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Gay Malawian Prisoner Steven Monjeza Is Very Ill |
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LONDON, April 19, 2010
– Steven Monjeza remains
very ill in the notorious Chichiri Prison in Blantyre, Malawi, according to
people who have seen him in the last two days.
I have been sent an appeal to get
him medical help. Mr Monjeza, who is on trial with his same-sex partner,
Tiwonge Chimbalanga, has been sick for more than two weeks.
He is vomiting, coughing and
suffering from pain and pressure in his chest.
His eyes are jaundiced.
He is thin and weak, with barely
enough energy to smile. People who
saw him at the weekend are very worried about his condition. He needs to be admitted hospital to undergo medical
tests and receive treatment. He is not getting adequate care in prison. Although he has not been convicted of any offence,
Steven has been held on remand in an overcrowded, fetid cell for nearly four
months, without proper food, sanitation or medical care. Together with Mr Chimbalanga, Steven is being
prosecuted on charges of homosexuality. They
were arrested after holding an engagement ceremony last December.
Such a ceremony is not illegal in
Malawi and there is no evidence that they have committed any criminal
homosexual acts. This weekend I was sent another request to get Mr
Monjeza transferred to hospital. At first sight, some of Steven's symptoms seem like
flu. But the prison authorities have
discounted this possibility. They
suspected that he had TB. Steven was
sent for tests. But the TB tests
have come back negative. T he prison authorities would not have sent him to
be tested for TB if his symptoms corresponded to flu. Prison officials are unable to determine Steven’s
illness. Although they are unsure,
they are not doing further medical tests. Even if Steven had only bronchitis or pleurisy, we
should be concerned. These can
develop into pneumonia, which can sometimes be fatal. Steven’s poor health is confirmed by his partner,
Tiwonge Chimbalanga, who has also expressed concern about Steven’s
condition. Both men have urged that Steven receives hospital
treatment as soon as possible. My independent sources agree.
They say Mr Monjeza needs to go to
hospital for a full medical examination and treatment.
His health is likely to deteriorate
further unless he gets medical care. Mr Monjeza is being held in a small cell, with up to a
dozen other men. There is not enough
space to sleep comfortably. Toilet and washing facilities are deficient. Mr Monjeza receives only two prison meals a day.
It is always the same maize porridge
with beans, which has low nutritional value.
The families of other prisoners bring them food to supplement their
meagre rations. But Steven and
Tiwonge’s families have abandoned them. The
two men say they are getting little or no assistance, apart from occasional
prison visits from straight Malawian sympathisers. Chichiri prison was built for 800 prisoners.
It currently holds nearly 1,900
inmates. All the prisoners are suffering in the jail’s
overcrowded, sub-standard conditions. Sickness
is rife, with high rates of disease and infection.
The prison needs reform and
upgrading for the sake of all detainees. See this report on prison conditions from the Malawi
Medical Journal
HERE and
HERE. Chichiri jail was one of the prisons used to
incarcerate Malawian dissidents who opposed the dictatorship of the
western-backed anti-communist dictator, Dr Hastings Banda, from the late
1960s to the early 1990s. Steven and Tiwonge are being held on remand.
They have not been convicted of any
offence. Yet they are being treated
like criminals and imprisoned with hardened felons convicted of serious
crimes. Although they have never
been found guilty of any crime, they have already served almost four months
in jail. Thankfully, most of the prison guards and other
prisoners seem more enlightened and compassionate that some of Malawi’s
political and religious leaders. Steven
and Tiwonge are not suffering homophobic abuse or ill-treatment in prison.
They have friends in prison. Requests by Mr Monjeza and Mr Chimbalanga for bail have
been turned down repeatedly, even though people accused of violent assaults
and murder have been granted bail. The
denial of bail for a victimless alleged crime is very unusual.
It looks like they are being singled
out for special victimisation by the
courts.
What you can do Please lobby your elected representative.
Get him or her to press the
government of Malawi to transfer Mr Monjeza to hospital and provide him with
medical treatment. Thank you, ■ Note for those in the United Kingdom.
As all the MPs have now stepped down, it is suggested that lobbying is done via your MEPs.
To email your MEPs, click
HERE for the Write to Them Website and
enter you postcode. All MEPs
for your European Constituency are listed and you have the choice to email
an MEP individually, or all of them in one email.
In addition you can lobby the Foreign and Commonwealth Minister,
David Miliband and his ministerial team: MSU.PublicIn(at)fco.gov.uk.
SEE ALSO
Court Case Drives Gays Deeper Underground. An engagement ceremony has landed a same-sex Malawian couple in jail, propelled their country into
international headlines, and pushed men who have sex with men (MSM) further towards society’s risky margins.
(UK Gay News, April 6, 2010)
Government and Judiciary Split, Suggests Gay Malawian Exiled in London. The delays in the trial of Steven Monjeza
and Tiwonge Chimbalanga – and the postponed verdict – are a sign that the Malawian government and the country’s
judiciary are split, a gay Malawian exiled in the UK said yesterday. Edi Phiri, a gay Malawian who fled his country
after he was badly beaten and had threats to kill him, was the keynote speaker at the protest ,staged outside the
Commonwealth Secretariat yesterday lunchtime.
(UK Gay News, March 23, 2010)
Amnesty: Two Gay Men Facing Trial for ‘Gross Indecency’ Must Be Released.
Amnesty International has called on the Malawian authorities to immediately and unconditionally release Steven Monjeza and Tiwonge
Chimbalanga, after a judge today ruled this morning that they will face trial in April on charges of “gross indecency”. And
in New York, the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) was “dismayed” by the court ruling.
(UK Gay News, March 22, 2010)
London Protest in Support of Gay Malawian Couple Facing Jail. A protest outside the Commonwealth Secretariat in London is to be staged
on Monday, the day when a Malawian court is due to hand-down the verdict in the trial of gay couple Steven Monjeza and Tiwonge Chimbalanga
on charges of homosexuality. (UK Gay News,
March 17, 2010)
British MPs Condemn Malawi Gay Arrests. Thirty-three British MPs have so far signed a House of Commons Early Day Motion (EDM 564), which
condemns Malawi’s arrest and current trial of two men, Steven Monjeza and Tiwonge Chimbalanga, who are accused of a homosexual relationship.
(UK Gay News, January 23, 2010)
Malawi ‘Gay Marriage’ Trial Set for January 15. Human rights defender arrested on false porn charges.
A Malawian court yesterday refused bail to two men who celebrated their engagement to be married in a traditional African ceremony,
which they held late last year. The same day the police arrested a worker from the human rights group CEDEP, which assisted
the detained men and secured them legal representation.
(UK Gay News, January 5, 2010)
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