalized
homosexuality. The law called for fines supervision for first time
offenders, while repeat offenders faced imprisonment. Fortunately
a new Penal code made in 2004 has now completely
decriminalized homosexuality with an equal age of
consent at 16 age of consent for all. (From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT_rights_in_Cape_Verde)
Wikipedia:
Cape Verde facts
Lonely Planet Guide Information
BUBL
LINK Information AFROL
Information
Canadian
Travel Advice for Cape Verde
CIA Factbook:
Cape Verde
BBC Cape
Verde Profile
Creolization
in Cape Verde
Human
Rights Cape Verde Sex
and Sea in Cape Verde (novel)
By Germano Almeida. 2004
HIV
Risk Increases with Tourism in Cape Verde
(All infected adults
receive antiretroviral treatment provided free
to anyone
who
needs it, including those in country illegally.)
(Comment
from InternationalSexGuide.info
I was in Sal, Cape Verde in 2000 on business but my schedule did
not allow for some "exploration". You do need Portuguese
to get around because few people speak English. I spent two hectic
days there, but my client did arrange for a 20 year old sweet and
sexy companion. He said there are plenty of action especially in
Mindelo, in another island. By the way, Cape Verde consists of many
islands.)
New York Times
www.nytimes.com/2007/06/24/world/africa/ 24verde.html
June 24, 2007
In a World on the Move, a Tiny Land Strains
to Cope - An Identity Linked to Migration (non-gay
background story)
By Jason DeParle
Mindelo, Cape Verde
Virtually
every aspect of global migration can be seen in this tiny West African
nation, where the number of people
who have left approaches the number who remain and almost everyone
has a close relative in Europe or America.
Migrant money buoys the economy. Migrant votes sway politics. Migrant
departures split parents from children, and the most famous song
by the most famous Cape Verdean venerates the national emotion, “Sodade,” or
longing. Lofty talk of opportunity abroad mixes at cafe tables here
with accounts of false documents and sham marriages.
The intensity of the national experience makes this barren archipelago
the Galapagos of migration, a microcosm of the forces straining American
politics and remaking societies across the globe.
An estimated 200 million people live outside the country of their
birth, and they help support a swath of the developing world as big
if not
bigger. Migrants sent home about $300 billion last year — nearly
three times the world’s foreign aid budgets combined. Those sums
are building houses, educating children and seeding small businesses,
and they have made migration central to discussions about how to help
the global poor. A leading academic text calls this the “Age
of Migration.”
But it is also the age of migration alarm, as European ships patrol
African coasts to intercept human smugglers and new fences are planned
along the Rio Grande. Countries that want migrant muscle and brains
also want more border control. Many of them see illegal migrants
as a security threat, especially in a terrorist age, and worry that
large-scale
migration, even when legal, can undercut wages, require costly services
and subject national identities to bonfires of religious and cultural
conflict.
The stakes can be seen here in Mindelo, a semicircle of barren hillsides
that gaze out at the only sign of natural life, a beckoning sea.
In a country with little rain and a history of famine, migration
began
as a necessity and became part of the civic DNA. You can dine at
Café Portugal,
drink at the Argentina bar and stroll Avenida da Holanda.
Yet Holland — the Netherlands — now requires would-be migrants
to pass a test on Dutch language and culture. Other countries have
raised the cost of visa applications, discouraged applicants by requiring
them to travel to the Cape Verdean capital, Praia, and placed new penalties
on employers who hire illegal immigrants. While the Netherlands has
long been a favorite destination for residents of this island, a Cape
Verdean song now warns that “Holland belongs to the Dutch.”
Watch out_Because they can make you go back swimming_And you’ll
get home with seaweed in your teeth
Mindelo, Cape Verde’s second-largest city, contains 63,000 people
and about as many variations on the migrant’s tale. On the
hillside neighborhood of Monte Sessego, Maria Cruz, 70, beams at
the living
room suite her son sent from Rotterdam. Out toward the airport,
Stenio da Luz dos Reis, 17, studies Dutch and hopes to join his
mother in
the Netherlands. Down by the beach, Orlando Cruz, 46, stares at
vacant tables. He fell off a ladder in New Jersey and used the
insurance money
to start a hotel and restaurant, which are now nearly empty.
As construction racket fills her half-finished house, Evanilda
Lopes, 27, speaks freely about the fraudulent papers that got her
to the
Netherlands. As he hustles change for his H.I.V. medication, Manuel
Gomes, 41, is
equally frank about the crimes that got him deported from Providence,
R.I. He moved there as a child and grew up wild — selling
drugs, stealing cars and burglarizing homes. Now like hundreds
of others deported
here from the United States, he finds himself a man without a country,
exiled to a world no less foreign for having been the place of
his birth.
“
You have a Cape Verdean here who would cut his right arm off to go
back,” said Mr. Gomes, who lives in a one-room hovel without
running water or electricity.
If Cape Verde is the Galapagos of migration, Jorgen Carling, a
Norwegian geographer, is its Darwin. A rising star on the academic
circuit,
Dr. Carling, 32, visited Cape Verde 10 years ago, taught himself
Kriole,
the local language, and has been returning ever since.
“
Cape Verde is a showcase of the contradictions and frictions of global
migration,” he said. “It is in a quite dramatic transition — from
being so dependent on migration to trying to cope with a world
in which borders are closing.”
The tensions he cites abound. Migration reduces poverty. But it
increases inequality between migrants and others back home. Migration
can express
family devotion. It can also strain family bonds.
And while migration may be at record levels, so is the frustration
of people who want to migrate but cannot. That is because as migration
grows, the desire to experience its economic rewards grows even
faster.
“
Migration is probably more important to more people than it has ever
been,” said Dr. Carling of the International Peace Research Institute,
a nonprofit group in Oslo. “But what characterizes the world
today is also the feeling of involuntary immobility.”
These conflicts can be seen in a block home on a dusty hill where
migration unites and divides four generations. At 79, the owner,
Antonia Delgado,
is old enough to remember famines, and she spent decades living
in a shanty made of used oil drums. Thanks to the money her son
sent
from the Netherlands, she has four rooms, electric lights and indoor
plumbing.
But she no longer has the son. He stopped calling more than five
years ago, and she is not sure if he is alive. “I’m very worried,” she
said. “He helped me so much.”
Now she relies on money sent by a second family migrant, her granddaughter
Fatima, a nanny in Portugal. That brings Ms. Delgado monthly support
of $135, but leaves her raising her granddaughter’s son,
an 11-year-old with a missing front tooth and irrepressible smile.
The boy, Steven Ramos, is sorting through parallel complexities.
His mother’s salary buys school supplies, martial arts lessons and
the occasional DVD. But she left five years ago and has come home only
once. His father works in the Netherlands and rarely calls. Steven
called him “ingrote” — for ungrateful — choosing
a Cape Verdean term for migrants who forget those left behind.
Though Steven’s mother now has a work permit, she cannot get
a visa for Steven, who has spent his childhood thinking their reunion
was imminent. He cried when her recent visit ended but cast her departure
in traditional Cape Verdeans terms, as something natural, necessary
and good. “I cried, but I wasn’t sad because I knew she
needed to go,” he said. “ She went to give us better
conditions.”
An Identity Linked to Migration
Without migration, Cape Verde would not exist. The 10-island chain,
385 miles off the coast of Senegal, was uninhabited until the 15th
century, when Portugal settled it with two migrant streams — Europeans
and African slaves. Cape Verde became a creolized mix of both continents
and a supply depot for the slave trade.
Mass emigration began in the late 1800s on whaling ships that brought
Cape Verdeans to New England. It continued after World War II
with European guest-worker plans, which sought temporary labor
but brought
permanent settlement.
Those same plans brought Turks to Germany, South Asians to Britain
and North Africans to France, and a generation later, many Europeans
remain concerned about continuing cultural conflicts. “We asked
for workers, but we got people,” is a famous European lament.
Cape Verde gained independence from Portugal in 1975, about the
time the guest-worker plans ended. Still, Cape Verdean migration
continued — legally
(through family reunification laws) and illegally (through visitors
who stay after visas expire). Many people here travel on tourist
visas, then seek a European or American citizen to marry, often
of Cape Verdean
ancestry.
Migration is so central to their identity, Cape Verdeans often
boast that emigrants outnumber the people who remain. That is
true, Dr.
Carling said, only when counting emigrants and their descendants.
By that standard,
he estimates there are 460,000 Cape Verdeans on the islands and
500,000 overseas, including 265,000 in the United States. “Sodade,” the
hit by Cesaria Evora, a Mindelo resident and a Grammy award winner,
conveys “longing, longing, longing for my island.”
Some scholars argue that migrants form a record share of the
world’s
population, though weak data make historical comparisons difficult.
Despite current alarm, migration is likely to grow. Rich economies
with aging work forces need labor. Workers in poor countries need jobs.
Border crossings are hard to prevent, and the rewards of moving have
never been greater. The average pay raise awaiting today’s
unskilled migrants, in inflation-adjusted terms, is about twice
as high as that
which greeted migrants a century ago, during the last great period
of global migration.
Economists generally argue that migration has helped rich economies
expand by supplying needed labor, though some low-skilled domestic
workers may suffer wage reductions because of increased competition.
From the start, Cape Verde has embraced its emigrants — as
kinsmen, investors, lobbyists for foreign aid, safety valves
for population
growth and eventually as voters. With migrant help, Cape Verde
has doubled its per capita income since 1990, to about $2,100,
a high figure
by African standards. Remittances, the sums that migrants send
home, make up 12 percent of the gross domestic product and once
were twice
as high. Migrants elect their own representatives to the National
Assembly.
More broadly, however, development experts are split on the effects
of migration. Remittances feed and shelter the poor, and migrants
sometimes return with new business contacts and ideas. But migration
can also
drain countries of talent and promote dependency, among individuals
and governments. No country has climbed out of poverty through
migration alone. Despite the economic progress here, the unemployment
rate
hovers above 20 percent and the fastest-growing industry, tourism,
is dominated
by low-wage jobs.
While Dr. Carling admires Cape Verde’s ability to invent itself
as a nation beyond borders, he also sees problems with the constant
emphasis on departures. It can weaken relationships, he said, leave
marriages short-lived and promote indifference among students and workers. “The
possibility of relying on remittances — and the prospect of going
abroad one day — can alienate you from the environment here,” he
said.
Even as Cape Verdeans struggle to get out, others are migrating
in. This, too, is characteristic of the age of migration — most “sending” countries
are also “receiving” countries, underscoring how
universal the phenomenon is. Nearly half the migrants from poor
nations move
to other poor nations.
Mindelo, on the island of São Vicente, is filled with
Chinese shopkeepers chasing new markets and West African peddlers
fleeing
homelands torn by war and worse poverty. Many hope to move on
to the Canary Islands,
which are part of Spain, aboard dangerous smuggling boats on
journeys that kill hundreds if not thousands every year.
“
This is life and death,” said Emmanuel Kofi Cathline, a local
peddler who migrated from Ghana 17 years ago and once made money here
helping migrants book the illegal journeys. Though crackdowns have
chased him from the business, he remains loyal to what might be called
the global migrants’ creed. “If a place is no good, change
it,” he said. “Go to another place!”
A Test of Optimism
For all the rising barriers, many Cape Verdeans remain confident
they will leave. Mr. da Luz dos Reis, the teenager studying Dutch,
answered
the door in a blaze of sartorial optimism: orange shorts and
orange shirt — can you guess the Dutch national color? — with
the word “Holland” stretched across his back.
His mother left for the Netherlands six years ago to work as
a maid, and his younger sisters just joined her. Having passed
his
16th birthday,
Mr. da Luz dos Reis was left behind, with a workbook containing
100 questions in Dutch.
Thirty will appear on a test. No. 62 asks if it is important
to learn Dutch quickly. (It is.) No. 59 asks if wife beating
is permissible.
(It is not.) Mr. da Luz dos Reis pays $70 a month for a tutor
and must take the test in Dakar, two hours away by plane. But
he is
not
one
to gripe.
“
It’s good,” he said of the test. “Then we get there
with an idea of what it’s like.” Besides, he added, “it’s
their country.”
Across town, Evanilda Lopes, 27, has more experience and less
optimism. A stylish woman with rhinestones on her Coco T-shirt
and blond
extensions in her hair, she was raised on reports of fashion
and comfort from
six older siblings in Europe. She left school at 17 and spent
five years seeking a tourist visa, which arrived only after she
had
created a fictitious bank account and job. “It was the way I could go,” she
said.
Things soured in the Netherlands. Her aunt lined up three Dutch
men for her to marry, but Ms. Lopes rejected them all. The atmosphere
in the house grew hostile. Ms. Lopes moved in with a Dutch plumber,
and
they had a child they named Giovanni. Cohabitors in the Netherlands
have residency rights, but when the relationship expired so did
her
permission to stay.
She came home last fall with a cache of the luxury goods she
had gone to Europe to find — belts, handbags, sandals,
perfume. She sold them on the streets and made enough money to
start building
a home
for her and Giovanni, 5, who has just come home to a country
he does not know.
Ms. Lopes alternately calls her time in the Netherlands a blessing
and a curse. “I was young and I didn’t know life was so
hard,” she said. With a half-finished house and half-formed
plans, she has her shoes on one shore, her mind on another and
her innocence
lost somewhere in between.
The
International Journal of African Historical Studies
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0361-7882%282003%2936%3A1%3C83%3AIOSTAH%3E2.0.CO%3B2-4&size=LARGE&origin=JSTOR-enlargePage
Islands of Sexuality: Theories and Histories of Creolization in Cape
Verde
The International Journal of African Historical Studies, Vol. 36, No.
1,
Special Issue: Colonial Encounters between Africa and Portugal (2003),
pp. 83-103
doi:10.2307/3559320
By Isabel
P. B. Feo Rodrigues
This article consists of 21 pages.
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