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New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Gay
rights campaigners in Zimbabwe see chance to push for equality
David Smith, Guardian (UK)
August 09, 2009
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/aug/09/zimbabwe-gay-rights-constitution
Gay men and lesbians
in Zimbabwe are hoping for an end to years of "hysterical homophobia"
by having their rights enshrined in the new constitution.
Sexual acts between men
are outlawed in the socially conservative country (there is no legal
reference to women) and the president, Robert Mugabe, has encouraged
a climate of hostility by condemning homosexuality, describing it
as a western import.
His opponents in the
Movement for Democratic Change are more supportive of gay rights,
raising hopes that Zimbabwe's constitution could follow that of
South Africa, the first in the world to specifically outlaw discrimination
on the grounds of sexual preference.
Keith Goddard
said the group Gays
and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ) - of which he is director
- had tried twice to get sexual orientation included in the
constitution.
"Now, with
the new constitutional review, we are pushing again for sexual orientation,"
he said. "The National
Aids Council has moved forward enormously from its original
policy, and in its strategic plan for 2006-10 it specifically calls
for the decriminalisation of homosexuality because punitive measures
have simply driven the community underground and make this hidden
population difficult to reach.
"So I think we can
use it on the grounds of health and HIV/Aids interventions to try
and argue the issue. Arguing it on religious or moral grounds is
not going to get it anywhere. We live in hope. I think we've probably
got a 50:50 chance."
GALZ, which has about
400 members, is the main meeting place for Zimbabwean gay men and
lesbians in the absence of specified bars and nightclubs.
Mugabe's public statements
had contributed to an atmosphere of "hysterical homophobia",
Goddard added. "People are very fearful to come out to their
parents for fear of being chucked out of home, or of even letting
their friends know . . . the broader network that we're in contact
with are people who are very hidden and very scared."
For years the only mention
of homosexuality in the media was in prurient reports of criminal
cases, Goddard said, though now South African soap operas with positive
gay role models were on Zimbabwean TV. But for a public figure to
come out would be "political suicide", and at present
civil partnerships and gay marriage were "not even on the gaydar
screen".
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