Friday, June 13, 2008
President
of The Gambia Yahya Jammeh, who in mid-May reportedly threatened to
expel or behead lesbian and gay people the country, should fully
retract his comments, Human Rights Watch said in a letter to the
President on 10 June.
President Jammeh has retracted his
threat to kill homosexual people, but not the threat to expel them, the
HRW statement said. His comments, which HRW says were made in a speech
in May, “encourage hatred… [and] contribute to a climate in which basic
rights can be assaulted with impunity”.
Scott Long, director
of HRW’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights Programme said:
“It is very dangerous when political leaders turn to homophobic
statements to try to drum up political support. When statements like
this are made, violence often follows – sometimes immediately and
sometimes further down the line. It makes people think these are people
that it is safe to attack,” Long told IRIN in a telephone interview
from New York.
In the letter to President Jammeh, HRW’s
Juliana Cano Nieto, a researcher with the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and
Transgender Rights Programme said, “Neither religion nor culture can
justify calls to mob violence and murder.”
Terror
According
to reports of President Jammeh’s comments quoted by HRW, he
gave homosexuals 24 hours to leave the country and threatened to seek
out and arrest gays and expel them from their homes. According to the
BBC the President also vowed to “cut off the head” of any homosexual,
and to impose stricter laws banning homosexuality.
The Gambian
newspaper the Daily Observer quoted him as saying: “We are in a Muslim
dominated country and I will not and shall never accept such
individuals [homosexuals] in this country.”
On 16 May, the day
after the President’s speech, Gambian police arrested two men from
Senegal, apparently on suspicion of being homosexuals.
“People
in the under-cover gay and lesbian community are terrified,” said HRW’s
Long. “These statements drive them further under cover - this just
intensifies the climate of fear.”
The long-term impact will
depend on how civil society reacts, according to Long. “What happened
in Zimbabwe for instance, is instructive. Mugabe demonised gay people
there in 1994 and…eventually the same kind of tactics of stigma and
hatred that were used against lesbian and gays, graduated into a
broader attack on everyone’s human rights.”
Defying international covenants
According
to Human Rights Watch, President Jammeh’s statements go against the
African Charter on Human and People’s Rights and the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights both of which Gambia has signed
up to.
Article 26 of the African charter provides that “every
individual shall have the duty to respect and consider his fellow
beings without discrimination, and to maintain relations aimed at
promoting, safeguarding and reinforcing mutual respect and tolerance”.
According
to Long there is some leverage for legal bodies to take the case
forward. The UN human rights committee under the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights which examines violations of human rights
could look into it.
And there is “a possibility of bringing
this to bear” with the African Commission on Human Rights, which is
increasingly active in looking at the causes of violence in Africa.
Stricter national law
Homosexual
acts are illegal in Gambia - Article 144 of the criminal code punishes
consensual sexual acts between men with 14 years in prison, while in
2005 the law was updated to include women, according to a May 2008
report by the International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA).
Eleven West African countries deem homosexual acts illegal, as do 86 UN member states, according to the ILGA.
“Ex-British
colonies tend to have the worst laws because they tend to relate
directly back to Victorian legislation and do not relate to African
culture or history – they’re colonial relics,” Long pointed out.
And
the law may get stricter still. According to the BBC the President
announced he will soon come up with a new law banning homosexual
practices in the country, which will be more stringent than any found
in other states, “including Iran”.
International leverage
European
Union member governments, under the Slovenian Presidency have prepared
a joint statement and are currently in discussion with the Gambian
ministry of foreign affairs over the issue, according to Graham Birse,
the acting British high commissioner.
One government
representative told IRIN, “We decided we should come up with a common
message and we are all aligned with it,” adding, “Obviously we don’t
agree with the President's statements.”
But for Long the
strongest leverage international organisations have is “to shame and
embarrass the president”. And he thinks these efforts may be having
some effect – President Jammeh has since denied any decapitation
comments.
In the meantime, Human Rights Watch is monitoring
the government’s next steps and keeping track of how the police and
others are acting on his statements.
“We are monitoring
situation through contacts in-country to keep track of what the police
and others are doing as a result of the statements, and we’re waiting
to see the government’s next move,” Long told IRIN. “If you can attack
even these most marginalised people, it could set a precedent for
attacking wider human rights.”
Source: IRIN NEWS http://irinnews.org