Showing posts with label uganda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label uganda. Show all posts

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

Evil against LGBT: Ostensibly in the name of god + the law

English: Christian Bible, rosary, and crucifix.
Image via Wikipedia
Source: Gay Kenya

By Danny

Shocking, but true, is to learn that out of 76 countries that currently criminalize homosexuality, 45 are former British anti gay colonies whose modern elites in charge of current governments are largely Christian.

The legacy of Christianity and British rule and morality in many parts of the modern world need careful and urgent scrutiny in the light of millions of suffering human lives as a result of the consequences of that legacy.

The legacy is weighing heavily on the shoulders of the LGB who, among other evils, risk suffering the death penalty or life imprisonment for being gay and are excluded from national HIV strategies in many countries because (according to the Law), they remain an illegal group.

In recent times, we have witnessed the worst homophobia and anti-gay hate incidences in countries like Uganda, Malawi and Nigeria. Coalitions have been formed (like; Coalition for the Restoration of Moral Values; headed by Dr. James Nsaba Buturo, former Ugandan Ethics minister) and registered with government departments to have a legal mandate for their work.

Legislations have been drafted with clear and legalized objectives to systemically commit evil against innocent citizens (members of the LGBT community).  These activities are spearheaded and supported by religious leaders and protected by the law.

More than half of the countries, who deny basic information and health services to gender and sexual minorities within their national boundaries, do so because of religious and largely Christian beliefs that strongly influence public policies.

Public health and human rights advocates have spoken for over a decade about the risks of creating these significant holes in the fabric of comprehensive national health policies, but leaders in homophobic counties have chosen to keep their ears shut to this calling. This has left a gap in global interventions for universal access to health care, which is regrettable.

One wonders what leaders of today (both religious and political) want to be remembered for, 50 years from now. Do they want to be remembered for gross violations of global and fundamental human rights and a failed public policy on HIV/AIDS? Or do they want to be remembered for being a diverse global community that disagreed about a lot of things, but drew a sacred line at protecting human life and promoting families of birth and families of choice? 

Wednesday, 18 January 2012

Ugandan ambassador: 'Kill gays' bill dead, 'no persecution'

Kamunanwire
Source: Washington Blade

By Lou Chibbaro Jr.

Uganda’s ambassador to the United States blasted the head of the United Negro College Fund for sending him an “incendiary” letter last week asking him to discuss an anti-homosexuality bill introduced in the Uganda Parliament in his scheduled speech at a Martin Luther King Day event sponsored by the Fund.

Ambassador Perezi K. Kamunanwire responded to that letter by withdrawing as keynote speaker at the King Day event, held Monday morning in Greenbelt, Md. In his own letter, he said United Negro College Fund president and CEO, Michael L. Lomax, “blindsided and startled” him with Lomax’s Jan. 12 letter raising the issue of the anti-homosexuality bill.

In addition, Kamunanwire claims in the letter that the Ugandan Parliament is not planning to reconsider a bill that would impose the death penalty for homosexual acts.

The ambassador, a former college professor who has taught at U.S. universities, said in his letter that he had been invited to speak on education-related issues at the King Day event.

Lomax said in his letter to Kamunanwire that he raised the issue of reports of anti-gay persecution in Uganda after receiving an inquiry from the Washington Blade and others asking why his organization invited a Ugandan official to speak at a King Day commemoration.

“Following a brief telephone conversation with Dr. Lomax in which I expressed concern that changing the topic would distract from our shared commitment to honor Dr. King’s legacy and advance the discussion of education equality, it was clear from his discourteous and insulting tone that I was no longer welcome,” Kamunanwire said in a Jan. 15 letter to William F. Stasior, chairman of the board of directors of the United Negro College Fund.

Kamunanwire sent a copy of his letter to Stasior to the Blade along with an email message expressing concern about the Blade’s story reporting he had withdrawn abruptly as a speaker for the King Day event. The Blade story cited a press release from the United Negro College Fund announcing Kamunanwire’s withdrawal as speaker.
“My staff at the Embassy of the Republic of Uganda, and members of the Ugandan American community, brought your article to my attention,” he said in his email to the Blade. “In an effort to clarify my decision to withdraw as keynote speaker from the UNCF’s 29th Anniversary Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. breakfast fundraiser, I am sharing a letter which was sent to the chair of the UNCF board,” he said.

“This will be my only statement on the matter, as I withdrew my name so as not to distract from the importance of the King holiday and education equality,” he said. “It is my hope that the Washington Blade will report this matter fairly.”

Friday, 13 January 2012

Audio: Ugandan activist receives death threats

Screengrab of Red Pepper report on Mugisha headlined 'Bum Drilling Activist Gets JF Award'
Source: Huffington Post

By Michelangelo Signorile

A Ugandan gay activist who wrote a New York Times op-ed piece in December, speaking out against homophobia in his country enforced by the government and the police, has received threats and says he fears for his life, afraid to even go shopping alone or eat in a restaurant for fear of being poisoned.

"Just two days ago there was a very big piece of news about me," said Frank Mugisha, executive director of Sexual Minorities Uganda, in an interview by phone from Kampala on my radio program on SiriusXM OutQ yesterday, referring to an article he says was written in a local newspaper, attacking him for writing the New York Times op-ed.
"It said that everything we are saying is not true. That we are just trying to get sympathy in the Western world. They put my picture in the newspaper with all these hate words and of course I got a lot of bad emails, bad phones, a lot of harassment against me."
[Edited to add: This article in the Daily Monitor is the one Mugisha is referring to. It accused gay activists of producing the Red Pepper tabloid newspaper, which 'outed' people and called for them to be hanged, in order to elicit international sympathy and attention. The tabloid's reports were eventually outlawed by a Ugandan court. Melanie Nathan spoke with Giles Muhame, publisher of Rolling Stone, who ridiculed the suggestion in the Monitor article.]

Mugisha, who in November received the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award at a ceremony in Washington, had written in the Times back on December 22 about the conditions for LGBT people in in his country, which came under international criticism beginning in 2009 for its consideration of what had come to be known as the "kill the gays" bill, a law that if enacted would make homosexuality punishable by death or life imprisonment.

The bill was shelved in May of 2011, but Mugisha wrote that it could be introduced again at any time.
"Here, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people suffer brutal attacks, yet cannot report them to the police for fear of additional violence, humiliation, rape or imprisonment at the hands of the authorities," Mugisha wrote in the Times. 
"We are expelled from school and denied health care because of our perceived sexual orientation or gender identity. If your boss finds out (or suspects) you are gay, you can be fired immediately. People are outed in the media -- or if they have gay friends, they are assumed to be 'gay by association.'"
Mugisha also discussed Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's historic speech in Geneva last month which put pressure on countries around the world, calling for gay rights to be included as human rights and tying foreign aid to a country's record on LGBT rights. Uganda, like other African countries is a recipient of U.S. foreign aid.
"Every day of my life here in Uganda I have to be careful of what I do," Mugisha said in the radio interview yesterday. 
"It has reached the point that where I even have to be careful when I'm going to get food in a restaurant, to be sure that the food I'm getting, that I trust the restaurant, because I'm scared I could get poisoned. Even when I want to go shopping I have to call a friend and say can you come with me because my face has been in the newspapers, my face has been in the media. Just two days ago when my face was put in the newspapers I received harassment already. Now it is my fear of stepping out my house. If I want to go and buy food, because I have to eat, what is going to happen to me today?"
Mugisha fears what happened to the best-known gay activist in Uganda, David Kato, could happen to him. Kato was found dead in his home last year, bludgeoned to death with a hammer.
"That gives me more fear because he was murdered [in] his house," he says. "That is more scary. Not having the privacy. Not having the closure. It's very fearful for me."
Mugisha says all he can do is continue to keep speaking out:
"Maybe if I keep talking, maybe they will stop, maybe the homophobia will stop. People call me up and they, 'My family, they beat me up, they throw me out.' All I can do is shout and say, 'Please listen. We are hurting our own children, our own people.'"

Listen to the interview with Mugisha:


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Friday, 30 December 2011

2011 round-up: Part five: Backlash and repression

Manifestação contra Homofobia
Image via Wikipedia
By Paul Canning

I'm rounding up the year in a series of posts - in which no doubt I've missed something, so please let me know what I've missed in the comments!

Backlash and repression

A whole new country, South Sudan, was born with a sodomy law and exclusion of LGBT from rights supposed promised to 'all'.

Turkish LGBT groups suffer repeated attempts to legally shut them down and to block their websites.

The increasingly visible LGBT organising in Malaysia suffered a backlash including law change proposals in two states and the banning of events.

An attempt to use gay rights as a 'wedge' issue failed in Zambia as the opposition leader Michael Sata was elected President. Gay rights was also used as a 'wedge' in Zimbabwe, most awfully to divide the Anglican Church leading to Church resources like orphanages closing and children going hungry.

Malawi criminalised lesbians. This was an issue, but a minor issue, in a subsequent aid reduction by the country's biggest donor, the UK. It was mainly the Malawian government's other walk-backs on human rights and a diplomatic spat which caused the UK's change of approach on aid, but it was played up by them as a 'wedge issue' against the opposition with protests against the state of the economy and human rights abuses called 'gay rallies' in state media.

The so-called 'Kill gays' bill failed to pass at the end of Uganda's parliament in May, probably more by luck than design. It has been reintroduced into the current parliament. The bill provoked the biggest international petition drive for LGBT rights ever, well over two million supported different efforts. Activists pleaded for such support to be offered in the context of the general human rights problems in the country, but most solidarity work continued to single out the gay issue from the bigger crisis. Protests against the bill raised, again, the use of development aid redirection from governments and other government-to-government 'leverage' by Western countries in front of and behind the scenes. The atmosphere generated by the bill led to increased government and societal repression of Ugandan LGBT, highlighted by the murder of leader David Kato in January. Three brave Ugandan activists won international human rights awards, including one described as the most important after the Nobel Peace Prize.

There were a series of arrests of gays in Cameroon, followed by convictions including some based solely on people's appearance, not their acts. There was violent rhetoric, organised hunts for gay people using entrapment and the government ended the year proposing a 'tightening' of the anti-gay law.

Anti-gay rhetoric in Ghana's media and agitation by religious leaders over the past few years produced a proposed witch-hunt by a state leader - and subsequent international attention. In the ensuing fallout, local human rights and civil society groups failed to defend LGBT. The year ended with proposals in parliament for further criminalisation of gay people.

Nigeria reintroduced anti-gay legislation which was then extended in the parliament to attack any pro-LGBT human rights organising, potentially fatally undermining HIV/Aids work amongst other impacts.

There were sporadic reports of death sentences for homosexual offenses in Iran but little follow-up on these reports by either media, human rights or LGBT groups due, in part, to issues with verification and dangers to sources in Iran.

Honduras finally acted on the large number of unsolved murders of LGBT in that country, after US prompting. The rate of murders of LGBT elsewhere in Latin America - particularly in Brazil, Mexico and Venezuela - drew little international attention. As did the failure of the international community to support devastated local LGBT in Haiti following the earthquake, though the UN finally pledged a response.

Anti-gay laws were passed or proposed in Russia and in Ukraine. Pro-gay demonstrations in Russia, and in Belarus, were banned and violently broken up - whilst vicious anti-gay ones permitted. Though Russians finally won a European Court of Human Rights ruling that the ban on Moscow's gay pride march was illegal.

There were reports of arrests of gay men in Tanzania, Kurdish Iraq, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi.

The Serbian gay pride march was banned, reportedly for political reasons. The gay pride march in Split, Croatia was attacked, video of which ensured worldwide attention but in the capital, Zagreb, pride went ahead with no problems - and little attention. In Montenegro the government publicly backed LGBT rights.

The fake 'Syrian lesbian blogger' scandal in June created a huge international storm, outraging real activists participating in the revolution there. Local LGBT in the Middle East/North Africa (MENA) region report mixed feelings about the potential outcomes of the 'Arab Spring' for them - in Syria, gays are reportedly divided on participation in that country's revolt. The devastating impact of the Iraq war on LGBT continued to be felt. A new project documented those who have fled to Jordan, but the year went by with almost no media attention to these 'forgotten people'.

A criminalisation attempt in the DRC (Congo) parliament was started then put on hold.

The UK's foreign aid policy relationship to LGBT human rights became the focus of a major backlash following an anti-aid story in a right-wing British newspaper, particularly in Africa and including from some LGBT activists. In a messy PR foul up, the UK was forced to clarify it wasn't planning to remove aid but redirect it.

The so-called 'curing' of LGBT people continued to spread worldwide from its US origins with a backlash in Ecuador leading to closure of some 'clinics' and the discovery of supposed 'conversion therapy' being payed for by Hong Kong's government. In the US itself 'cure the gay' drew both ridicule and outrage, the latter in particular highlighted by a media expose about the suicide of some gay people forced when they were children to go through it and the discovery that a Republican presidential candidate's camp husband was selling 'conversion' therapy.
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Thursday, 29 December 2011

Video: Brenda, lesbienne ougandaise, obtient le statut de réfugiée en France

Video source: Yagg




Souvenez-vous. En février dernier, Yagg avait interviewé Brenda Mutesi, jeune lesbienne tout juste débarquée d’Ouganda et demandeuse d’asile en France. Elle venait de fuir son pays, où, après le meurtre de l’activiste gay David Kato, la traque des homos avait pris une nouvelle ampleur.

Après de multiples démarches, parfois humiliantes – l’accueil des étrangers en préfecture n’est pas digne de la cinquième puissance économique du monde – Brenda a pu déposer sa demande à l’Ofpra (Office français de protection des réfugiés et des apatrides). Elle a aussi obtenu l’aide de l’Ardhis (Association pour la reconnaissance des droits des homosexuels à l’immigration et au séjour) dans ses démarches.
Le 13 décembre 2011, soit près de dix mois après son arrivée en France, Brenda obtenait enfin le document tant attendu et qui la place sous la protection de la République française. C’est quelques jours après que nous l’avons à nouveau interviewée.

~~~~

Translation by F Young

Last February, the Yagg website did a video interview of Brenda Mutesi, a young lesbian from Uganda seeking asylum in France. She had just fled her country, where, after the murder of gay activist David Kato, the hunt for gays had taken on unprecedented dimensions.

She was assisted by ARDHIS (association for the recognition of gay rights to immigration and residence). After undergoing numerous, sometimes humiliating, procedures, Brenda was able to submit an application to OFPRA (french office for the protection of refugees and stateless persons).

On December 13, almost ten months after her arrival in France, Brenda finally received the document that places her under the protection of the French Republic. This is a video of her interview by Yagg a few days later.

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Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Gay Ugandan asylum seeker freed from US detention

By Paul Canning

A gay Ugandan asylum seeker has been freed from detention in California after a campaign by his friends.

Joseph Bukombe had been held at an Otay Mesa, San Diego detention facility for nearly two years.


He needed $20,000 bail and this was raised following a campaign to 'get him home for Xmas'. Friends are now raising money to fight for his asylum claim.

"It's like a dream come true," Bukombe told 10News.

Eight years ago, he arrived in San Diego from Uganda and came out as a gay man but was afraid to go home. He said his work visa expired several years ago.

He says that during the time he has lived in California a mob beat one of his friends to death.

"I didn't want to die. I didn't want to go back and die," he said.

In early 2010, Bukombe was stopped for a DUI after eating Jell-O at a birthday party.
"I knew I was driving, so I was trying to be careful. I didn't know the Jell-O had alcohol in it," he said.
Bukombe was detained and faced deportation. He hired an attorney, but could not pay for him.

After languishing for several years, Bukombe discovered a $20,000 bail had been set early in the process.

Hector Martinez, a friend of a friend, started a campaign supporting Bukombe, including a petition drive.
"We think either paperwork got sent to the wrong address or the attorney never informed him," said Martinez.
Martinez raised $6,000 and took out a loan for the remainder of the bail.


"Thanks to all the 70 donors who contributed to bail for Joseph Bukombe who was released from Otay Mesa last night," the Rev. Canon Albert Ogle wrote in an email to friends and supporters on Christmas Eve.
"He enjoyed his first meal with friends in San Diego at a Kenyan restaurant with friends and wanted to express his deep appreciation to everyone who helped to secure his release after two years in prison," Ogle wrote.

"Joseph and his close friend Hector Martinez will be attending Midnight Mass at St. Paul’s Cathedral tonight in San Diego," Ogle said.
However, Bukombe still faces deportation hearings.
"It's clear I will die," said Bukombe of being returned to Uganda. "I'm scared for the future, but at least I have hope."
U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement have told 10News about Bukombe's case:
"Over the course of the last year, Mr. Bukombe's immigration case has undergone extensive review by judges at multiple levels of our legal system. In those proceedings, the courts have held that he has failed to establish a legal basis to remain in the United States. ICE is now in the process of seeking to carry out the deportation order handed down by the immigration court."
Supporters are also pushing a congressional bill that could allow him to stay. Bukombe's supporters say that they are hopeful because of the Obama Administration's new policy toward LGBT immigrants who face persecution or the threat of death in their homeland.
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Friday, 16 December 2011

Jamaican first winner of David Kato award

Tomlinson at Stand against Homophobia, Emancipation Park, Kingston, 28 July, 2011
The inaugural winner of a new international human rights award named for the murdered Ugandan gay activist David Kato is Jamaican lawyer, Maurice Tomlinson

Jamaica is regarded as one of the most homophobic countries in the world, where at least 35 people have been murdered because of their sexuality since 1997. Despite the very real risks to his own life and safety, Maurice Tomlinson has been one of the most outspoken advocates for LGBT rights in Jamaica, working tirelessly to promote change in laws and policies and challenging misrepresentations about LGBT communities.

The culmination of Maurice’s ongoing work is the unprecedented legal challenge to the Jamaican anti-sodomy law, announced in October, that Maurice initiated at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Maurice is leading the legal team to file the first-ever such challenge at the regional level. If successful, it could be the beginning of the end of legalized homophobia in Jamaica, and undoubtedly will have a multiplier effect throughout the Caribbean.

Accepting the award, Maurice recalled those who have been murdered in Jamaica.
"I dedicate this prestigious honour to the memory of David, Robert Carr, 16 year old Oshane Gordon (who was chopped to death in his home in the early morning of on October 18, 2011 because of "questionable relations" with another man) as well as ALL the other martyrs. "Lift every voice and sing!"" he wrote.
In a letter to the Jamaican Gleaber, Tomlinson noted that Gordon's homophobic murder was the second reported on Jamaican TV in three months. He noted that:
"Despite these vicious attacks and many more like them, there are still those who argue that Jamaica's deadly homophobia is a figment of the global North's gay hysteria and an agenda to smear our country's good name."
Frank Mugisha, chair person of the Steering Committee, and Executive Director for the David Kato Vision and Voice Award and Director of Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG), said:
"The spirit of the work that David fought and died for is perfectly captured by the very essence of Maurice's tireless efforts in Jamaica and the region. In a highly competitive process Maurice is a worthy recipient of the very first David Kato Vision and Voice Award."
Kevin Osborne, Senior Adviser on HIV at the International Planned Parenthood Federation, one of the sponsors of the award, said:
"Despite advances in many countries the fight for the sexual rights of LGBTI people is far from over. The overwhelming response to the David Kato Vision and Voice Award has highlighted that across the world - in far flung places and regions-  LGBTI people are using our voices and vision to achieve human rights for all. It’s a battle that must be won."
George Ayala, Executive Officer of The Global Forum on MSM + HIV, another award sponsor, said:
“Maurice’s courage and unapologetic determination to raise awareness and to bring people together in support of gay men and their families in the Caribbean embodies the spirit of the David Kato Vision and Voice Award.  Maurice’s work is absolutely critical to the fight against HIV.”
Kato was a leading LGBT activist in Uganda and his death was mourned worldwide, with vigils in several cities and included a statement by President Obama. The murder led to an exceptional, positive editorial in the independent Monitor newspaper described by blogger GayUganda as “a real big deal.” Last month his murderer was sentenced to thirty years imprisonment.

The aim of the new award is to support David’s legacy in continuing to promote human rights, particularly for LGBTI people, and recognizes the incredible and often dangerous work of individuals like David around the world.

It will be awarded annually, to an individual who demonstrates courage and outstanding leadership in advocating for the sexual rights of LGBTI people, particularly in environments where these individuals face continued rejection, marginalization, isolation and persecution. The award will be accompanied by a grant of US$10,000.

The award will be presented at a ceremony to be held at the end of January in London.
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Monday, 12 December 2011

Video: Julius Kaggwa: 2010 Human rights award honoree

Video source:

Born and raised in Uganda, Julius Kaggwa is an advocate for the human rights of sexual minorities in Uganda and throughout Africa. He is a leader in the Civil Society Coalition on Human Rights and Constitutional Law and directs the Support Initiative for People with Atypical Sex Development (SIPD).

Kaggwa has led the fight against a draconian anti-homosexuality bill in Uganda that aims to make engaging in any homosexual act a crime—in some cases punishable by death. Kaggwa also works to create a more tolerant environment for sexual minorities and their supporters in Uganda. Kaggwa has been harassed and threatened because of his work, but he continues to fight for human rights, playing an increasingly public role despite the danger he faces daily.
 

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Saturday, 10 December 2011

Uganda’s LGBTI leaders speak passionately for their human rights

English: Human Rights logo: "FREE AS A MA...
Image via Wikipedia
by Melanie Nathan

Calls for Dignity and Justice for all : Reject the Anti-homosexuality bill  ( Kill the gays Bill) that is still pending, as this would further heighten the witch-hunt of LGBTI persons and make it impossible for us to live freely and safely in our country.

The Ugandan LGBTI leadership and community take great risks each and every day – just by being who they are. Now at even great risk they issue this impassioned plea to Ugandans to abide by the Declaration of Human Rights and to respect their natural born orientation.
Today the Ugandan LGBTI community joins millions of other Ugandans in commemorating the International Human Rights Day. This day is a time for people worldwide to reflect about the meaning, importance and need for human rights. It is an occasion for the government and people of Uganda to re-commit themselves to the spirit and letter of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to which we are a signatory.

The theme of the 2011 International Human Rights Day, Dignity and Justice for all of us, is especially important for the LGBTI community in Uganda particularly in the wake of increased hate speech and hate-inciting legislation against sexual minorities, which has resulted in mass hateful uprisings and demonstrations, direct harassment, violence and loss of life of human rights activists advocating for the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex Ugandans. These violations deprive sexual minorities of the dignity and justice guaranteed to all peoples under the UDHR.

As we celebrate this year’s International Human Rights Day, the LGBTI community in Uganda recommits to working towards a more inclusive and tolerant society that will ensure that every Ugandan lives in peace and with dignity, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity. We emphatically stress on this day that LGBTI rights are human rights and not special rights. 

Wednesday, 7 December 2011

Three causes to support at Xmas

Xmas tree basic
Image via Wikipedia
The Tanzanian group WEZESHA is raising money to support LGBT people who face violence and rejection in Tanzania. The group say that they currently have 25 gay people in Dar es Salaam who were rejected by their families and lost their permanent homes.

They need help in supporting them with accommodation, health services and food.

You can contribute online to help the group here.

WEZESHA is a volunteer-powered organization founded two years ago and run and managed by LGBT.

In the UK. Freedom from Torture is a human rights organisation that exists to enable survivors of torture and organised violence to engage in a healing process to assert their own human dignity and worth. It has had many LGBT clients and joined with the Lesbian Immigration Support Group earlier this year to march in Manchester Pride.

They're holding a couple of fundraising events in the next fortnight. One is a great night of live music at Band on the Wall in Manchester (this includes £5 student tickets on the door). And they have organised a Christmas Concert in Chorlton.

UPDATE: Joseph has been freed!

Joseph Bokombe
Joseph Bukombe, a San Diegan man has been in detention for two years because his attorney was unable to prove to the court that Joseph was a gay man and by returning to his native Uganda, it would endanger his life. Even though Joseph’s story attracted publicity and a petition organized by his friend Hector Martinez and some other legal advisors, Joseph is a tragic local reminder of how broken the American asylum system really is. The good news is that Joseph can be released from detention if $10,000 can be raised for his bail and allow him a fair trial that will incur additional legal costs.

The St. Paul's Foundation for International Reconciliation is a San Diegan based non profit agency concerned with LGBT globally equality and has been supporting the work of Ugandan Bishop Christopher Senyonjo this past year. They are also sponsoring a young transgender Ugandan who was abducted and tortured before being granted asylum.

Any funds raised that are returned or left over from Joseph's bail and legal fees will be used to support this second victim of Uganda's horrific anti-gay laws. You can read more about this at: blog.stpaulsfoundation.com

We are looking for 400 people to each donate at least $25 to free Joseph for Christmas. He has been promised his old job and friends will accommodate him until he can get back on his feet.

“We can give one gay man, a fellow San Diegan, the gift of freedom,” said Canon Albert Ogle who is co chairing a holiday party event at LifeHOUSE on Thursday 15th December from 5-7.30 p.m. to pay for Joseph’s bail.

Tax deductible tickets or donations (if you cannot attend) can be purchased through the St. Paul’s Foundation for International Reconciliation.
“This money will really help both Ugandans to find a place where they no longer live in constant fear and stress”, said Canon Ogle.
“I can think of no greater gift that we could give to anyone this season than to give someone the gift of freedom. Joseph’s haunting story makes that biblical passage from Isaiah, also used by Jesus in his first public sermon so relevant to this season of Advent: that we are to “ bring good news to the poor.. to proclaim release to captives and to let the oppressed go free”, reflected Ogle.

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Monday, 5 December 2011

A hard life for gay refugees in Kenya


Source: Global Post

By Jonathan Kalan

The two tender, soft-spoken Ugandans shared a circle of good friends back in their hometown of Kampala. They were close with their families and they started a restaurant together. Life was good.

That was before everything went wrong. They were disowned by their families. Their restaurant was burned down. Their car was stoned and set ablaze.

And so they fled Uganda and came here, thousands hundreds of kilometers east with little more than the clothes on their backs. They came as brothers to live in a scorching refugee camp in northern Kenya.

Surrounded by thousands of others who have fled wars and drought in neighboring countries, they came here to save their own lives.

These two men are not rebel soldiers. They are not fleeing war or drought, and they aren’t really brothers. They are lovers, and they came here to escape what they feared would be certain death after being outed last year in a country where homosexuality is widely considered a mortal sin, as "unnatural" as it is "un-African."

Alex and his partner Michael — whose real names cannot be used because of a continued threat of violence against them — were the target of a series of violent attacks inspired, they say, by an American evangelical campaign that began in 2009, and inspired legislation that, if passed, would have made gay acts punishable by the death penalty.

“I’m not a fighter,” said Alex, a former youth and community leader back in Uganda.

He is timid, unwilling to throw his elbows against hardened Somalis and Sudanese in the food line at the camp. As a result, he now shows signs of malnourishment.

Today the men have been pushed to their limits, living as refugees far from their friends, family and allies. Although they had hoped for a better life in a new land, the camp has proven to be yet another dangerous place for the two polite young Ugandans.

“LGBT people are perhaps the most persecuted group in the world,” said Neil Grungras, founder of the Organization for Refuge, Asylum and Migration (ORAM). “They are persecuted in countries of origin, but neighboring countries share similar cultural values. If you go across the border, you’re not any less likely to be persecuted.”

Thursday, 1 December 2011

How law blocks HIV/Aids prevention, treatment

AIDS AwarenessImage by sassy mom via Flickr
Source: The Global Forum on MSM and HIV (MSMGF)

This World AIDS Day, as the United Nations Global Commission on HIV and the Law draws up its final recommendations, the Global Forum on MSM and HIV (MSMGF) urges national legislators around the world to review and repeal laws that undermine access to HIV services for gay men and other men who have sex with men (MSM).  To help illustrate the connection between HIV and the law for this key population, the MSMGF has launched a new collection of resources that features case studies, toolkits and never-before-seen video testimonials from grassroots MSM advocates in Uganda, Zimbabwe and Cameroon.

“From laws criminalizing homosexuality in more than 70 countries to laws punishing non-disclosure of one’s HIV status, punitive legal environments around the world prevent MSM from accessing life-saving services,” said Dr. George Ayala, Executive Officer of the MSMGF.  “This is a major problem for the HIV response among MSM around the world, in countries rich and poor alike.”

The content of the archive was selected to make clear the connection between HIV and the law for this highly-impacted population, as well as provide grassroots organizations with tools to aid in legal advocacy for the health and human rights of MSM. 

“Civil society has formed the backbone of the response to the HIV epidemic among MSM around the world, with local men rising up to care for their own communities where support from government and society is lacking or absent,” said Krista Lauer, Policy Associate at the MSMGF.  “This archive is part of a larger effort to equip grassroots organizations with the information and resources they need to hold governments and multilateral institutions accountable for doing quality HIV work, including addressing harmful laws.”  

The website features the MSMGF's Specialist Submission to the Global Commission on HIV and the Law, made public for the first time.  Drawing upon focus group interviews, published research and other sources, the report makes five recommendations for law-based action that would have a game-changing impact on the HIV response for MSM:
  • Review and repeal laws that undermine the HIV response among MSM
  • Address the inappropriate enforcement of laws that hinder access to HIV services for MSM, through coordination, education and training with the judiciary and law enforcement officials
  • Establish laws that protect the health and rights of MSM, and bring perpetrators of violence and other human rights abuses against MSM to justice
  • Implement know-your-rights campaigns, and create enabling environments in which individuals can lay claim to their rights
  • Integrate the law as a core pillar in all National AIDS Reponses, and adopt a rights-based approach to the HIV response
“We know that laws and policies that uphold the human rights of gay men and facilitate their access to services are absolutely essential for an effective HIV response,” said Dr. Ayala.  “But real action to transform legal environments has been bogged down by fear, stigma, and a lack of political will to take on the tough issues.  Courageous activists have continued to raise their voices in this struggle, often at great personal expense to themselves and their families.  We call on all Member States of the United Nations to heed the call of civil society, and recognize that the human rights movement is the HIV movement.” 
The online archive can be accessed on the MSMGF’s website at http://www.msmgf.org/law.

The Global Forum on MSM and HIV (MSMGF) is an expanding network of AIDS organizations, MSM networks, and advocates committed to ensuring robust coverage of and equitable access to effective HIV prevention, care, treatment, and support services tailored to the needs of gay men and other MSM. Guided by a Steering Committee of 20 members from 18 countries situated mainly in the Global South, and with administrative and fiscal support from AIDS Project Los Angeles (APLA), the MSMGF works to promote MSM health and human rights worldwide through advocacy, information exchange, knowledge production, networking, and capacity building.
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Thursday, 24 November 2011

Audio: Interview with Ugandan gay activist Frank Mugisha

Interview with 2011 Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award winner Ugandan gay activist Frank Mugisha by Michel Martin on NPR.



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Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Resource: In US, LGBT Asylum Support Task Force

By Pastor Judy Hanlon

My name is Pastor Judy Hanlon and I am the co-founder of the LGBT Asylum Support Task Force that physically resides in Worcester, Mass, but helps anyone who contacts us.

You have recently read about Juan. He came from El Salvador to San Diego but contacted me in Worcester via the Internet. We were able to get pastors, drivers, housing, social support, legal support and transportation so that he could thrive in your beautiful state.

Did you know that there are almost 80 countries in which it is illegal to be gay? Our Task Force has helped nearly 30 people from El Salvador, Iraq, Kenya, Uganda, Cameroon, Zambia, Nigeria, Ghana, Lebanon and Palestine.

Some have found us through our website, www.lgbtasylum.org. Others have friends that made it here and their gay friends told them about this Task Force. Folks we have supported live in Texas, California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York and Canada!

Through my own connections with the United Church of Christ’s LGBT Coalition and other denominations’ “OUT” groups, I have been able (usually) to find a pastor or a church or an AA group or SOMEONE, who they can connect with safely.

We are NOT a Christian organization, though religious abuse from both fundamentalist Muslims and Christians is something from which all asylum seekers must heal. I can provide exegetical work on the EIGHT Christian “clobber texts” and will simply pray to the God of our flamboyant universe with our Muslim friends.

One Jamaican man said that a herd of deacons prayed over him for eight hours that the demon of homosexuality would come OUT OF HIM! For months after being safe in America, he had night terrors about that event!

We would love to come and tell you how to replicate what we are doing, especially since San Diego is said to have the best weather in the entire world! Until then, if you could find a way to financially help us, that would be absolutely amazing.

At this moment, we are supporting nine asylum seekers to the tune of about $4,000 per month. We have exhausted all grants and simply do fundraisers, from spaghetti suppers to yard sales, from “cocktails for cash” amid our wealthier supporters to letters of desperate appeals!

Saturday, 12 November 2011

Video: Ugandan gay activist wins Kennedy award

Video source:



Ugandan gay activist Frank Mugisha received the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award in Washington DC on Thursday.

Mugisha leads the Sexual Minorities Uganda organisation.

Mugisha told Associated Press that he hopes to persuade other human rights groups to join the struggle for gay rights.

As a young gay activist, Mugisha said he has been beaten and harassed for speaking out. He added that he's not afraid of his government, but rather of the people on the street who want to eliminate gays.

Mugisha, reflecting on the Kennedy award, said it may afford some protection by raising his profile.

The biggest motivation to continue his work, despite death threats, is his daily interactions with Ugandan gays and lesbians, he added.
"They just look at you when you talk to them, and they feel there's hope," he said. "They feel there's a voice out there speaking for them."
The award was headlined in the notorious Ugandan Red Pepper tabloid newspaper, responsible for initiating an anti-gay outing campaign several years ago, as 'Bum Driller Gets JF Award'. Interestingly the text was an almost direct lift from AP and other news reports.

Introducing Mugisha, Kerry Kennedy, daught of Robert Kennedy and President of the Centre, said "Frank Mugisha exemplifies Robert Kennedy’s vision of moral courage. "
"As a result of his advocacy, Frank was threatened and targeted for arrest. He had to flee his country to seek safety, where he could have lived a peaceful life."

"Instead, at grave personal risk, he returned to Uganda where he and seven courageous colleagues took part in a public media campaign proudly identifying themselves sexual minorities."

"Today, Frank, the Robert F Kennedy Partners for Human Rights joins you in your struggle. We are committed to bringing all the resources of our organization to our new 6 year partnership with you."

"We will listen to your needs. We will develop a long term plan. We will work with you, side by side, shoulder to shoulder. You will never be alone."

On Twitter, Mugisha wrote "best part was when Kerry Kennedy made every one say "We are there for you.""

Accepting the award Mugisha said:
"Over the years, I have lost jobs and friends, and most of my relatives don’t even talk to my family because of me. Despite intimidation, harassment and fear of rejection, I have continued doing my work with the hope not only to be understood, but also to effect real change in society – the change I know will come someday. "
"We may not be accepted and recognized in our own communities, but with this award we know that we are being heard and there is hope."

"I will continue to speak out. I will continue to demand that my government create laws and policies to protect LGBTI persons from violence and discrimination. I will continue to advance human rights in my country. I will continue to challenge the criminalization of homosexuality. I will continue to educate my country to accept diversity."
Also speaking at the ceremony were Senator John Kerry and U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner.

The Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award was established in 1984 to honor courageous and innovative individuals striving for social justice throughout the world.

Frank Mugisha's speech:

Thursday, 10 November 2011

Uganda: David Kato killer gets thirty years

Front cover of the Sept 2, 2010 edition of Rolling Stone, featuring a photo of David Kato (left) and Bishop Christopher Senyonjo (right).
By Paul Canning

The man named by Ugandan police as having confessed to the murder of gay activist David Kato has been sentenced to thirty years imprisonment in a Ugandan court today.

Kato was a leading LGBT activist in Uganda and his death was mourned world wide, with vigils in several cities and including a statement by President Obama. The murder lead to a exceptional, positive editorial in the indepedent Monitor newspaper described by blogger GayUganda as "a real big deal".

Sidney Nsubuga Enoch, 22, is alleged by the police to have had unwanted sexual advances made on him by Kato. According to the prosecution, after bludgening Kato with a hammer the accused made off in Kato's clothes with a camera, keyboard for a computer, teeshirts, shoes and a mobile phone.

Alledgedly Nsubuga was was brought to police by residents in another suburb and then confessed. In statements made after the arrest police insisted that Kato had got Nsubuga out of prison, offered him somewhere to stay then was murdered after refusing to pay for sex and the crime was not linked to his LGBT activism.
“He told us that he killed Kato after he failed to give him a car, a house and money he promised as rewards for having sex with him,” a police source told The Monitor at the time.
Kato had just won a High Court judgement stopping the infamous 'outing' campaign of Ugandan newspapers against gays.

At the time Frank Mugisha, executive director, Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG), said:
“I highly think his death is related to the homophobia from the religious groups and to winning the High Court judgment against the newspaper.”
The official press office of the Ugandan government had quickly issued an official statement on its “investigation” of the motives behind Kato’s murder, before Nsubuga was questioned. The details from the statement matched very closely a conspiracy theory posted by the managing editor of the Ugandan Tabloid which conducted a “Hang Them!” campaign last September featuring Kato’s picture on the front cover. The same newspaper against which Kato had won a judgement.

Rolling Stone managing editor Giles Muhame posted a nearly identical conspiracy theory surrounding Kato’s death on Facebook. Muhame named “Eden” Nsubuga as  the “DESPERATE prisoner whom (Kato) attempted to force into a cruel sex bang.” Muhame also alledged that “the embassies have been giving Kato dollars which he has been flashing around to seduce young boys” and that “it’s estimated he sodomized about 300 boys in his regime as 'king of sodomy honchos’ in the country.”

It is generally believed in Uganda that gays are funded by foreigners, rich and seduce young boys and girls into 'the lifestyle' - propoganda planted, supported and enhanced by American evangelicals who regualrly visit the country.

Mugisha, who has known Kato for several years, since their years working together at Integrity Uganda, said, “It is highly unlikely that David would pay anyone for sex.”

As with many others who worked with SMUG, Kato often had to scrounge around for money to help bail people who were arrested, especially if they were LGBT, which meant that they would have been disowned by their families, and on their release from jail would have been homeless, said Mugisha.

Mugisha said:
“Anyone who knew David knew that he didn’t have any money to promise anyone a house, car, as was reported. The media says David had a house and car, but all the stories are untrue. They are saying that David was trying to give money to a straight person and that SMUG and David were getting money from foreign sources, and that he had lots of money.”
According to Mugisha, a month before his demise Kato had told him that he was afraid for his safety.

Mugisha said that the virulent anti-gay pastor Martin Ssempa reportedly said that Kato was killed because he was living a dangerous life as a gay person.

Questioning the integrity of Ugandan police and courts is perfectly legitimate given that in 2010, Uganda was ranked at number 127 out of 178 countries by  Transparency International.

The sentence on Nsubuga may actually be one of death. In July Human Rights Watch reported on the state of Ugandan prisons, finding prisoners "subject to brutal compulsory labor, frequent violence, miserable overcrowding, and disease".

Donations can be made in David’s memory to bring more legal and human rights work to Uganda, as well as providing safety and sanctuary for other Ugandans facing persecution by clicking HERE.
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Wednesday, 9 November 2011

Ugandan lesbian refugee in Germany tells her story

Lillian
Source: Deutche Welle

By Author: Naomi Conrad

"Some guys broke into my house and started raping and beating me," Lillian said, playing with her short, spiky dreadlocks while explaining why she had to leave Uganda. "The men told me: Until you stop being a lesbian, we will continue to do this to you."

Homophobia runs deep in Uganda. Known gays and lesbians are ostracized, said Musaazi Namiti, a Ugandan journalist who lives in Qatar. "Most employers would never hire a known homosexual." Homophobia is fueled by many of the country’s Pentecostal churches where sermons against homosexuals are common and widely accepted, he added.

Homosexuality is an 'evil'

David Bahati, a member of the Ugandan Parliament, said he believes homosexuality is an "evil" that needs to be "cured" and claimed that some 95 percent of Ugandans hold the same view. As in 36 other African countries, homosexuality is illegal in Uganda and those caught face imprisonment. The laws date back to the colonial times and the British penal code. For Bahati, imprisonment is not enough. He introduced a bill in 2009 that called for the death penalty in certain cases.

The bill was dropped, following an international outcry and condemnation - and the threat to cut development aid. An attempt to reintroduce it in August of this year was blocked by the Ugandan government. But Bahati said he hopes it will be reintroduced at some point in the future. "The bill is now the property of the parliament," he said.

The main danger is from the public

The main danger homosexuals face come from the public and their own families. When someone told Lillian's family she was homosexual, they lured her back to her village from Kampala, where she worked as a journalist. Her grandmother was dying, they told her. She had to see her before she died.

When she arrived at the village, the elders confronted her, called her a disgrace to the clan and beat her. Someone pushed her, she fell and cut her face and throat on pieces of glass. "One of my relatives said: If you die now, we don't care." Thick scars run down her cheek, framing her face. She managed to return to Kampala, where she said she thought maintaining a low profile would keep her safe.

Like Lillian, many homosexuals try to hide their sexuality to stay out of danger, according to Amnesty International's Stephen Cooper.

In 2009, Lillian wrote an article in a small magazine criticizing the proposed anti-homosexuality bill.  The response to the article was immediate - and violent.

"I got a lot of threats, a lot of attacks," she said, adding that she changed her house three times only to have the threatening phone calls continue. She was harassed in public and beaten up on several occasions. "The public beating up homosexuals is quite a usual thing in Uganda."

No help from the police

She went to a police station after a group of men had broken into her flat and raped her only to have the police officer threaten to put her behind bars. Lillian realized that she had to leave Uganda. She won a journalism scholarship to Germany and decided to apply for asylum.

She was lucky, her lawyer Gisela Seidler said. Lillian's case was processed quickly and she was granted asylum within a couple of months. She had proof that she was a journalist and had worked as an activist in Uganda. This is very unusual, as cases often drag on for months, according to Seidler.

While the legal framework for asylum seekers has improved within the last few years, Seidler said many judges still work upon the assumption that as long as homosexuals keep their sexuality private they are no danger in their country - an assumption the lawyer called ludicrous.
"It’s like saying that political activists should just keep their mouth shut," Seidler said.
Asylum lottery

There are no figures as to how many homosexuals apply for asylum. But the chances of getting asylum approved depend on the judge who is assigned to a case. While some judges do serious research, others sometimes reply on outdated sources. A positive decision can depend on "whether you file your case on a Tuesday or a Thursday, or whether you file it in Munich or in neighboring Nuremberg," Seidler said.

One of her other clients, a gay Nigerian, was recently denied asylum. The people who see their application rejected, Seidler said, still are not in a position to pack their bags and return to their home countries.
"They know that they're in real danger." Lillian said. "Had I not been granted asylum, I would have gone to a neighboring African country."
Even now, Lillian continues to hide her homosexuality: she is still living in an asylum hostel.

"My councillor told me to keep quiet about being homosexual," Lillian said, adding that a gay asylum seeker was beaten up when the others in the hostel found out.

Lillian only shares her secret with close friends and asked not to be identified here out of fear for her own safety. At the end of the year she wants to leave the hostel and move into an apartment of her own. She said she wants to find a job and apply for a visa for her girlfriend, who she hopes to marry.

Saturday, 5 November 2011

Lonely Planet thinks Uganda is world's top tourist destination

Lonely Planet, one of the biggest and oldest guidebooks for travellers, has surprised many by picking Uganda as its top world destination for 2012. Burma is its second choice.

Lonely Planet's story notes Burma's repression but says:
"We want people to come to Burma. the words of the National League for Democracy (NLD), the opposition party that has urged foreigners to stay away since 1996.
For Uganda it does say that "human rights abuses aren't uncommon" and "it's taken nasty dictatorships and a brutal civil war to keep Uganda off the tourist radar" but "stability is returning and it won't be long before visitors come flocking back." It fails to mention that for lesbian and gay tourists the country may be unsafe.

When a gay BBC Radio DJ did a report from the country earlier this year he ended up being threatened after he disclosed his sexuality to the chief promoter of the Anti-Homosexuality ('Kill gays') bill. Ugandan lesbian activist Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera, recent winner of one of the world's top human rights prizes, says she has to constantly move because of threats.

Speaking to swissinfo.ch about receiving the award, she said:
Harassment occurs almost on a daily basis, verbal attacks in public or more sinister repression. The simple suspicion of being a homosexual has serious consequences: being evicted from your home or losing your job is quite common; many homosexuals commit suicide.
After the publisher's website was flooded with criticism of their choice of Uganda an Editor explained in the comments:
We chose Uganda for the experiences that it can offer to travelers, separate from its current political situation. To be very clear: we are aware of, and condemn, Uganda's anti-homosexuality bill. We hope that travellers do not judge the country in general, and most of its people, by the sentiments of its government. Many destinations across the world have political and human rights issues and travel often can raise awareness of these issues.
Unlike Burma, the publishers don't seem to have asked if the locals suffering human rights abuses want tourists or not. It's also unclear whether on not they would support the call by some for the publisher to rescind their choice of Uganda as a top tourist destination and apologise.

Tuesday, 1 November 2011

The flow of LGBT refugees 'is on the rise'; a report from Africa

Somalia1Image by IRIN Photos via Flickr
Source: salon.com

By Naomi Abraham

I first met Fred at a prayer service for gay men in an industrial part of Nairobi where even on a Sunday morning, the noise was deafening. The service was part biblical study and part support group. The other men who were worshipping with Fred in the dingy and cavernous room that day were Kenyans, but he was not.

Fred, a lanky Ugandan, became a refugee in December 2009 after he was brutally assaulted by a mob in Kampala for being gay.

Fred, who asked that his last name not be used, bought a one-way ticket to Nairobi days after the assault with the intention of never returning. “It’s OK to kill me,” he said. “People would be happy to see me dead, even some of my family.” I asked what he meant by OK, and he explained that no one would ever have to pay a price for his murder.

Within the last decade, rancorous anti-gay rhetoric has infiltrated public discourse in many African  countries. Just last week, the Ugandan parliament revived a proposal to legalize capital punishment for people who engage in homosexual acts. This is new for Africa. In the past, homosexuality was rarely brought up privately let alone in the public sphere. The new acrimonious tone against homosexuality espoused by politicians and religious leaders has percolated across all strata of African society including the media. It has also given rise to increasing homophobic and transphobic violence, which for a growing number of gay Africans has meant that life in their own countries has become untenable.

Fred’s journey from Uganda to Kenya followed the same logic as that of other Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered (LGBT) African refugees I spoke to. They move to urban centers in neighboring countries not necessarily because these places are any less hostile to homosexuals but for the anonymity that comes with being a newcomer in a densely populated area.

Navi Pillay, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, went on record last May saying that anti-gay hate crimes are increasing around the world and now account for a high percentage of all reported hate crimes.

Homophobia is not necessarily a new attitude for most African societies. Being gay is a crime in 38 of the 54 countries in Africa. Many of these laws have been on the books since colonial times. But it’s a stretch to think, as some have claimed, that homophobia is simply a vestige of colonial times.

However, some pundits believe that the shift to a more sinister form of homophobia in many African countries over the last decade has its root in conservative religious indoctrination. Some reports suggest that U.S. evangelical groups have had a hand in creating the venomous anti-gay attitudes and violence that have swept over the continent and pushed gay Africans out of their countries.

“It wasn’t until the late 1990s that we saw Africans with the help of American conservative religious groups using this issue (homosexuality) as an organizing tool,” said Rev. Kapya Kaoma, an Anglican priest from Zambia who has studied the U.S. evangelical influence on African societies.

Fred, who looks a decade or so younger than his 48 years, said that for most of his life he had guarded his sexuality with the utmost care for fear of social retribution and becoming estranged from loved ones. He lived his life relatively undisturbed until 2009 when the “Kill the Gays” bill, which sought to legalize capital punishment for homosexuality, was first introduced. Fred says it was during this time that he started to fear for his life.

His neighbors began to suspect he was gay and threatened to turn him in to authorities or to kill him themselves. On the night of his near fatal assault, he says, a large group of people from his neighborhood stood outside his bedroom quietly waiting to get the final proof they needed to confirm their suspicions. When they had heard enough, they broke his window and attacked him and his partner.

“People don’t leave their countries on a lark seeking more gay bars,” says Cary Alan Johnson, executive director of the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission. He adds that in places like Uganda it is because of an overwhelming sense of fear for their lives.

Kaoma says Uganda is unique only in that it has gotten more international attention. Other African countries continue to take steps to criminalize homosexuality. This, he says, will increase the flow of LGBT refugees if the international community doesn’t put pressure on these governments.

Also, because some gay African advocates have chosen to become more visible in their fight for equality, anti-gay factions have become more vehement. Some gay rights advocates have been driven  into hiding.

Larry, a leading Kenyan gay rights advocate who now lives in Texas after being granted political asylum, was forced to relocate to Uganda in 2007 after he appeared on Kenyan national television as an openly gay man. “I left for Uganda because I needed to go undercover since there were multiple threats to my life.” He says he chose Uganda because of its proximity to Kenya and because he had friends there.

Neil Grungas, executive director of Organization for Refuge, Asylum and Migration, a San Francisco-based organization assisting LGBT refugees and asylum seekers, says that while there is no way of knowing exactly how many LGBT African refugees there are, it is a growing problem. “We know that it’s an enormous issue in Africa because the continent has the most concentrated persecution against gay people,” he said in a phone interview.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees and the U.S. State Department do not track refugees who are displaced because of their sexual orientation. But even if those numbers existed, Duncan Breen, senior associate at Human Rights First, a D.C.- and New York City-based human rights organization, says the numbers would be grossly inaccurate given how many of these refugees might be afraid to reveal their sexuality.

But those working on refugee issues believe that the flow of LGBT refugees is on the rise. They point to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees issuing guidelines for working with LGBT refugees and providing sensitivity trainings to its field staff. Also this past summer, the U.S. State Department funded the very first LGBT resource center, at Heartland Alliance for Human Needs and Human Rights, a Chicago-based organization that provides services to immigrants and refugees. Under the grant, the group is to come up with best practices for resettling LGBT refugees in the U.S.

Still, advocates and some U.S. politicians say the State Department should do more to expedite the resettlement process for refugees fleeing antigay persecution.  In a February 2010 letter addressed to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and  Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) urge Clinton to take decisive steps to protect LGBT refugees, who are targets of violence in the countries they have escaped from as well as the ones they’ve escaped to.

Danny Dyson, one of the first African refugees to be resettled in the United States because of the anti-gay persecution he faced in Uganda, went back and forth between Uganda and Kenya before his arrival in San Francisco. “It was a nightmare in Kenya,” he said. “At first I didn’t have any help, and I had to leave the refugee camp I went to because other refugees started harassing me for being gay.”  Dyson finally found help with a U.S. nongovernmental refugee assistance group, which asked that it not be named because they feared recriminations for their work with LGBT refugees.

Dyson and Fred met in Kenya as refugees. Fred awaits a decision from the U.S. government on his application for resettlement. Having heard about Danny’s successful resettlement in America, he asked me, “Is it true there are lots of us there and I don’t have to hide?”

Naomi Abraham is a multimedia journalist in New York City. She reported from Kenya and Uganda as part of a project sponsored by the International Center for Journalists. The Ford Foundation provided funding for this story.

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