The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Tanzania to list, publish gays

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DAR ES SALAAM. — Tanzania on Saturday announced plans to publish a list of gay people allegedly selling sex online — just days after shutting dozens of AIDS clinics accused of promoting homosexual­ity. The country’s deputy health minister Hamisi Kigwangall­a said on Twitter that the government was investigat­ing “the homosexual­ity syndicate” and would arrest and prosecute those involved in the gay sex business.

DAR ES SALAAM. - Tanzania on Saturday announced plans to publish a list of gay people allegedly selling sex online - just days after shutting dozens of Aids clinics accused of promoting homosexual­ity.

The country’s deputy health minister Hamisi Kigwangall­a said on Twitter that the government was investigat­ing “the homosexual­ity syndicate” and would arrest and prosecute those involved in the gay sex business.

“I will publish a list of gay people selling their bodies online. Those who think this campaign is a joke are wrong. The government has long arms and it will arrest all those involved quietly,” he wrote.

“Once arrested they will help us find others.”

Gay male sex is punishable by anything from 30 years to life imprisonme­nt under Tanzanian law, but there is no such ban on lesbian relations.

However politician­s have largely ignored the gay community - which was not subject to levels of discrimina­tion seen in other countries such as neighbouri­ng Uganda - until a recent spike in anti-gay rhetoric by the government.

In July last year, the regional commission­er for the port city of Dar es Salaam, Paul Makonda, announced a crackdown against gays, followed by arrests in clubs.

Some people who have been openly gay on the internet stopped posting after Makonda threatened that police would arrest those who follow them on social media.

Dozens of men suspected of being gay have been detained and taken to hospital for anal exams to confirm their homosexual­ity.

Also in July last year the government banned the import and sales of sexual lubricants, which Health Minister Ummy Mwalimu said encouraged homosexual­ity which led to the spread of HIV and Aids. On Thursday government announced it was stopping many privately run health centres from providing Aids-related services after they were accused of providing services to homosexual­s.

“We have suspended the provision of HIV and Aids services at less than 40 drop-in centres for key population­s operated by NGOs countrywid­e after it was establishe­d that the centres were promoting homosexual­ity, which is against Tanzania’s laws,” Mwalimu told a Press conference.

Last year she said it was estimated that 23 percent of men who have sex with men in Tanzania were living with HIV and Aids.

Homosexual­ity is illegal in 38 of 54 countries in Africa, and is punishable by death in Mauritania, Sudan and Somalia, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal.

Uganda in 2014 tried to impose the death penalty on those found guilty of being homosexual, however the controvers­ial law was later repealed.

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