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GALZ
Remembers Fanny Ann Eddy
Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ)
October 04, 2004
The early death
of anyone is tragic; when that someone is gruesomely murdered for
seemingly no other reason than that she stood up for the rights
and fought for the dignity of those who are marginalized and persecuted
in Africa, it leaves us all with deep feelings of confusion and
despair. Late Wednesday night or early Thursday morning, Fanny Ann
Eddy who founded the Sierra Leone Lesbian and Gay Association (SLLAGA)
in 2002, was brutally raped by a gang of five men in her office
where she was working late. They then stabbed her in the head and
broke her neck.
Fanny Ann was
an activist in the real sense of the word. She dedicated herself
to the cause of normalizing lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
people in society through direct action and she was an example to
those of us who play the victim and claim that nothing is possible
in the hostile climates in which we exist. In 2002 she came to the
GALZ Offices in Harare, Zimbabwe looking for assistance in the setting
up of an LGBT group in her home country, Sierra Leone. It was obvious
she had all the determination and willpower to do so. Even in Zimbabwe,
where she was a refugee, she brushed with members of our police
force and others who tried to threaten her because she was lesbian.
Naturally, she refused to be intimidated.
On returning
to Sierra Leone, she quickly dedicated herself to the task of realizing
her dream. At the first All-Africa Rights Initiative (AARI) conference
in Johannesburg in February 2004, she recounted to a delegation
of nearly 60 people from 22 LGBT groups in 17 African countries
how she had recently managed to register her organization and open
a bank account. She told her story with pride and the characteristic
humour that always accompanied her efforts.
"When
we had registered and I went to open a bank account for the organisation,
the whole staff of the bank came out to have a look at me and
I had to call the manager to make sure that I was actually served.
Later, when I went to carry out a transaction at the bank and
used just the account number as a reference, the teller told me
in a very loud voice so that all the other customers were alerted
that I had to say the name of the account. I did not give in but
insisted on making the transaction using the account number as
a reference."
All of us at
GALZ are stunned and horrified by the news of her death: not only
was her demise terrible and untimely, she was a leading light and
strength within the whole AARI movement and we have lost a great
source of inspiration. Let her death encourage us to redouble our
efforts to make Africa a safe place for all LGBT people. For those
who would seek to detract from the need for legal and constitutional
protection at the highest international level for LGBT people, let
Fanny Ann's demise act as an agonising reminder to them as
to why the Brazilian Resolution seeking this protection through
the United Nations is so urgently necessary.
Our hearts and
minds are with those in SLLGA who have lost such a great leader
and with Fanny Ann's friends and family including those who
would not be recognized or acknowledged as her family by general
society.
Keith Goddard
and all the staff of the Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ)
Visit the GALZ
fact
sheet
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