|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Sexual
orientation and Zimbabwe's Constitution: A case for inclusion
Gays
and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ)
July 02, 2009
Download this document
- Word
version (106KB)
- Acrobat
PDF version (349KB)
If you do not have the free Acrobat reader
on your computer, download it from the Adobe website by clicking
here.
Executive
Summary
Although democracy
is about the rule of the majority, the majority does not have unfettered
power. A democratic constitution must incorporate various fundamental
rights in order for it to be democratic. These fundamental rights
are not determined by majority opinion, but are regarded as inalienable
and inherent. These rights have been integrated into all international
human rights treaties. Zimbabwe has ratified the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights and has thus undertaken to respect
the rights of equality and privacy. The right to equality protects
gay and lesbian identity, the right to privacy, and consensual adult
gay and lesbian conduct. The right to equality implies respect for
difference. No person should be deprived of opportunity solely on
the basis of an irrelevant personal characteristic. Such a deprivation
constitutes unfair discrimination. To deny a job simply on the basis
of a person's gender, when the fact is unrelated to the ability
to perform the required work, is an affront to the person's
dignity.
Identity of
treatment may also result in substantive inequality. To equally
deny maternity leave to women as well as men results in equality
through a failure to acknowledge a difference in circumstances and
sex. Unfair discrimination thus results from the unequal treatment
of equals and the equal treatment of unequals. Gays and lesbians
have the personal characteristic of same sex attraction. This characteristic
is irrelevant to their contribution to the community or ability
to perform work. Yet gays and lesbians encounter unfair discrimination
solely on this basis.
The right to
privacy recognises that there is an area in each individual's
life which ought to remain free from government intrusion. Sexuality
is a most private area of a person's life. It ought not to
be interfered with unless there are legitimate reasons to do so.
International jurisprudence reveals that public morality alone is
an insufficient basis to intrude upon private sexual acts which
cause no harm to others. There is no legitimate basis for government
interference in gay and lesbian sexual acts where these take place
in private between consenting adults.
However, neither
the right to privacy alone nor a general right to equity of all
persons is sufficient to protect the dignity of the gay and lesbian
community and to prevent unfair discrimination. The Universal
Declaration of Human Rights declares a general right to equality
but lists specific grounds upon which discrimination is proscribed
where these grounds have historically been the targets of unfair
discrimination. Sexual orientation is one such ground and thus should
likewise receive specific mention. A right to privacy alone is an
inadequate safeguard for gay and lesbian rights, since gays and
lesbians are not discriminated against solely on the basis of what
they are perceived to do, but who they are. Accordingly, Zimbabwe's
new constitution requires rights to privacy and a right to equality,
in which sexual orientation receives specific mention.
Download
full document
Visit the GALZ
fact sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|