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Perspectives
Series #4: Sexual orientation, gender identity and human rights
in Africa
Heinrich
Böll Foundation
October 31, 2010
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Editorial
Homosexuality
is outlawed in 38 African countries. In some countries offenders
can be punished with death and in many more with harsh jail sentences.
Recent developments in Uganda and Malawi have attracted international
attention and once more underlined the precarious human rights situation
of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) people
on the continent.
Fuelled by homophobic
utterances of political and religious leaders, opposition to homosexuality
is often embedded in tradition, religion and culture. Ignoring factual
history, non-normative sexual orientations and gender identities
are dismissed on the basis that they are Western imports and "un-African".
The Heinrich
Böll Foundation has aimed to empower LGBTI organisations to
participate in public life and express the concerns of LGBTI people
in the region for many years. It is hoped that this issue of Perspectives
will help LGBTI activism in its struggle towards changing Africa
into a continent where LGBTI people enjoy the full range of human
rights.
What is clear
from the articles gathered here is that despite the myriad of challenges
and hostile environment there is an ongoing engagement and growing
movement towards equality for LGBTI people throughout the continent.
So while there may be a long journey ahead, we remain optimistic.
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