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The gay community in Africa is
often denied its rights, including access to HIV/AIDS services.
Photo © Reinnier Kaze/IRIN |
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This article, and photos, comes via IRIN, the
humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily
reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States.
LIMB, July 23, 2008 (IRIN) – The
persistent and increasing outbreaks of violence against members of the gay
community in Africa are jeopardising efforts undertaken to combat HIV, both
within this group and across the population as a whole, Aids activists
warned at a recent meeting in Limb, Cameroon.
The extreme vulnerability of
members of the gay community to HIV on the continent was highlighted during
the meeting, initiated by the French non-governmental organisation, AIDES,
and its partners, which took place at the beginning of July in the south
west of Cameroon and brought together many Aids activists from Francophone
African countries.
On average it is estimated that HIV
infection rates amongst MSM (men who have sex with men) are four to five
times higher than the population overall, with highs in certain areas.
In Bamako, the capital of Mali,
screening tests carried out on a few hundred MSMs revealed that the
infection rate was around 37 per cent, according to ARCAD-SIDA, an
organisation in Mali that supports people living with HIV/AIDS. Official
statistics set the national infection rate of the population at 1.3 per
cent.
In Senegal, a survey carried out in
2005 showed that 21.5 per cent of MSMs in the capital, Dakar, were infected
with HIV, compared to a national prevalence rate estimated by the
authorities at 0.7 per cent.
The 2007 “Off the map” report,
which was produced by the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights
Commission (IGLHRC), an American organisation that defends the rights of
homosexuals, highlighted that “the vulnerability of same-sex practicing men
and women is not due to any biological predisposition, but is the result of
an interlocking set of human rights violations and social inequalities that
heighten HIV risk”.
Criminalisation of homosexuality
According to IGLHRC, 38 of the 53
countries in Africa still consider homosexuality as an offence punishable by
sentences ranging in severity up to imprisonment.
This is the case in Cameroon, where
11 people were put in prison in 2007 for homosexual activity, according to
the 2008 report of the human rights organisation Amnesty international.
Due to lack of care, one of the men
imprisoned died of an HIV/Aids related infection a few days after his
release.
Dr Steave Nemande, a doctor and the
president of the human rights organisation Alternatives Cameroun, believes
that by criminalising homosexuality “social homophobia is legitimised and it
increases fear amongst MSM, who take further risks to live their sexual life
in secret”.
In Senegal, homosexuality remains
illegal, although in 2005 MSM were integrated into Aids programmes
Here, the ‘manhunt’ and arrests
that have taken place over the last few months, following photos of a gay
festival being published in the local news, forced certain members of the
MSM community to go into exile, and others, including those infected with
HIV, to hide – therefore, giving up their treatment.
Even in countries with no
legislation on homosexuality, such as the Côte d'Ivoire, MSM are far from
able to claim their rights, noted Herv Beut, a member of Arc-en-Ciel+, an
HIV/Aids prevention association for MSM.
“We are still fighting for [MSMs to
have] access to health centres,” he said.
Members of the community died from
HIV/Aids without receiving healthcare, after they were turned away by
certain health facilities, he stated. He added that he had himself been “a
victim of violence a few times” during prevention campaigns for MSMs.
Ill-informed communities
“On the continent, more and more
MSMs are organising prevention campaigns, however, they will never be
effective whilst they are being hunted down and/or imprisoned, or even
excluded from official strategies to combat the pandemic,” said David
Monvoisin, a member of Africa Gay – a group fighting against Aids within
homosexual communities – and also working with the French NGO, AIDES.
Philippe [last name withheld] is
being monitored by a centre providing free information and care for MSM,
which was opened very recently by Alternatives Cameroun in Douala, the large
city port.
He decided to risk revealing his
sexual orientation and his HIV positive status to give others something to
hold on to, “in the hope that this will serve as an example for others so
that there is more discussion about the illness between [MSMs] and health
professionals”.
Such initiatives are indispensable,
because many MSM “are not educated and ignore all or nearly all prevention
methods”, said Aboubakar Dabo, a member of ARCAD-SIDA, in Mali.
According to a survey carried out
in 2006 by this organisation, 77 per cent of the MSMs questioned had had
unprotected intimate relations.
“Many MSM told us they were sure
that there was no risk of infection with anal penetration,” said Yves Jong,
coordinator of Alternatives Cameroun’s sexual health and prevention unit.
Dangerous clandestine existence
Even when MSM are aware, their
exclusion from the majority of health policies on the continent means that
it is difficult for them to obtain what they need to protect themselves from
infection.
The most frequent problem is access
to lubricating gel, explained Monvoisin. “Many [MSM] use butter or oil, but
unfortunately this damages condoms.”
The clandestine existence that gay
communities are forced to hide away in exposes them not just to the risk of
HIV, but the rest of the population too: because they are unable to live
openly as gay men, many MSMs also have sexual relations with women, or are
even married, activists have highlighted.
In Mali, “the majority of
homosexuals – 88 per cent according to a study – are bisexual, which
increases the spread of the disease”, said Dabo.
African governments must,
therefore, act as quickly as possible and protect these vulnerable groups in
the interest of the population as a whole, urged participants at the meeting
in Cameroon.
“As long as [MSMs] are ignored, all
efforts undertaken in the world to combat AIDS will be destined to fail,”
concluded Jol Nana, from
IGLHRC’s African office.