THEIR crimes were “gross indecency” and “unnatural acts”. Their  sentence was 14 years’ hard labour: one intended, said the judge, to  scare others. He has succeeded. A court in Malawi last week horrified  many with its treatment of Steven Monjeza and Tiwonge Chimbalanga, a gay  couple engaged to be married. The two men are the latest victims of a  crackdown on gay rights in much of the developing world, particularly  Africa. 
Some 80 countries criminalise consensual homosexual sex. Over half  rely on “sodomy” laws left over from British colonialism. But many are  trying to make their laws even more repressive. Last year, Burundi’s  president, Pierre Nkurunziza, signed a law criminalising consensual gay  sex, despite the Senate’s overwhelming rejection of the bill. A  draconian bill proposed in Uganda would dole out jail sentences for  failing to report gay people to the police and could impose the death  penalty for gay sex if one of the participants is HIV-positive. In March  Zimbabwe’s president, Robert Mugabe, who once described gay people as  worse than dogs or pigs, ruled out constitutional changes outlawing  discrimination based on sexual orientation.
Read more at the Economist  
No comments:
Post a Comment