Bangkok Post

Gay rights stance led to ouster

US ambassador to Zambia was shown the door after exposing govt corruption, writes Ruth Maclean

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The United States recalled its ambassador to Zambia on Monday after he criticised the government for sending a gay couple to prison, and accused officials of stealing millions of dollars of public funds.

Ambassador Daniel L Foote had described the treatment of the gay couple as “horrifying” — setting off outrage in Zambia, a conservati­ve Christian country. But analysts said that the main reason for his departure was that he had repeatedly declared that ministry officials had misappropr­iated millions.

In an unusually combative public statement for a member of the diplomatic corps, Mr Foote had said that the Zambian government “wants foreign diplomats to be compliant, with open pocketbook­s and closed mouths”.

Mr Foote’s comments set off recriminat­ions in Zambia, a copper-producing, landlocked country in southern African. Zambia’s president, Edgar Lungu, said he did not want Mr Foote in the country, even if Zambia risked losing its annual $500 million (15 billion baht) in US aid.

“We don’t want such people in our midst. We want him gone,” Mr Lungu told the state-owned television channel ZNBC on Sunday.

He later told Sky News, “If that is how you are going to bring your aid, then I’m afraid the West can leave us alone in our poverty. And we’ll continue scrounging and struggling.”

The State Department said in a statement that it was dismayed the Zambian government had declared Mr Foote’s position as ambassador was “no longer tenable”. The department said that his remarks were “the equivalent of a declaratio­n that the ambassador is persona non grata”.

Mr Foote is a career diplomat who was appointed US ambassador to Zambia by President Donald Trump in November 2017. In his statement, released in early December, Mr Foote had said the Zambian foreign minister had accused him of interferin­g in internal affairs for speaking out about the “harsh sentencing of a homosexual couple”.

Despite all the aid Zambia receives, the ambassador wrote he had found it very difficult to get an audience with the president.

“Both the American taxpayers, and Zambian citizens, deserve a privileged, two-way partnershi­p, not a one-way donation that works out to $200 million per meeting with the head of state,” Mr Foote wrote.

The administra­tion of Mr Lungu, who was first elected in 2015 after his predecesso­r died in office, has been widely criticised as corrupt. One Zambian analyst recently called it “kleptocrat­ic”, saying grand corruption has become endemic and the economy is faltering.

A recent report by the Environmen­tal Investigat­ion Agency, an internatio­nal organisati­on that investigat­es environmen­tal crime and abuse, described the president, his daughter and two ministers as central figures in a “cartel” that traffics mukula rosewood trees. It said that the trees were on the verge of commercial extinction.

Mr Foote had spoken out about corruption in Zambia before.

“His voice is powerful. He had exposed their hypocrisy and corruption,” said the popular musician Fumba Chama, who has repeatedly criticised government corruption in songs like Koswe Mumpoto, which means “rat in the pot”.

Chama — whose stage name, Pilato, stands for People In Lyrical Arena Taking Over — has been targeted by the government many times. He was last arrested in Livingston­e on Saturday while running a workshop on transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, charged with unlawful assembly.

He said the furore over the ambassador’s comments on gay rights was just a pretext, and the real issue was his bold condemnati­on of corrupt officials.

“They brought up the LGBT thing because they knew if they brought it to the fore, the public would side with them. Zambia is a very religious country,” Chama said.

Gay relationsh­ips are against the law in many African countries, but gay people confront a broad range of conditions across the continent. The prosecutio­n of the two Zambian men, for what the government called “crimes against the order of nature” is not unique on the continent.

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They brought up the LGBT thing because they knew the public would side with them. FUMBA CHAMA

POPULAR MUSICIAN

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