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Africa's
lesbians demand change
Joanna Jolly, BBC News
February 27, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7266646.stm
Lesbians from across
Africa have called on African governments to stop treating homosexuals
like criminals.
The demand came as about
75 activists gathered at a conference in Maputo, the capital of
Mozambique.
The Coalition of African
Lesbians called the conference to highlight discrimination across
the continent.
Conference spokeswoman
Fikile Vilakazi told the BBC that action was needed to respond to
homophobia which, she said, was rife in Africa.
She said her main goal
was to stop governments treating homosexuality as a criminal offence.
According to the International
Gay and Lesbian Association, homosexuality is outlawed in 38 African
countries.
One participant said
the conference was helping to provide support for lesbians across
Africa.
"We might be seemingly
a bit lost right now on the African continent, but there's positive
talk," said the delegate. "As Christians we realise that
the Bible doesn't discriminate, it embraces us in our diversity."
Another participant,
Nahlahla Mukize, said being a lesbian in Africa was a negative experience.
"I'm finding myself
as an individual who is every day trying to get the people that
I identify with... everyday having to educate them about who I am,
but finding it difficult for them to open their minds and their
hearts," she told the BBC.
"I haven't found
myself being attacked or kicked out of home but it's just the discourse,
how people talk about lesbian issues or how our government... how
they tend to sideline people like myself."
Mugabe
attack
Many
traditional African societies view same-sex relationships as abhorrent
and activists accuse some African governments of state-sponsored
discrimination and persecution.
In Zimbabwe, President
Robert Mugabe, has attacked homosexuality as a Western import -
describing gays as "worse than dogs and pigs".
In Senegal, the recent
publication of photos from a gay wedding provoked violent demonstrations.
In contrast, South Africa
holds the most liberal attitude towards homosexuality on the continent.
The South African constitution
bans discrimination based on sexual orientation and the government
legalised same-sex marriages in 2006.
But even here, activists
say, openly gay and lesbian people have been threatened, detained
and arrested.
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