Source: Human Rights Watch
(Dakar) – Gambia’s recent passage of a homophobic law puts the already persecuted lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) community at even greater risk of abuse, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch said today.
The new crime of “aggravated homosexuality,” which carries punishments
of up to life in prison, is part of a criminal code President Yahya
Jammeh approved on October 9, 2014, documents uncovered in mid-November
show. Among those who could be charged with “aggravated homosexuality”
are “serial offenders” and people living with HIV who are deemed to be
gay or lesbian. Exactly what constitutes “homosexuality” or a
“homosexual act” is not defined in Gambian law. That makes Gambia’s
criminalization of homosexual activity – which already violates
international law – even more likely to be used broadly and arbitrarily.
“The new law treats consensual, private sexual activity between adults
of the same sex – which should not be a crime – in the same way as rape
and incest,” said Steve Cockburn, deputy regional director for West and
Central Africa at Amnesty International.
“The vague and imprecise provisions of this law could be used to arrest
and detain anyone who is believed to be gay or lesbian, and contributes
to the already severe climate of hostility and fear for LGBTI people in
the country.”
The Gambian authorities failed to acknowledge the enactment of the
“aggravated homosexuality” law, despite repeated questioning during a
United Nations review of the country’s human rights record on October
28. Legislation in force in the country already criminalizes consensual,
private sexual activity between adults of the same sex, in violation of
international human rights law.
Passing the law appears to form part of a broader attack on the LGBTI
community in Gambia. At least three women, four men, and a 17-year-old
boy were arrested between November 7 and 13 and threatened with torture
because of their presumed sexual orientation. Another six women were
arrested on November 18 and 19 and remain in detention, a member of the
LGBTI community in Gambia reported.
The detainees said that they were told that if they did not “confess,”
including by providing the names of others, a device would be forced
into their anus or vagina to “test” their sexual orientation. Such
treatment would violate international law prohibiting torture and
ill-treatment.
“Arresting and torturing people based on their sexual orientation is
shameful, and inventing new crimes with even harsher sentences is
scandalous,” Cockburn said. “Gambia’s new law not only flouts African
human rights obligations, it violates its own constitution, which says
that all people must be equal and free from discrimination before the
law.”
President Jammeh should have used his constitutional powers to reject
this homophobic bill, which was proposed by the National Assembly on
August 25, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch said.
“President Jammeh’s inflammatory public statements against LGBTI people
have been put into practice through this odious law and the witch hunt
that followed its secretive passage,” said Monica Tabengwa,
Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The law and practice are an
affront to the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights
resolution condemning violence against LGBTI people and calling for
those responsible to be brought to justice.”