Police Across Nigeria Have Begun Arresting Lesbians And Gays

POLICE across Nigeria have begun arresting lesbians and gays
following President Goodluck Jonathan's recent signing into law of a new
Draconian bill that makes being homosexual an offence punishable for 14 years
in jail.
Earlier this month, President
Jonathan put his signature to the controversial Same Sex Marriage Prohibition
Bill into law. Condemned internationally as a fundamental breach of human
rights, the law stipulates that anyone convicted of engaging in a same sex
marriage is liable to serve 14 years in prison, while anyone aiding or abetting
such relationships faces a 10 year jail term.
Human rights groups like Amnesty International have widely condemned the
law as an infraction of Nigeria's human rights obligations and gay rights
campaigners plan to picket Nigeria's high commissions and embassies worldwide.
Also, the campaigners are calling on Nigeria's trading partners to boycott
Nigerian goods and spurn tourism with the country.
Defiant, however, the Nigerian authorities
have stepped up their campaign against homosexuals and so far this week, the
police in Bauchi have arrested 38 people suspected of being gay. It is likely
that they will be charged under the new law in what will be a controversial
trial attracting international attention.
Already, the US and the UK have warned that they may cut funding for
HIV/Aids projects in Nigeria if the government keeps up its witchhunt of gays.
Nigeria is not dependent on development
aid like many other African countries but her HIV/Aids programme receives a lot
of international funding.
One Aids
counsellor said: “Authorities responded to an unfounded rumour that the US had
paid gay activists $20m to promote same-sex marriage. An officer pretending to
be a gay man then joined a group being counselled on Aids.” Dorothy Aken’Ova, the executive director of
Nigeria’s International Center for Reproductive Health and Sexual Rights,
confirmed that the clampdown has begun. She said police detained four gay men
over the Christmas holidays and tortured them until they named others allegedly
belonging to their organization.
According to Ms Aken’Ova, following the arrest of the 38 men, the police
are looking for 168 others who are members of an organisation that provides
free legal services to gay men. She added that she has helped secure bail for
some of the 38 detainees but dozens of homosexuals have fled Bauchi in recent
days following the arrests.
Mustapha
Baba Ilela, the chairman of the Bauchi State Sharia Commission, which oversees
the regulation of Islamic law, confirmed that 11 gay men have been arrested
over the past two weeks. He said community members helped fish the suspects
out, adding that they are on the hunt for others
No comments:
Post a Comment