December 23, 2012

President Zuma Urged to Oppose Nigerian Anti-Gay Law

South Africa’s opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) is urging President Jacob Zuma to tell Nigerian President Jonathan Goodluck to oppose an anti-gay bill in Nigeria’s parliament.

Kenneth Mubu, DA Spokesperson on International Relations and Co-operation, said:

President Jacob Zuma is set to visit Nigeria on Saturday. He must use this as an opportunity to urge his Nigerian counterpart to veto the bill on the grounds that it violates fundamental human rights.

The protection and promotion of human rights is officially a guiding principle of South Africa’s foreign policy.

It is incumbent on President Zuma to use his position as leader of an influential African nation to promote human rights on the African continent. However, he has thus far repeatedly failed to do so.

Mubu pointed out that South Africa has not condemned the reintroduction of the ‘Kill the Gays’ bill into Uganda’s parliament. It has also appointed an anti-gay journalist, Jon Qwelane, as South African ambassador to Uganda. South Africa is the the only African country that boasts a fully LGBT inclusive constitution.

Says diaspora South African writer Melanie Nathan of the Qwelane appointment:

Despite the fact that [Qwelane] may be “aware” of the Constitution, as the Minister Nkoana-Mashabane suggests, failing a renunciation of his article, which still stands on the record despite the years, reveals the plain fact that the emissary Qwelane, who represents an all inclusive country, remains on the record as the homophobic ambassador to a homophobic country. Nothing alters that picture; and so DIRCO [Department of International Relations and Cooperation], Minister Nkoana-Mashabane, President Jacob Zuma are complicit in what is clearly Qwelane’s contempt for the South African Constitution.

In September, Jerry Matjila, the newly appointed DIRCO director-general, told The Independent that South Africa’s approach to human rights in Africa would change.

“The president and the minister have told every one of our diplomats that ‘the Bill of Rights is your Bible’,” he said.

“We have a vision to create a better world with more justice and more human rights.”

In June, Matjila sponsored and persuaded the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) to adopt a resolution to establish a working group to discuss how human rights law could be used to protect gays.

Many African countries opposed the move but he told them:

Our constitution enjoins us to tackle this issue. Can we keep quiet or not lead? No. We had to. Of course you lose friends and allies, but as a country we feel we have to defend them because it’s the right thing to do.

The Nigerian anti-gay bill, which has passed its first reading in the House of Representatives, would make it a punishable offense — of up to 14-years in prison — for anybody to go to a gay bar, to work for or be involved with LGBT organizations, or to be in an openly gay relationship.

Anyone who doesn’t report men or women living together — a ‘gay marriage’ in this bill — would also be punished. The bill appears to punish anyone supporting LGBT human rights, or even writing about gay people.

Source: https://www.care2.com/causes/president-zuma-urged-to-oppose-nigerian-anti-gay-law.html#ixzz1gGz6vI8V

Walker Appointee: It Should Be Legal To Harass Gays In the Workplace

If organizers manage to get the 560,000 plus registered voters to sign the petitions, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker will be up for recall and could possibly be replaced with a new governor sometime next year. But that doesn’t stop the damage already done to the state by Walker’s appointees, conservatives who have made it a mission to dismantle union rights, roll back reproductive health, sex education and birth control access, and even fight against basic civil rights.

One such appointee? Commissioner Laurie McCallum, who believes that gays cannot be harassed in the workplace, because sexual orientation is not a protected category in the workplace. According to the Wisconsin Gazette, “…McCallum, the politically connected wife of former GOP Gov. Scott McCallum, defied nearly 30 years of precedent in state law by asserting that sexual ‘preference,’ as she put it, is not a protected category in workplace discrimination cases.

McCallum’s stance alarmed civil rights advocates as well as her fellow commissioners, who warned that her view could upend legal tradition and ‘make it permissible to harass an employee based upon race, national origin, religion, age or disability,’ as well as sexual orientation.”

McCallum was outvoted, but as opponents noted, Walker can continue to appoint commissioners with the same anti-homosexual views for as long as he is in office.

Source: https://www.care2.com/causes/walker-appointee-it-should-be-legal-to-harass-gays-in-the-workplace.html

Cameroon Jails Men Over Gay Sex

Three men in Cameroon have been sentenced to five years in prison for homosexual acts, which are illegal in the central African nation.

Two of the accused were in court in the capital, Yaounde, but a third man was sentenced in absentia as he had jumped bail.

Police said the men were arrested for having oral sex in a car.

“It’s a shocking and unacceptable decision,” Cameroonian lawyer and gay rights defender Alice Nkom told AFP.

“It is not worthy of a country that speaks of human rights,” she said.

The BBC’s Randy Joe Sa’ah in Yaounde says homophobia is widespread in Cameroon, as in most African countries.

He says as well as the five-year jail term - the maximum sentence for homosexual acts in Cameroon - the men were each fined 200,000 CFA francs (about $400, £260).

Their lawyer Michel Togue said it was a bad ruling and he accused the judge of peppering the hearing with homophobic innuendos, AFP news agency reports.

The two men who were in court were denied bail in August. The third defendant was granted bail after their arrest in July and never appeared in court for the trial.

Ms Nkom, who runs Cameroon’s Association for the Defence of Homosexuals, told the BBC in August that there was no evidence against the men and they had been arrested because they looked feminine and their hair was “dressed like women”.

“This is a crime of fashion, not homosexuality,” she had said.

Amnesty International has said Cameroon’s homosexuality law is draconian and discriminatory and should be scrapped.

 

Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-15871386

Anglican newspaper defends ‘Gaystapo’ article

A column in the independent Church of England Newspaper compares gay rights campaigners to Nazis.

Alan Craig, who wrote in the Church of England Newspaper: ‘Gay-rights stormtroopers take no prisoners as they annex our wider culture.’

An Anglican newspaper has defended the publication of an article that compares gay rights campaigners to Nazis, saying the author has “pertinent views”.

The column, by former east London councillor Alan Craig, appeared in the 28 October edition of the Church of England Newspaper, one of the oldest newspapers in the world. Although it is independent of the institution bearing the same name, it carries adverts for Church of England jobs and is read by its clergy.

In his column Craig referred to a number of high-profile legal cases where Christians claim to have been penalised for their views on homosexuality.

He wrote: “Having forcibly – and understandably – rectified the Versailles-type injustices and humiliations foisted on the homosexual community, the UK’s victorious Gaystapo are now on a roll. Their gay-rights stormtroopers take no prisoners as they annex our wider culture, and hotel owners, registrars, magistrates, doctors, counsellors, and foster parents … find themselves crushed under the pink jackboot.

“Thanks especially to the green light from a permissive New Labour government, the gay Wehrmacht is on its long march through the institutions and has already occupied the Sudetenland social uplands of the Home Office, the educational establishment, the politically-correct police. Following a plethora of equalities legislation, homosexuals are now protected and privileged by sexual orientation regulations and have achieved legal equality by way of civil partnerships. But it’s only 1938 and Nazi expansionist ambitions are far from sated.”

Craig told the Guardian he was “pretty careful” to distinguish between the leadership of gay rights groups and “ordinary gay people”.

“I’ve nothing against ordinary gay people but the leadership, well I stick by my word Gaystapo. It is bullying. I oppose bullying and hatred in all its forms. There is no justification for the bullying or intimidation of gays and that has been rectified in law, but we’ve moved on to a new game. We’re now seeing these attitudes of intolerance they accuse their opponents of.”

The weekly paper, which was founded in 1828 and has a circulation of around 8,000, takes pride in its reputation of being a “bastion of conservative evangelicalism”. Its editor, Colin Blakely, defended the “Gaystapo” article.

“He has got views that are pertinent on this issue. I was on holiday that week and if I had seen it I would have asked him to tone the language down somewhat. We’re getting a lot of correspondence on this column. He has not won a lot of support with readers and we’re publishing letters. We want people to engage with the issue.”

Ben Summerskill, the Stonewall chief executive, condemned the column and the newspaper. “Given the horrific circumstances of the Holocaust, it is deeply disturbing and highly offensive that the Church of England Newspaper has chosen to compare supporters of equality with Nazis. We are sure that many of the paper’s advertisers, such as the University of Sheffield, will be deeply disturbed to read this crass and homophobic article.”

There is an increased perception among some Christian groups that it is harder for the devout to live out their faith because of legislation such as the Equality Act. Christian guesthouse owners Peter and Hazelmary Bull are in court this week trying to overturn a ruling that they broke the law by refusing to allow a gay couple to stay in a double room, while a group of politicians and peers are holding “select committee style” hearings to establish whether or not British laws discriminate against Christians.

Source:

https://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/08/anglican-newspaper-defends-gaystapo-article