The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

In Africa, LGBT rights activists worry about Trump impact

- By Carley Petesch

DAKAR » Gay rights activist Joseph Achille Tiedjou is worried every day that he will be harassed or arrested in Cameroon.

Defending LGBT rights can be dangerous in Africa, where many countries have laws against homosexual­ity. But in recent years activists have stepped out of the shadows, empowered by the support of the Obama administra­tion and the internatio­nal community.

Now many fear the Trump administra­tion will undermine those gains, and that their exposure could make them more vulnerable if support fades.

“I have so many worries with the new administra­tion,” the 32-year-old Tiedjou said, pointing out Trump’s ban on transgende­r people in the U.S. military. “Obama was known to be very engaged. Hillary Clinton was a champion of LGBT rights and made many guarantees in addressing these issues specifical­ly.”

Obama’s administra­tion made LGBT rights a major domestic and foreign policy, though some in Africa saw it as pushing “Western ideals.” The Obama administra­tion also created a special envoy position on LGBT rights. The Trump administra­tion has said it will keep the post, but concerns remain.

“The difference with the previous administra­tion was that the rights of LGBT people were explicitly part of foreign policy. So LGBT groups around the world could absolutely rely on the moral and, indeed, material support that came from the U.S. government and that made a huge difference,” said Graeme Reid, director of Human Rights Watch’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgende­r Rights Program. “Under this administra­tion, we are no longer going to be seeing that proactive engagement around LGBT rights.”

Though the Trump administra­tion’s overseas policies on LGBT rights remain to be seen, the erosion of domestic advances directly undermines the authority of the U.S. to speak out internatio­nally, Reid said. He cited the pushback against federal protection­s and the appointmen­t of “openly homophobic officials” to senior government positions.

The U.S. recently joined a dozen other countries to vote against a U.N. Human Rights Council resolution that urged countries not to use the death penalty for specific forms of conduct, including consensual same-sex relations. State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said the vote was made “because of broader concerns with the resolution’s approach in condemning the death penalty in all circumstan­ces” but said the U.S. “unequivoca­lly condemns the applicatio­n of the death penalty for conduct such as homosexual­ity.”

Same-sex acts are illegal in more than 33 African countries and can lead to death sentences in parts of at least four, including Mauritania, Sudan, northern Nigeria and southern Somalia, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal.

Homosexual­ity is criminaliz­ed in the East African countries of Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. In Tanzania, authoritie­s recently stopped health providers from non-government­al organizati­ons from providing services to LGBT people.

In Cameroon, a strong ally of the U.S. in the fight against extremism, Human Rights Watch has documented high levels of arrests of LGBT people.

Colonial-era anti-gay laws are still in place in Ghana and are implemente­d from time to time, and a high level of social intoleranc­e and family violence exists against the LGBT community.

In Gambia, where former leader Yahya Jammeh made “aggravated homosexual­ity” punishable by life in prison, activists are waiting to see whether new President Adama Barrow will amend the law.

In Senegal, violence is directed at LGBT communitie­s, along with arrests, according to Human Rights Watch.

“In practice the act is criminaliz­ed so it can be used broadly to detain people based on their orientatio­n,” said Francois Patuel, a West Africa researcher for Amnesty Internatio­nal.

But despite setbacks in some countries there have been some gains, Patuel said.

The African Commission on Human and People’s Rights in 2014 adopted a resolution condemning violence and discrimina­tion against gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgende­r people. South Africa’s constituti­on specifical­ly protects the rights of LGBT and allows same-sex marriage.

 ?? JANE HAHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Alhaji,who fled Gambia after being beaten, tried, and persecuted for being gay, poses for a picture in front of the African Renaissanc­e Monument in Dakar, Senegal. Defending gay rights can be dangerous in Africa, where many countries have laws against...
JANE HAHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Alhaji,who fled Gambia after being beaten, tried, and persecuted for being gay, poses for a picture in front of the African Renaissanc­e Monument in Dakar, Senegal. Defending gay rights can be dangerous in Africa, where many countries have laws against...

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