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The
mean season for gays
IRIN News
September 25, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/96377/ZIMBABWE-The-mean-season-for-gays
For Zimbabwe's
gay community, voting season is a time of dread. As political temperatures
rise ahead of expected elections next year, gays and lesbians are
being targeted by police in an apparent strategy to win over voters.
On 11 August 2012, police raided a book launch at the headquarters
of the Gays and
Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ), an NGO based in Harare that promotes
the rights of sexual minorities. The police arrested
44 people, and although none were formally charged, the incident
followed a familiar pattern of harassment, beatings and threats
against people who openly identify as gay.
The group was
released the next day, but not before being "profiled"
- a term used by police to describe information gathering. Detainees'
names, addresses, places of work and even details about friends
and family were recorded.
With this information,
police have been pursuing these individuals as well as people close
to them. "We are in for a protracted campaign of harassment;
it is going to be a very rough time," Chesterfield Samba,
director of GALZ, told IRIN. "People are being tracked down
in clubs and bars, at their jobs and homes, because they are suspected
of being gay."
Politically motivated
Same-sex relationships
are considered a breach of the traditional family structure, in
which marriage and procreation help perpetuate a system of care
for elders. In Zimbabwe, regard for tradition is used to stir up
populist sentiment during elections.
"Usually
when anything political is happening, the vilification of the [gay]
community begins," Samba said. "It is a fearful time,
and it becomes difficult to go about daily life as normal."
Two key political events appear to have triggered the latest round
of harassment: the expected presidential election - in which President
Robert Mugabe will likely square off against his rival in the unity
government, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai - and the referendum
on a draft constitution, which, if adopted, could limit the powers
of the presidency.
Tsvangirai has
called for presidential and parliamentary elections to take place
in March 2013. The current session of parliament ends in June 2013,
and, according to the 2009 unity government agreement, the polls
must be held by October 2013.
The constitution
was drafted by a joint committee consisting of members of the
main political parties, which formed a power-sharing government
in the aftermath of the violent
2008 parliamentary and presidential elections. Mugabe's
ZANU-PF party wants to dilute provisions of the constitution that
curb presidential powers, while opposition parties see it as a tool
to rein in presidential authority.
By raising the
visibility of gay rights advocacy and linking it to the constitution
- which makes no mention of the issue - Mugabe supporters hope to
swing the referendum vote in their favour, indicating that, unless
there are changes to the draft constitution, they will campaign
for a no vote.
"The constitution does not mention homosexuality at all, and
they are spinning its silence to mean that it embraces homosexuality,"
said David Hofisi, an attorney with Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), which has been acting on behalf
of a number of those arrested at the book launch.
At a rally celebrating his birthday earlier this year, Mugabe alleged
that supporters of gay rights were attempting to insert a clause
protecting same-sex marriage into the draft constitution. "We
won't accept that," he said, according to media reports. "You
don't have the freedom for men to marry men and women to marry women.
You have the freedom for men to marry women. That's God's freedom.
That's what created you and me."
'Moral
panic'
Since the August arrests at GALZ headquarters, the police have continued
their investigation into the 44 "suspects".
"Police
used the information to visit their homes, including the parents
of people that were arrested," Samba said. "They also
went to the places of work of some of our members, so effectively
'outing' them. Some were kicked out of their homes.
Others face disciplinary action from their bosses who are homophobic."
"Usually,
police conduct an operation from time to time against the gay community,
then move on, but this time it's a sustained campaign and
we have no idea when it will end," Hofisi told IRIN.
An attempt to obtain a court injunction against the police was halted
earlier this month, when a group of youths stormed the courtroom
in Mbara, a poor neighbourhood south of Harare, forcing lawyers
and plaintiffs to flee. "We are now asking the court to transfer
proceedings to a different court that is in a less volatile area,"
Hofisi said.
An intolerance of gays is shared across the political spectrum,
and although homosexuality is not specifically illegal, sodomy is
deemed a criminal act. This has not stopped police from arresting
lesbians, Hofisi said, nor from arresting people who are deemed
gay, even if there is no evidence that they have engaged in homosexual
acts.
"We know
Mugabe always uses this subject to divert attention away from other
issues like poverty, lack of jobs and corruption," Monica
Tabengwe, a lawyer and researcher for Human Rights Watch who has
written several papers on the plight of Zimbabwe's gay community,
told IRIN.
"You would
think that under other circumstances these would be the things that
people are concerned about. But the subject of homosexuality gets
people's attention ... The moral panic this creates always
works," she said.
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