Sunday People

Rwanda lies on gay rights

Activist told to assure refugees

- Katie Wilson feedback@people.co.uk

RWANDA’S leaders are scrambling to make the country appear safe for gay people, it was claimed yesterday.

A senior activist there told the People he was approached by officials and asked to add his name to a statement giving assurances.

The move was seen as an attempt to whitewash abuses in the African country as Home Secretary Priti Patel presses on with plans to fly cross-channel migrants there from Britain.

And veteran gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell last night said it was proof Rwanda was “cynically trying to use Rwandan LGBT+ people for propaganda purposes”.

Our source was approached after reports that campaigner­s had major concerns for the safety of LGBT+ migrants if they were forced to live in Rwanda.

The man, who asked to remain anonymous for his own safety, said: “The Rwandan government wants to force the Rwandan LGBT+ movement to step up and say that we are OK and safe – they are aware that LGBT+ immigrants are refusing to come.”

He said he was approached in person with a demand to “write a statement talking about the LGBT+ community’s situation”.

He was told it would be published to send a message to refugees in the UK.

The activist added: “I was also asked to go and testify the statement publicly, but I refused.

“I am sure they’ll trick people and use straight people to lie. They are doing this in a secretive way.”

Mr Tatchell, who set up campaign group Outrage! in 1990, said: “This is outrageous and typical of attempts by the Rwandan regime to disguise its failed protection of LGBT+ people.

“The country is not safe for LGBT+ people. There is widespread homophobic prejudice, discrimina­tion and threats of violence. Rwanda clearly fears that the asylum deal with the UK may fall through.

“I am concerned that since LGBT+ people are refusing to parrot government lies they may be subject to retributio­n.”

Us-based Human Rights Watch has documented how Rwanda’s authoritie­s arbitraril­y detained, harassed, insulted and beat transgende­r and gay people in the capital city Kigali, where refugees from Britain would be housed.

The Home Office said its own assessment of Rwanda found LGBT+ people “did not face a real risk of persecutio­n”.

It added Rwanda has “a track record of supporting asylum seekers, including working with the UN Refugee Agency which said [it] has a protective environmen­t”.

 ?? ?? FLIGHT PLAN: Priti Patel
FLIGHT PLAN: Priti Patel

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