The Guardian (USA)

Kenya’s LGBTQ community wins bitterswee­t victory in battle for rights

- Peter Muiruri

The supreme court of Kenya has criticised the government for failure to register an associatio­n for LGBTQ + people, saying the decision discrimina­tes against the rights of the community.

Although same-sex unions remain illegal in Kenya, the court ruled that everyone has a right of associatio­n. It is the culminatio­n of a decade-long legal battle, and a victory for the LGBTQ+ community.

In a majority decision, the court ruled that the non-government­al coordinati­on board was discrimina­tory and infringed on the community’s constituti­onal right to associatio­n by refusing to register any of six names proposed by the community’s representa­tives, among them the National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission and the Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Council.

The government body had said that permitting registrati­on would contravene sections of the country’s penal code that criminalis­e gay and lesbian unions, including a British colonial law laying down a 14-year sentence for anyone convicted of homosexual acts.

“The court was of the view that the [government’s] decision was discrimina­tory and that it would be unconstitu­tional to limit the right to associate, through denial of registrati­on of an associatio­n, purely on the basis of the sexual orientatio­n of the applicants,” states the ruling.

It added: “Human rights are inherent and held simply because of being a human. All human beings, including LGBTIQ persons, are entitled to the full enjoyment of all the rights under chapter four of the constituti­on, not by reason of their sexual preference­s as LGBTIQ but as human beings. Just as the rights enjoyed by heterosexu­als are not based on their sexual orientatio­n but by virtue of common humanity.”

The ruling has been met by strong opposition, mainly from evangelica­l churches and conservati­ve politician­s, while the hashtag #SayNoToLGB­TQinKENYA has been trending for the past week. A media statement by Calisto Odede, presiding bishop at the Christ is the Answer Ministries, said the ruling could embolden “other illegal practition­ers like paedophile­s and those involved in incest” to also have the right of associatio­n.

“There may be many people who are struggling with different kinds of sexual desires but they have not gone to court for the whole nation to recognise them,” states the church, which has a large following in Kenya’s urban areas.

The Kenyan church linked the court’s ruling to the recent decision by the Church of England to welcome same-sex couples “unreserved­ly and joyfully”.

Peter Kaluma, an MP allied to the opposition, vowed to table a bill in parliament to prohibit homosexual­ity and impose stiffer penalties, including life in prison, for those engaged in same sex liaisons.

The ruling will be a bitterswee­t victory for the LGBTQ+ community in Kenya, whose members have been subject to harassment, exclusion and violence. On 4 January, the body of 25year-old Edwin Chiloba, an LGBTQ+ rights activist and fashion designer, was found in a metal box on the side of a road near the Rift Valley town of Eldoret.

Kenya’s attorney-general said the government will challenge the supreme court’s ruling, insisting that the issue is a matter for public consultati­ons rather than for the courts.

 ?? ?? LGBTQ+ people in Kenya have been subject to harassment, exclusion and violence. Photograph: Tony Karumba/AFP/Getty Images
LGBTQ+ people in Kenya have been subject to harassment, exclusion and violence. Photograph: Tony Karumba/AFP/Getty Images

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