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service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
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JOHANNESBURG, May 15, 2007 (PlusNews)
– The legalisation of same-sex marriages in South Africa in 2006 was
expected to speed up the liberation of gays and lesbians in neighbouring
countries like Zimbabwe and Namibia, where homosexuality is still illegal,
but international and local experts believe the battle for recognition in
Africa is far from over.
Researchers, community leaders and
activists who were part of a recent international delegation to a three-day
conference on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people and
HIV/Aids, in Pretoria, South Africa, voiced their concerns about the risks
posed by one-sided health programmes and HIV prevention campaigns in Africa.
This is what they told IRIN/PlusNews:
“Discriminatory rule in countries
like Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Cameroon and Kenya is an ongoing [problem]... and
LGBT people who live under laws that criminalise same-sex activity are often
excluded from national healthcare programmes and HIV prevention campaigns,”
said Carey Alan Johnson, International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights
Commission senior specialist on Africa.
“Some donor organisations also
condone this blatant human rights violation of LGBT communities through
unclear policies on how their funds should be spent.
“Take PEPFAR [the multibillion
dollar United States President's Emergency Fund for AIDS Relief] in Ghana,
for instance, and how it covers the purchase of condoms but not the purchase
of water-based lubrication necessary for condoms not to break during anal
intercourse,” Mr. Johnson pointed out.
Ian Schwartz, the director of
Namibia's gay rights group, The Rainbow Project, highlighted the problems of
access to healthcare in Namibia for LGBT communities, people with
disabilities and other sexual minority groups, like commercial sex workers.
“It remains a major issue,” he
insisted..
“The attitude of the Namibian
government was certainly demonstrated recently when, after many months of
working on the third medium-term plan [part of the national strategy for
addressing HIV and Aids], The Rainbow Project managed, for the first time,
to get in a clause on the health needs of sexual minorities in national
programming, but this clause was thrown out during the review of the
document in Parliament.
“It’s very sad, because there is
growing evidence to support earlier fears that national health interventions
run the risk of failure if ... [they] continue to exclude people based on
sexual identity.”
Professor Vasu Reddy, chief
research specialist at the Gender and Development Unit of South Africa's
Human Sciences Research Council commented: “Homosexuals as well as
heterosexuals are left more vulnerable to HIV infection as a result of the
attitudes of governments to LGBT people on the [African] continent.
“Persecution of gays and lesbians
is also rife in Africa, and just because it does not hit the press ...
[people think] it is not happening, but one experience is one too many, and
often illustrates how far LGBT people will go to blend in or even operate on
the ‘down-low’, where people who desire same-sex intimacy are forced to
commit to false heterosexual marriages to conceal their sexual identities,
often with dire consequences.
“Issues of same-sex sexuality and
HIV/Aids are absent from national debate and, if not explored, threaten to
reverse the gains of national and even global health programming,” Prof
Reddy noted.
Among other things, Johnson,
Schwartz and Reddy have called for the urgent repeal of conservative donor
conditions as well as laws that criminalise same-sex sexuality.
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Posted: 15 May 2007 at
17:00 (UK time) |