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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
GALZ
LGBTI rights violation report 2011
Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ)
August 12, 2012
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Summary
and overview
Violent acts and aggravated
harassment of individuals suspected of being gay or lesbian are
commonplace in Zimbabwe. Individuals who identify as lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgendered, or intersex (LGBTI) are driven from their
homes through violence or threats of violence, forcing many to abandon
their possessions and become internally displaced—or even
seek refuge abroad—on account of their sexual orientation
or gender identity.
Zimbabwe's Criminal
Law, which explicitly criminalises consensual anal sex between
men and which contains ambiguous and over-broad provisions on sexual
assault, is used to justify abuse against LGBTI individuals. Extortionists
also use the existence of these provisions to demand money or goods
in exchange of not releasing real or imagined details of an individual's
private life to the public. In a context of entrenched stigmatization
of LGBTI individuals, many feel compelled to hand over their possessions
rather than risk the often-violent wrath of families, friends, and
neighbour.
Victims of abuse and
harassment are often too scared to seek protection from the police.
In many cases, police officers are themselves instigators of abuse,
or contribute to it, either by carrying out extortion schemes, or
by subjecting individuals suspected of being gay or lesbian to cruel,
inhuman, and degrading treatment, including sexual assault, forced
strip-searches, non-consensual medical treatment, and death-threats.
Those who work to defend
the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex
individuals see their rights to freedom of expression and assembly
routinely violated, often with reference to nationalism.
Political leaders not
only condone these human rights abuses, but many celebrate them
as part of Zimbabwean "culture." High-level leaders,
including President Robert Mugabe, repeatedly refuse to endorse
the repeal of discriminatory legislation and, moreover, fuel public
prejudice against LGBTI individuals through public statements that
endorse abuse. In doing so, they ignore Zimbabwe's voluntarily undertaken
international human rights obligations to protect the rights of
everyone under Zimbabwe's jurisdiction without discrimination.
This situation
could, to some extent, be remedied by the constitutional reform
process initiated in 2011 as the result of the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) that brought Zimbabwe's two main political
parties together in an integrated government after the last - and
very contentious - presidential elections. Through this process,
the Zimbabwean parliament has the opportunity to bring the constitution
into compliance with its international human rights obligations
and explicitly prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation
and gender identity.
So far, this
potential has not been fulfilled, not least because high-level politicians
from both major political parties, including President Robert Mugabe
and the co-chairs of the Constitution Select Committee, publicly
have opposed the inclusion of LGBTI protections in the new
constitution.
Zimbabwe's
failure to take action to stop human rights abuses against LGBTI
individuals committed by state agents, to take measures to protect
against abuses by state and private actors, and to protect and promote
the ability of Zimbabweans to peacefully organise and assemble in
defence of their human rights, violate its obligations as a state
party to regional and international human rights treaties, including
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International
Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, the Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women,
and the African Charter
on Human and Peoples' Rights.
Gays and Lesbians of
Zimbabwe (GALZ) calls upon Zimbabwe to live up to its international
human rights obligations by including LGBTI representatives in the
constitutional process; by explicitly prohibiting discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity in the new
constitution; by repealing all laws criminalising or punishing consensual
adult sex, including between members of the same sex; and by investigating
and punishing abuse and violence directed at individuals because
of their real or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity.
GALZ also calls on Zimbabwe's government to ensure that the criminal
justice system is not used to target or harass LGBTI organizations,
their staff, and the lawyers who represent and support them, and
that these organizations, their staff, and lawyers can carry out
their work in defence of human rights without fear of reprisal or
intimidation.
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