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Homosexuality:
Is Africa making progress?
Lorraine
Moyo, Accelerating-Prevention
December 01, 2010
http://www.ngopulse.org/article/homosexuality-africa-making-progress
The changing
global environment has presented unforeseen consequences; the legalisation
and widespread acceptance of homosexuality by certain countries
in the world. This, however, has not eased the controversy surrounding
homosexuality. So what causes homosexuality; is it innate or something
learnt? This is a question that hovers in the minds of millions
of people around the world. While homosexuality has gained acceptance
in some parts of the world; it remains a problem to many, especially
in Africa.
Heterosexuality
in the predominant sexuality, therefore it remains a problem for
most Africans to embrace this new 'sexuality-. There
have been cases in which homosexuals have been attacked in their
communities. The attacks are informed by the perception that they
are casting out the so-called 'demons- that manifest
themselves in homosexual conduct.
Many homosexuals
in Africa continue to live in denial of their sexual orientation
in fear of being victimised by their families, friends and communities.
The million-dollar question however still remains; is homosexuality
a choice or is it something inborn?
Perhaps its
best then to de define it. Homosexuality, according to A. Dean Byrd
and Stony Olsen, in a report entitled 'Homosexuality: Innate
and Immutable?- define it as a sexual activity between two
partners of the same sex? "Homosexual orientation refers to
overall responsiveness of someone to members of his or her sex.
Male homosexuals are called 'gays- and the females,
'lesbians-," they explain.
So, what then
can we say to staunch homophobians like Zimbabwean President, Robert
Mugabe, who has been cited in the media and under scrutiny for hurling
a whole lot of insults against homosexuals? In August 1995, the
media quoted him as saying homosexuality:
"...degrades
human dignity. It's unnatural, and there is no question ever of
allowing these people to behave worse than dogs and pigs. If dogs
and pigs do not do it, why must human beings? We have our own culture,
and we must re-dedicate ourselves to our traditional values that
make us human beings. . . . What we are being persuaded to accept
is sub-animal behaviour and we will never allow it here. If you
see people parading themselves as lesbians and gays, arrest them
and hand them over to the police!"
And in accordance
with his words, so many homosexuals have been incarcerated for their
homosexuality in Zimbabwe. They include the former Zimbabwean President,
Canaan Banana, members of Gays
and Lesbians Association of Zimbabwe (GALZ), an association
founded for the purposes of serving the needs and interests of lesbian,
gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) people and pushing
for social tolerance of sexual minorities) and most recently, pupils
from Evelyn Girls High School in Bulawayo.
In the current
constitution making process in Zimbabwe, the government of national
unity continues to intensify campaigns against the inclusion of
the rights of homosexuals. One of President Mugabe-s followers,
Didymus Mutasa, a powerful figure in the ruling ZANU-PF, said his
party will see to it that homosexuality is outlawed in the new constitution
and that stiff penalties will be put in place for those who engage
in the practice. "Practices such as homosexuality, abortion
and euthanasia which offend human and public morality should be
outlawed," he warned.
Meanwhile, Zimbabwe-s
Prime Minister, Morgan Tsvangirai, agrees with the Mugabe's stance.
Tsvangirai was quoted in the Mail & Guardian as saying that,
"Why should a man seek to have a relationship with another
man when women make up 52 percent of the population? In fact, men
are fewer than women."
In Zambia, social
attitudes towards homosexuals are marred with mostly negative and
coloured by perceptions that homosexuality is immoral and a form
of insanity. In 1999, Zambia Against People with Abnormal Sexual
Acts (ZAPASA), a NGO combating homosexuality and homosexuals in
that country, was formed. This was in addition to Zambia-s
constitutional prohibition of same sex relationships in the penal
code.
A study by S.
LeVay, of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in San Diego,
found that there are differences between homosexual and heterosexual
men, suggesting that homosexuality is genetical. In homosexual men,
the cluster of cells in the hypothalamus was seen to be smaller
than in heterosexual men. LeVay-s finding proved controversial
because it represented a small sample and he himself acknowledged
the inconclusiveness of his findings. However, this remains the
shield that gays and lesbians use to protect themselves against
those who criticise their sexual orientation.
There is also
a belief that the use of contraceptives can result in high hormonal
imbalances in the uterus. One expert, interviewed in one of the
editions of the Oprah Show, stated that if a woman falls pregnant
suddenly after being on contraception, the hormonal imbalance causes
a male foetus- brain failure to adopt male characteristics
such that in the end, the baby is born with a female brain, causing
homosexuality to occur. This explanation, however, fails to explain
female homosexuality.
There is also
a widely held belief that homosexuality is sparked by cultural forces
rampantly promoted by popular media. Some are of the view that it
is a lifestyle one adopts because of their preference. To discriminate
individuals by virtue of their sexual orientation violates their
right to be free from discrimination. Any form of discrimination
against homosexuals will also violates their right to privacy, freedom
of expression, and freedom of thought and conscience.
By the same
virtue, torture, detention and inhuman treatment of homosexuals
is tantamount to the violation of their right to liberty and security.
Most of these rights are enshrined in the treaties that most countries
signed and ratified. However, the same countries continue to take
away these rights in the guise of protecting morality.
But who said
homosexuality is immoral? Australian philosopher, Peter Singer,
is of the view that the stronger objection to the prohibition of
homosexuality is to deny the claim that lies at its core - that
sexual acts between consenting people of the same sex are immoral.
Singer disputes the claim that homosexuality is wrong, unnatural
and even a "Perversion of our sexual capacity," which
supposedly exists for the purpose of reproduction.
Does the fact
that homosexual acts cannot lead to reproduction make them immoral?
According to Singer, this would be a particularly bizarre ground
for prohibiting sodomy. "If a form of sexual activity brings
satisfaction to those who take part in it, and harms no one, what
can be immoral about it?," he argues.
In South Africa,
the Constitution, does not give the State the right to unfairly
discriminate anyone on one or more grounds, including gender, sex
and sexual orientation. It is not surprising that South Africa became
the first African country to endorse same-sex marriages, following
in the footsteps of Canada, Spain, Portugal, Belgium and Sweden.
However, the
much-reported murder of the two Soweto lesbians, Sizakele Sigasa
and Salome Massoa, in July 2007, was a reminder that despite their
acceptance, homosexuals are still not tolerated by the majority.
Their killing also reminded us that the country has a long way to
go in educating its citizens on homosexuality.
In conclusion,
it is not only Zimbabwe, Zambia and many other African countries
that continue to discriminate against homosexuals. Other developing
and least-developing countries that are also notorious for discriminating
against homosexuals include India, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran and
Yemen. The time is now for Africa to push for constitutions that
are progressive.
- Lorraine
Moyo (not her real name) is a Zimbabwean Human Rights activist
References:
1. Zimbabwe,
the ACLJ, and the criminalisation of homosexuality
2. Mugabe,
Tsvangirai reject gay rights for Zim charter
3. Did
Dr. Oz Indict Birth Control Pills for Causing Homosexuality?
4. Homosexuality
is Not Immoral
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