By Rex Wockner
The Women Affairs and Youth
Committee of Nigeria's House of Representatives held a hearing on February.
14 on an extreme antigay bill that some activists had believed was not going
to see any action.
The measure, which bans same-sex
marriage and gay relationships, also seems to outlaw such things as
belonging to a gay group, visiting a gay Internet site and socializing
between gay people.
The bill states, in part:
“Publicity, procession and public show of same-sex amorous relationship
through the electronic or print media physically, directly, indirectly or
otherwise are prohibited in Nigeria. ... Any person who is involved in the
registration of gay clubs, societies and organizations, sustenance,
procession or meetings, publicity and public show of same sex amorous
relationship directly or indirectly in public and in private is guilty of an
offence and liable on conviction to a term of 5 years imprisonment.”
The National Assembly is now
expected to pass the bill, in some form, before April’s general election.
[Indications are that the Bill
is due before the Nigerian Senate tomorrow (March 1) – Editor]
According to Scott Long from Human
Rights Watch’s LGBT program: “The most useful form of outside pressure is
from governments, in the form of statements by foreign embassies in Abuja or
demarches at the ministerial level. Support to get those governments to
take a stand would be vital.”
As recently as late January,
leading activist Dorothy Aken’Ova of the Nigerian organization INCRESE, or
International Centre for Reproductive Health and Sexual Rights, had
considered the bill dead and had strongly urged reporters not to write
anything about it for fear news items could rekindle legislators’ interest
in the measure.
“[T]he bill is more or less dead
because there is pandemonium [in advance of] the elections coming up in
March/April and the swearing-in for a new government – we hope – in May,”
she said in an e-mail interview. “Now they have found enemies within
themselves and are not looking for gays, etc., to lead to the slaughter. If
this remains the situation ... then the bill is dead in all practical terms.
“[P]ress attention to the bill,
even if it is as mild as reporting that it is presumed dead as a result of
political tension ... will be dangerous. Right now, we want silence,” Aken’Ova said.
Some other local activists had a
different take in late January, just prior to the bill’s resurrection.
“Silence does not equate the death
of the bill,” Alimi Adebisi Ademola, executive director of the gay youth
group The Independent Project, said in an interview. “We believe strongly
that the bill is still alive only going through a process that no one
knows.”
Davis Mac-Iyalla, director of the
gay Christian organization Changing Attitude Nigeria, concurred: “Just
because the House has been silent about the bill does not make it dead.”
Leo Igwe, executive secretary of
the Nigerian Humanist Movement, had urged that international activism
against the bill not stop “even though the ‘general feeling’ now is that any
call for public action might be counterproductive unless there are
indications that the legislation might be passed in weeks.”
Aken’Ova, the Nigerian gay group
Alliance Rights, Human Rights Watch, the International Gay and Lesbian Human
Rights Commission and others have suggested that British activist Peter
Tatchell of the gay-rights group OutRage! may be to blame for the bill’s
resurrection.
They say OutRage! launched a new
international action against the bill in January without seeking input from
leading Nigerian activists who were calling for a “be silent” approach.
“Launching a global call to action
without consulting the range of activists in Nigeria is irresponsible and
insulting,” said HRW’s Long.
“Anybody who is proposing mass
public action needs to check their stuff,” said IGLHRC’s senior specialist
for Africa, Cary Alan Johnson. “[OutRage!’s] not taking responsibility for
not having checked in with folks both in the U.S. and Nigeria bugged me –
and I’ve witnessed similar kinds of disregard for local activists in Uganda
and elsewhere.”
In a Jan. 31 “Public Statement of
Warning,” Aken’Ova and 19 other African activists declared: “Until
OutRage!’s action was issued, the bill was dead. By calling on people to
begin a campaign at this stage, interest could be awakened in the bill.
OutRage! is acting irresponsibly and in direct contradiction to the advice
of leaders of the Nigerian LGBTI movement.”
In an interview, Tatchell responded
that his group “acted in good faith” and noted that he suspended the action
four days later, after learning that some Nigerian activists were counseling
silence on the matter.
He also said some African gay
groups disparage OutRage! because they “resent the fact that we also work
with other groups that they see as rivals. They want exclusive control.”
“This vendetta is an attempt by
certain groups to maintain their dominance and exclude other gay
campaigners,” Tatchell said.
OutRage! members also said the
Public Statement of Warning against OutRage!, rather than OutRage!’s call
for action against the bill, could have been the catalyst for the House of
Representatives’ renewed activity on the measure.
The public statement denouncing
Tatchell for speaking out generated several media reports in the United
Kingdom.
■ Rex Wockner, who lives in California, has
written for
more than 350 LGBT publications across the USA - and around the world.
He has been writing on gay issues since 1985 and is considered by many to be
the
‘grandfather’ of modern gay journalism.
© 2007 Rex Wockner.
Published by UK Gay News with permission.
|
Posted: 28 February 2007 at
22:00 (UK time) |