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Statement
from African lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender organizations
Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ)
February 13, 2004
A meeting of
African lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender organizations, with
fifty-five participants from twenty-two groups representing sixteen
countries across the continent, adopted the following statement
in Johannesburg , South Africa, on February 13, 2004.
To African member
governments of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and
of the United Nations:
We write to
you as a coalition of African lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender
organizations. If we do not sign the names of [all] our organizations
to this document, it is because of the climate of repression and
fear that we face every day. We represent sixteen countries across
the whole continent of Africa. We speak to you as fellow Africans,
concerned that our continent develop and realize its full potential,
steady in hope for African democracy, aware that repression and
fear are inconsistent with peace and freedom, conscious that democracy
and development can only be attained by mobilizing the energies
of all Africa’s peoples.
We say to you: We, African lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and transgender
people, do exist--despite your attempts to deny our existence. We
are part of your countries and constituencies. We are watching your
deliberations from our home communities, which are also your home
communities. We demand that our voices be heard.
We ask you to
support a resolution before the Commission on sexual orientation,
gender identity, and human rights.
Across Africa,
we face human rights abuses which threaten our safety, our livelihoods,
and our lives. That we are targets of such abuse proves that we
exist—states do not persecute phantoms or ghosts. It also proves
the necessity for action to safeguard our real situations and our
basic rights.
African lesbians,
gays, bisexuals, and transgender people confront harassment from
police; abuse by our neighbors and our families; and violence and
brutality—sometimes punitive rape—on the streets. We are discriminated
against in the workplace. Some of our families force us into marriages
against our will, in the hope of changing our inmost selves. Some
of us, among them the very young, are evicted from our homes because
of prejudice and fear.
Our intimate
and private lives are made criminal. Laws punishing "unnatural
acts" or "sodomy" are enforced against us. Political
leaders say these laws defend African "cultural traditions"—even
though, without a single exception, these laws are foreign imports,
brought by the injustice of colonialism.
We are denied
access to health care and basic health information targeted to our
lives and needs. We are blamed, unjustly, for the spread of HIV/AIDS
(known by experts to be, in Africa, primarily transmitted by heterosexual
sex); at the same time, we are omitted from HIV prevention programs.
The brave contributions we have made to HIV prevention and treatment—doing
outreach to our own communities and educating them in the face of
state neglect or persecution—are ignored or actively harassed.
Schools teach
intolerance, contributing to a harassment that denies young people
whose sexualities or gender identities do not "conform"
the basic right to an education. We are targets of media propaganda
campaigns that call us "foreign," "diseased,"
"evil," or "sick." Political leaders promote
hatred against us to solidify their own political situations. We
are kept in silence and denied the right of reply.
At the same
time, we have and have always had a place in Africa. Despite the
pressure of prejudice which politicians and self-styled popular
leaders promote, many of our families do not succumb; many of our
neighbors, co-workers, and friends continue to love and to support
us. Many of our communities continue to affirm that we are an integral
part of their web of relationships. Many traditional cultures still
are governed by those principles of welcoming and belonging which
have always been central to African life; they do not allow themselves
to be distorted by the politics of exclusion, and preserve our rightful
place in the gathering. Many African religious leaders from many
denominations speak to us of love and inclusion, not hatred and
revenge. And, on our continent, South Africa, at the end of its
long liberation struggle, became the first country in the world
to include, in its post-apartheid constitution, "sexual orientation"
as a status protected from discrimination.
In supporting
the resolution on sexual orientation, gender identity, and human
rights, you will be true to the real African tradition—which, in
culture after culture, before colonialism cast its stultifying shadow,
recognized the interrelationship and interdependency of us all.
We urge you
to support this resolution.
Visit the GALZ
fact sheet
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