Daily Dispatch

Anti-gay laws in place in most of Africa

Homosexual­ity outlawed in 28 states but latitude allowed in some others

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More than half of the countries in sub-Saharan Africa have antihomose­xuality laws, although others have moved towards legal tolerance, watchdogs say.

Twenty-eight out of 49 countries have laws penalising samesex relationsh­ips, according to Neela Ghoshal, a Human Rights Watch (HRW) specialist in lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgende­r rights.

The death penalty is on the books, under sharia, in Mauritania, Sudan and northern Nigeria, although there have been no known executions in recent times.

In southern Somalia, gay men are believed to have been put to death in territory ruled by the Al Shabaab jihadist group.

However, Angola, Mozambique and Seychelles have scrapped anti-gay laws in recent years, and on Friday a High Court ruling in Nairobi will determine whether Kenya follows suit.

On the other hand, Chad and Uganda have introduced or toughened legislatio­n.

Rights groups say many antigay laws date from the colonial area.

They represent a peril even in countries where they are not implemente­d, according to campaigner­s, as their existence on the statute books entrenches stigma and encourages harassment, they say.

Following is a snapshot of the legal situation in Africa, provided by AFP:

ANGOLA: Last month scrapped a notorious “vices against nature” provision in its penal code, and made the refusal to employ or provide services to someone on the grounds of their sexual orientatio­n liable to a jail term of up to two years.

BOTSWANA: On March 15, the High Court will hear a case brought by campaign group Lesbians, Gays and Bisexuals of Botswana challengin­g the constituti­onality of a law punishing same-sex conduct.

CHAD: Approved a law in May 2017 to punish “same-sex sexual relations” with between three months’ and two years’ jail and a fine ranging from R1,200 to R12,000.

GABON: The first gay traditiona­l wedding was conducted in 2013 but the couple was immediatel­y arrested following an outcry. The pair was released and the marriage overturned on technical grounds.

LESOTHO: In 2012, approved a penal code which scrapped a common-law regime under which sodomy had been criminalis­ed. Initiated a process in 2016 to decriminal­ise same-sex marriage.

MALAWI: In 2016, the High Court suspended a moratorium on arrests and prosecutio­ns of consensual homosexual adults, pending a Constituti­onal Court review.

MOZAMBIQUE: In 2015, swept away Portuguese colonial laws outlawing “vices against nature.” No known prosecutio­ns under those laws occurred after Mozambique gained independen­ce in 1975.

MALI: No anti-homosexual­ity law, but conservati­ve Islamic groups in December successful­ly campaigned against a Dutch-funded schoolbook on sexual education, maintainin­g it promoted homosexual­ity.

NIGERIA: Law introduced in 2014 provides for up to 14 years’ jail for same-sex cohabitati­on and any “public show of samesex amorous relationsh­ip“. In the north, sharia makes homosexual­ity punishable by death. SOUTH AFRICA: In 2006, South Africa became the sole African nation to allow gay marriage. The country has become a haven for African homosexual­s who flee persecutio­n at home or travel to the country to get married before returning home.

TANZANIA: A conviction for having “carnal knowledge of any person against the order of nature” can lead to 30 years’ jail or more. Foreign gay rights activists have been expelled. In October, the governor of Dar es Salaam, the country’s economic capital, threatened to arrest homosexual­s.

UGANDA: An Anti-Homosexual Bill that hiked the penalty for same-sex relations from seven years to life, and extended punishment­s to people found guilty of “promoting” homosexual­ity, was annulled by the courts six months after it was published in 2015, in what activists hailed as a victory.

ZAMBIA: Homosexual­ity is widely reviled and same-sex relationsh­ips can draw sentences of between a year and 14 years’ jail. Earlier this month, TV regulators ordered a new locallypro­duced reality show, Lusaka

Hustle, to be taken off the air on the grounds that it promoted a gay lifestyle.

Anti-gay laws date from the colonial area, entrench stigma and encourage harassment

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