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Cary Alan Johnson:
“Convincing many of our mainstream
NGO partners to support sexual minority issues remains a slow process”. |
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BRAZZAVILLE, November 27, 2007 –
Basic human rights for gay men and women – and transgender people – remains
a problem in most of Africa, with acceptance by many human rights groups and
non-governmental agencies (NGOs) continuing to be “a slow process”.
“Human rights advocacy in Africa is
still carried out in a tenuous and fragile environment,” said Cary Alan
Johnson, senior Africa specialist at IGLHRC at the conclusion of the 42nd
Session of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights held in
Brazzaville last week.
“Violations of LGBT rights in
Africa must be understood and addressed in the broader context of lukewarm
commitments and frequent, flagrant violations of international human rights
treaties by many African governments,” he pointed out.
IGLHRC has attended the last four
NGO Forums and Commission sessions and has supported the participation of
LGBT activists from more than 25 African countries.
One of the main pillars of IGLHRC’s
strategy of engagement at the African Commission is to show solidarity with
the human rights struggles of women, indigenous people, ethnic and
linguistic minorities, and human rights defenders.
IGLHRC believes that by becoming
valued members of the African human rights community, LGBT activists can
counter the tendency to marginalize LGBT rights.
“Convincing many of our mainstream
NGO partners to support sexual minority issues remains a slow process,” Mr.
Johnson said.
While in Brazzaville, he met with
representatives from more than a dozen key human rights civil society
organizations—including major players such as Amnesty International, the
Fédération International de Droit de l’Homme (FIDH), Women AID
Collective/Nigeria (WACOL) and the Minority Rights Group.
Mr. Johnson also met with a
representative from the Cameroon National Human Rights Commission, Betty
Luma, with whom he discussed the continued arrests of gay men in that
country.
IGLHRC continues to work with
progressive human rights partners from throughout Africa and around the
world to promote sexual rights at the twice-annual sessions of the African
Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
Advocacy and education around
sexual rights at the Commission and the NGO Forum that immediately precedes
the sessions are central to IGLHRC’s strategy for the decriminalization of
homosexuality in Africa.
At a meeting of its Africa Advisors
last month, LGBT leaders from throughout the continent confirmed their
collective commitment to the African regional human rights process as a
forum for promoting LGBT rights, and supported IGLHRC’s continued role as a
technical advisor to that process.
The Commission session itself
started on Thursday, 15 November, after two days of delay. IGLHRC met
briefly with nearly every Commissioner to ensure that even though there were
no formal communications on LGBT rights pending with the Commission, LGBT
rights would remain an issue for consideration.
There were four new Commissioners
appointed to the Commission this session. IGLHRC Program Associate Joel
Nana, with Nigerian LGBT activist Joseph Akoro, met with the new
Commissioner from Nigeria, Mrs. Catherine Dupe Atoki, in Abuja last June.
IGLHRC has also developed strong
working relationships with several other Commissioners, and the session was
used to strengthen those relationships and strategize about ways of
achieving progress on LGBT rights.
At previous sessions, IGLHRC has
supported delivering public statements on LGBT rights in Cameroon and
Nigeria, submitting shadow reports on Uganda and Nigeria, and providing key
questions related to human rights abuses based on sexual orientation to the
Commissioners for use during discussions about state reports.
As a result, the veteran
Commissioners have been exposed to basic issues regarding LGBT rights in
Africa. IGLHRC intends to step up its work at the Commission by meeting
with several Commissioners in their home countries in the run up to the next
session and working with local LGBT organizations to prepare shadow reports
to complement, and when necessary challenge, reporting by states
Other representatives attending
from the LGBT sector included Stefano Fabeni, director of the LGBT program
at Global Rights in Washington, D.C. and Vanessa Ludwig, the new director of
the Triangle Project in Cape Town.
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Posted: 28 November 2007 at
11:30 (UK time) |