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Hot
Seat: GALZ on plight of homosexuals in Zimbabwe
Violet Gonda, SW Radio Africa
April 09, 2010
http://www.swradioafrica.com/pages/hotseat130410.htm
Violet speaks
to the Gays and
Lesbians of Zimbabwe Programmes Manager for Gender, Fadzai Muparutsa.
The discussion focuses on the recent reports of violence against
the gay community and their struggle for basic human rights. Fadzai
also talks about how gay victims of violence are often ridiculed
by police officers after reporting an assault; and how even hospital
staff mock them when seeking treatment. The discussion also looks
at how minority issues are not taken seriously by both the ZANU
PF and MDC leaderships.
Violet Gonda: An annual
report by the US State Department on the human rights situation
in Zimbabwe has revealed that homosexual men and women have been
subjected to an ordeal known as, 'corrective rape'.
It has been documented in the report that gay men and lesbians are
being raped by those who claim to be trying to convert their sexual
orientation. The gay community have long been under siege in Zimbabwe
and hate speech against this group is common. Robert Mugabe says
homosexuality is 'abhorrent' and famously described
homosexuals as "worse than dogs and pigs". On the Hot
Seat programme is the Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe or GALZ, Programmes
Manager for Gender, Fadzai Muparutsa. She joins us from Harare to
discuss the reports of the new violence against the gay community
and the history of their struggle for basic human rights in Zimbabwe
. Welcome on the programme Fadzai.
Fadzai
Muparutsa: Thank you very much Violet.
Gonda:
Now let's start with the issue of 'corrective
rape', what exactly is this?
Muparutsa:
Well people have a certain belief that by, particularly men towards
women and particularly women who present themselves as masculine,
if they have sex with a man then they will appreciate male sex and
want to be in heterosexual relationships. So the idea behind it
is that you rape someone and you correct their sexual feelings towards
people of the same sex. It's said to be 'corrective
rape' but what we have been talking about of late is that
putting it in that way will mean that people will think it is something
that is positive and that it is corrective but what it is in fact
is something that is very negative because it is rape and putting
a term like 'corrective' in front of it or 'curative'
before the word rape is in some way desensitising the kind of violations,
or the kind of violence that lesbians or gay men experience.
Gonda:
And has GALZ, has your Association actually received such reports?
Muparutsa:
Yes we have. We have received, there aren't that many, we
can't say it is on the increase but what's happened
of late is that people are talking a lot more about it and so people
will come to the office and report cases that they have experienced
and particularly at the hands of either their families, because
this kind of rape usually happens in private spaces, in the homes
or in close knit societies that our members stay in.
Gonda:
Now isn't that taboo, to actually sleep with a member of the
same family?
Muparutsa:
Well it is, it's a very, it's a very disturbing act
that happens so let's say my family members feel that I need
to be corrected, they will get somebody to force themselves onto
me in the privacy of our home and that's what happens a lot
of the time. That's what I'm saying; it's something
that happens in the private space.
Gonda:
You know this report has raised a lot of scepticism, now does it
really happen to both men and women of homosexual tendencies, are
women really raping men in Zimbabwe ?
Muparutsa:
Yes we have heard that women are raping men; we're not sure
what the motive behind that is because there are a couple of articles
that have come out in the press about this. So I can't really
go into detail about that particular situation but what I can talk
about is the rape that happens towards women who have sex with women,
commonly known as lesbian and bi-sexual women. If we look at patriarchy
for example, we're looking at the position of women and how
their roles are so embedded or strictly regulated and institutionalised,
so a woman is supposed to be a mother, she's supposed to embody
guardianship and all of that parenthood, child bearing, feminised
- and what you have now, because this is how we look at homosexuality
from the African context, or let me talk about it from the Zimbabwean
context, the stereotyped lesbian who is a masculine, so-called butch
woman who dresses in a male way, presents in a male way, who walks
in a male way but is a woman. And so when this rape takes place
men feel that these women are moving away from what their role should
be by becoming a man or wanting to become a man and that they do
not want to sleep with men, which is a problem because women are
created for men, right? That's how patriarchy is sort of explained,
women are created for men, so when a woman is now not sleeping with
a man how best can he then get her back into his life or into the
role that she's supposed to be, is by forcing her into sex.
So that's the
kind of thinking that's behind 'curative rape'
and the kind of thinking that's behind correcting the situation
that's there. If it's abnormal for people to be lesbian,
or for men to be gay, how best can we control that because there's
the part where you can talk about prayer or you can talk about exorcism
or you can talk about the traditional healing, and then there's
the part where people feel they can take it into their own hands
and rape, go out and rape women to make them appreciate men. And
quite frankly I don't understand how that makes sense, because
if you rape somebody, I'm not sure how you expect them to
appreciate any kind of relationship with a man when the first relationship
that they have encountered is a violent one.
Gonda:
I understand that the report that was compiled or released by the
US State Department through the US Embassy in Harare went further
to say that lesbian women are raped by men to make them enjoy heterosexual
acts while gay men are raped by women, sometimes under supervision
of villagers and relatives to remove their sexual orientation tendencies.
Have you been receiving reports like that?
Muparutsa:
I'm sure that's something that's come out of the
press and I'm sure that if we were to go into it we would
probably come up with cases like that because they have been raped
and they're isolated, that's the problem. When we talk
about men getting raped, they're very isolated. But what I
think would be more precise would be that gay men who are feminised
are raped by other men - gay men who present themselves in a very
feminine way - so they are raped because that femininity is something
that the men don't expect a man to have because they should
be masculine, strong and have the expectations of what a man should
be so they rape them to try and strengthen them more, man them up
and it's almost in an insulting way, the rape is almost a
form of spitting on somebody for example.
Gonda:
I was actually going to ask you that can it be 'controlled'
through this way; this so-called 'corrective rape' or
it actually makes a person even more gay, it hardens them?
Muparutsa:
No I'm not sure about making them more gay but what I can
definitely think about is that if the thinking behind the rape is
to cure somebody, the first thing you think about is what is rape
in its nature. Rape is violent, rape is forceful and when we're
talking about converting somebody, you want to show a side that
is more compassionate, that has more love in it and that's
why I was saying it doesn't make sense for somebody to rape
a woman and expect her to appreciate heterosexual relationships
because that rape will only inform that person that heterosexuality
means violence and means rape. So I don't think that it's
a control measure in any way, that's why I said it's
actually a problem to put corrective or curative before rape because
there's nothing curative about it, it is rape.
Gonda:
And you said it's not known how many people have been affected
or how widespread this is. Why is that though? Is it because people
are still scared to speak publicly about these attacks because of
the stigma?
Muparutsa:
Most definitely. It is not the most easiest thing to talk about.
For example we can talk about the remarks that have been made by
the Prime Minister or the remarks that have been made by President
Mugabe and that means you are already creating an environment of
intolerance, an environment of discrimination and so for someone
to talk about the rape that they have experienced - firstly
you are talking about being raped and rape in itself is something
that has silenced quite a lot of women and a lot of men for that
matter and then you get into the issue of heterosexuality and homosexuality
where homosexuality is called abhorrent in Zimbabwe so talking about
those two things, coming out about them or even reporting them is
not the easiest of things to do in an environment that is not permitting.
Gonda:
So why haven't you as GALZ released a report about this?
Muparutsa:
You see, what we do as an organisation is that we do document information
that comes to us but what happens a lot of the time is that our
information and our documentation goes through to the member organisations,
the member human rights organisations that we work with, for example
the Human Rights Forum and so that's as far as our reports
go. But we haven't really gotten into how we can use the information
that we get from the reports that are made by people who carry out
for example advocacy strategies which are something that would be
very important to do considering that these cases do take place
and if we as an organisation are unable to take that information
out then that means that a lot more people will be silent on what
they experience.
Gonda:
And of course you mentioned the principals in the inclusive government,
Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai, and we all know how Mugabe
feels about the issue of homosexuality but this was the first time
that Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai publicly condemned the practice
of homosexuality. Why do you think the Prime Minister has chosen
to agree with the President on this particular issue?
Muparutsa:
I unfortunately cannot speculate on the reasons why. What I know
as an organisation and what we are doing as an organisation is that
we are seeking clarity from the PM as to that position and we've
written a letter to the PM's Office and we await a response
from him to just clarify his position. But last week there was a
report that was sent out, a newsletter that was sent out by MDC
where his spokesperson, Mr Maridadi was saying that the statements
made by the PM were his personal opinion and not the position of
MDC . And what I would think about in a statement like that is,
you would think about a lot of things - MDC is a movement
that stands for democracy and human rights, and as the leader of
the MDC inasmuch we believe that everyone has their right to opinion
but as a leader of any political movement, if you take a position
or if you say what your position is or what you feel about a certain
topic it is likely to be construed to be part of your Party's
politics as well. And it influences how people think about a certain
topic and what this statement has done, we hope it hasn't,
has unified ZANU PF and MDC on how they respond to human rights
issues and how minority issues aren't being taken very seriously
in Zimbabwe.
Gonda:
What about the fact that the President himself said that he would
not allow any gay rights to find their way into the new constitution.
What are your thoughts on this?
Muparutsa:
Well those are individual positions, I think when it comes to the
constitution as has been said about the constitution, it is a people-driven
process, and we will wait to see what the people of Zimbabwe decide.
If at that stage they decide that gay rights will not be included
in the constitution then that means at GALZ we have a lot more work
to do. But we still feel that there are things that we need to do
and we will carry on with all our advocacy strategies.
Gonda:
What sort of things do you think you need to do because this remains
a sensitive issue, not only in Zimbabwe but in many parts of Africa?
Muparutsa:
Well definitely there is a lot of awareness raising that needs to
be done because most people believe that homosexuality is a sin
and I can't really go into that because the religious debate
is one that is very difficult for us, the religious debate, there's
the cultural and traditional debate and there's the fact that
people think that homosexuality is a western import. And as far
as I know and as far as I have read, there is information that dates
back into pre-colonial Africa where cases of homosexuality have
been reported and it was not anything that was abhorrent at that
time, it was something that then became illegal after colonialists
settled into Africa . So it's difficult for us to try and
understand why it is then thought of as a western import when it
quite honestly isn't. It's a human occurrence, it's
natural although it's thought of as being unnatural.
And then there's
the debate that goes into homosexuality and paedophilia and bestiality
and by allowing homosexuality it means that we can then allow murderers
and whoever to be free in our State. That is something that is very
different. I think people don't understand that homosexual
acts are acts that happen between two people, two consenting adults.
It's not between a minor and an older person where there are
power dynamics that are at play. This is an agreement between two
people who are old enough to agree, who are over the age of 18,
who have consented to be in a relationship with each other, no abuse
of power or authority or anything like that and that's what
people seem to think. And I guess it's the whole uninformed
or ill-informed position that people speak from. We do have a lot
of work in terms of raising the awareness of people that we live
in the societies that we live in.
Gonda:
Have you had any problems as an association working in Zimbabwe
because of the whole stigma that surrounds the issue of homosexuality?
Muparutsa:
Well obviously it's difficult working on such a basis because
once you stand up and introduce yourself as someone who's
coming from Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe they will automatically,
people will already start withdrawing from you. But in as far as
our work around human rights in Zimbabwe has been we have had quite
a positive response from our partner organisations and I think the
only challenges that come into the work that we do is the statements
that are made by people who are in positions of leadership. Those
homophobic statements by State leaders are what I think will be
a challenge to us.
Gonda:
Right and some of the responses that we've been getting from
people include this submission from one of our listeners saying
that people are entitled to their own opinion about this issue but
the fact that homosexuals are being abused and victimised makes
these people, the people who are doing this, guilty. Now what role
is the police playing here if at all?
Muparutsa:
When we talk about rights for gay people I think this is one of
the things that we try and talk about as often as we possibly can
- the issue of law enforcement agents and why it is that gay
people are asking for rights anyway and what rights is it that gay
people asking for? We are not asking for anything that's special
because we are born with our rights as human beings but what happens
is that, when you come out as being gay then you lose a lot of those
rights by virtue of your sexual orientation.And one of the things
that happens is that if you experience any kind of violence, violations
or any kind of abuse, particularly relating to a sexual orientation,
if you go and report that matter to the police, they either don't
take any action, they ridicule you, you are paraded in front of
anyone or everyone who is at that police station. You are bribed
often times or you are arrested - so what kind of justice
am I getting as a gay, lesbian, bi-sexual person in Zimbabwe after
I have experienced violence? And those are the things that we are
talking about - the police sometimes will act, not that often.
I'm told out of a hundred cases, we can maybe highlight two
that have been acted upon, other than that they really don't
serve the citizen as a full category, there are selective citizens
who will be assisted and other citizens won't be assisted
and gay, lesbian people are amongst those people who aren't
assisted by law enforcement agents in any kind of way.
Gonda:
And you talked about the sort of rights that you would want to see
as a Zimbabwean but for the benefit of those people who are still,
for lack of a better word, ignorant about the issues of minority
rights, what are you asking for exactly in terms of rights?
Muparutsa:
OK - so if you look at any minority group that is stigmatised
or discriminated against in any society, they are unable to access
a lot of things, or if they do access those things they experience
stigma or some kind of discrimination in how those services are
delivered to them. So for example we look at, let's say, the
right to health. The right to health is something that is very big
in its definition - as human beings we all have the right
to the highest attainable health. The highest attainable health
to me means that I can go to my clinic and say I would like to get
treatment for an STI that I have and my partner who is a female
would also like to get treatment for that same STI , but that doesn't
happen in Zimbabwe . I can't go into a clinic and do that
there because like I said, exactly the same situation like the law
enforcement agents - you will get ridiculed and that means
that I am unable now to go to a practitioner and ask for assistance.
So what does that mean about my right? I cannot access it, that
is one thing.
If you look at the right to housing for example, if someone finds
out that I'm gay and I'm lodging at their house, the
chances of me getting kicked out without the due procedures being
taken into consideration are very high. I can't go and challenge
those because in any kind of court or any kind of civil court, people
will actually look at my sexual orientation before they look at
the case that's before them and then it gets mishandled.
The right to
education - my parents will kick me out, will stop paying
my school fees only because I'm gay or lesbian or my sexual
orientation is different from their one, of someone who is heterosexual
so my education becomes a problem. I don't have an education.
I could go one, the list is long, I could highlight all of them
in exactly that way and that's why we're saying that
we want gay and lesbian rights to be considered and it's actually
not, we're not calling for gay rights - what it is that
we're calling for at GALZ is non-discrimination on the basis
of sexual orientation. I do not want to be discriminated against
by law enforcement agents, by health practitioners, by educational
institutions, by the judiciary system based on my sexual orientation.
Gonda:
Right and of course homosexuality is not unlawful in Zimbabwe but
sodomy is, so how are they policing this and indeed sodomy between
heterosexuals?
Muparutsa:
Exactly, you see now how that becomes a challenge. You cannot police
what happens in someone's bedroom, in the privacy of their
home or the privacy of whatever space they're in because it's
not always the bedroom - so how can you? How can you enforce something
like that? It then becomes a challenge when you have an organisation
like GALZ that is actively advocating for sexual orientations to
be included in the constitution and an organisation like GALZ that
specifically looks at gay and lesbian issues in relation to socio,
economical and political climates in situations that we live in.
Gonda:
Have you had members arrested under the sodomy laws?
Muparutsa:
Yes there have been a couple of arrests but again you have to prove
that there have been those cases, that there has been sex per anus
and how do you do that? Like what kind of test do you do to prove
that someone has anal sex? You can't even conduct something
like that because, if you look at WHO, the World Health Organisation's
protocols around health and maybe inhuman and inhuman treatment,
that's inhuman treatment so it's very difficult for
someone to then do an anal exam on you without your consent only
for them to prove that you have had sex per anus. So it's
quite difficult to go into something like that, it's legislation
that is there but it's not the easiest of legislation to enforce.
Gonda:
What personal experiences can you share in terms of how you've
had to deal with who you are in a country and in a society that
views homosexuality as abhorrent?
Muparutsa:
Well, that's a difficult one, you know having to go through
personal challenges is what we experience on a daily basis. Our
coming out as gay people is not something that happens on one day
where you will tell somebody that you are gay - it's almost
on a daily basis where you are saying well this is my situation,
this is my sexual orientation, I am gay, lesbian or bi-sexual. And
once you say that, the chance of losing family and friends is very
high and I guess that's the experience that everyone has to
go through once they have said what their sexual orientation is
and so that has been my experience as well.
I understand
how people feel about homosexuality and I'll say I understand
because it's difficult to think about something that you're
not used to, something that is out of the norm for you but I think
as a nation and as a people, a race of humans, we need to talk about
issues of tolerance, issues of dignity and issues of human rights
because if you violate my rights, this is me and this is me today,
tomorrow someone else will violate your rights and it's a
circle that continues to manifest itself in our societies where
we take from a group of people without realising that we're
taking from ourselves and from each other. And if you continue taking
the way that we are taking, taking away people's liberties,
people's freedoms and people's rights, we will wake
up tomorrow and find all of us with nothing and I think it's
something that we need to think about.
It's
not that we want people to accept who and what we are but to try
and think about tolerance and what tolerance means and what dignity
means and what human value means because people throw around things
like morality and values and things like that without really starting
to think about what it really, really, really means. And particularly
people who talk about it from an African context. I am from Africa
, I know an African context and our African context speaks about
loving each other as a nation of people, respecting each other and
yet we throw around homosexuality as being immoral, like people
who are gay not deserving of rights. I don't understand where
that kind of talk comes from but it's the kind of language
that we seem to have acquired over the years, the language of hate
and we need to find a way of dealing with that kind of hate that
we have because it will manifest itself in our societies.
Gonda:
And before we go Fadzai, if we go back to the issue of 'corrective
rape', is this a new thing, have you heard anything about
this happening in other countries, especially in Africa ?
Muparutsa:
Oh yes, South Africa being like one of the worst countries. There
was a report, a documentary that was done by Third Degree and it
was released on the satellite channel here in Zimbabwe, I think
about a month or two months ago and it was very touching, very humbling,
very frightening to see the attitudes that are there within our
societies regarding 'corrective rape' and how people
think that it's something that is normal and should be done.
So yes, there are cases of 'corrective rape' that have
happened in other countries outside of Zimbabwe . I'm sure
in every country there are cases of 'corrective rape'
but like Zimbabwe, very few are not documented properly.
Gonda:
Right, and a final word Fadzai.
Muparutsa:
Well I know a lot of people use religion as their argument for why
homosexuality should not be there and it's quite difficult
to talk about religion and homosexuality in that way and just isolate
it like that because we are all created in the image of the Maker,
we are all created in God's image. And who are we as individuals,
as human beings to judge who is created in God's image and
who isn't? It's not for us, it's not our place
to do that. You will find in some cases people who don't understand
the Muslim culture because Zimbabwe is predominately Christian so
are we going to go out and say we don't want Muslims in Zimbabwe
because we are a Christian state, now everyone should conform to
Christianity? That's exactly what it is that we are calling
for and for goodness sake - to use the Bible - the Bible
was used during the slave trade - the Bible was used during
apartheid - the Bible was used during the Nazi time -
the Bible was used during the Crusades and really that was all slaughter
of people. So what is it we are talking about? From what I know
the Bible talks about love. We are all created by one Maker, in
the image of that Maker and who are you to say that I am not created
in my Maker's image? Have you now taken over God's position?
Gonda:
OK, thank you very much Fadzai Muparutsa for talking to us on the
programme Hot Seat.
Muparutsa:
You are most welcome Violet, thank you.
Feedback
can be sent to violet@swradioafrica.com
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