The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Kenya High Court delays decision on anti-gay laws

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NAIROBI: Kenya’s High Court postponed a much-anticipate­d rulingonwh­ethertoscr­apcolonial­era laws which criminalis­e homosexual­ity, citing a heavy case load.

The delay was met with dismay by Kenya’s LGBT community and their allies, who have been anxiously awaiting a ruling on the petition, which was filed three years ago.

“The files are above my height... we are still working,” said Chacha Mwita, one of the judges, who added that one of his colleagues was on leave and that the three-judge bench were juggling multiple cases. He set the decision for May 24.

“We plan to meet in April if all goes well and see whether we can come up with a decision. You do not appreciate what the judges are going through.”

Gay rights organisati­ons are asking the court to scrap two sections of the penal code that criminalis­e homosexual­ity.

One section states that anyone who has ‘carnal knowledge... against the order of nature’ can be imprisoned for 14 years. Another provides for a five-year jail term for ‘indecent practices between males’.

On social media Kenya’s LGBT community and allies have been anxiously counting down the hours to the ruling.

“To say we are disappoint­ed would be an understate­ment,” the National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Council (NGLHRC), one of the petitioner­s, wrote on Twitter.

Prominent Kenyan commentato­r Patrick Gathara slammed a ‘sad, sad day’ for the judiciary, describing the postponeme­nt as ‘ludicrous’. Activists believe Kenya has a chance to blaze a trail in Africa where homophobia is virulent in many communitie­s, with similar laws in over half the countries on the continent.

While conviction­s under the decades-old laws are rare, gay activists say the legislatio­n is unconstitu­tional and fuels homophobic persecutio­n.

Imani Kimiri of the NGLHRC’s legal team, told AFP her office dealt with 15 prosecutio­ns under the laws in 2018, but cannot recall the last conviction – slamming the process as ‘just a frustratin­g endeavour’.

The petitioner­s argue that under Kenya’s 2010 constituti­on every person is said to be equal before the law – a protection directly contradict­ed by the disputed sections of the penal code. Those who are blackmaile­d, evicted, fired, expelled from school, or assaulted over their sexual orientatio­n, are unable to access justice because it means ‘confessing to a crime’, said Eric Gitari of the NGLHRC.

Activists were optimistic of a ruling in their favour, given recent decisions by the court.

In March, the High Court banned forced anal testing of men suspected of being gay.

And in September, a court ruled that ‘Rafiki’ (friend), a film about a lesbian love affair which was the first Kenyan movie to be shown at the Cannes film festival, could be screened domestical­ly for seven days after its initial banning. — AFP

The files are above my height... we are still working. We plan to meet in April if all goes well and see whether we can come up with a decision.You do not appreciate what the judges are going through. Chacha Mwita, judge

 ??  ?? LGBT activists arrive to attend a court hearing in the Milimani high Court in Niarobi. — AFP photo
LGBT activists arrive to attend a court hearing in the Milimani high Court in Niarobi. — AFP photo

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