May 072012
 


Johannesburg – South Africa’s National House of Traditional Leaders wants parliament to delete a clause in the constitution that guarantees equal rights to homosexuals, a media report said on Sunday.

The leaders, who advise the government on traditional laws and customs among ethnic groups such as the Zulu and Xhosa, made the request in reply to the annual invitation to submit suggestions to parliament’s constitutional review committee, City Press reported.

The weekly newspaper said the ruling African National Congress (ANC) would consider the proposal.

South Africa is the only African country to allow gay marriage and adoption.

Its constitution, adopted after the fall of apartheid in 1994, reads: “The state may not unfairly discriminate directly or indirectly against anyone on one or more grounds, including… sexual orientation.”

ANC lawmaker Patekile Holomisa, who chairs the constitutional review committee and is also a traditional leader, said ANC leaders had imposed equal rights for gays on party members and the country.

“The great majority does not want to give promotion and protection to these things,” he told City Press.

“The last time this issue was discussed was about same-sex marriages. Most of the people in the (parliamentary) caucus were opposed to it, but then Luthuli House (ANC headquarters) and the leadership instructed us to vote for it.”

Holomisa, who said he fears the ruling party will lose votes if it ignores the traditional values of its electoral base, called homosexuality “a condition that occurred when certain rituals have not been performed”.

Despite South Africa’s liberal constitution, homosexuals still face discrimination, harassment and violence, especially in black townships, where lesbians are commonly targeted for “corrective rape” in the belief that sex with a man can change their sexual orientation.

Apr 092012
 


Johannesburg – A German, Andreas Derleth, living in New Zealand has won the Mr Gay World competition held in South Africa. He beat 21 other men, including the first black African contestants, whose participation brought its own difficulties.

For the first time, the contestants in Mr Gay World came to Africa, a continent where most countries still maintain sodomy laws, sometimes punishable by death.

Only in its fourth year, South Africans have won the contest twice – both times by white men.

Taurai Zhanje, the contestant from Zimbabwe where President Robert Mugabe regularly brands gays as “worse than pigs and dogs”, pulled out after government agents intimidated his family.

“There was relentless pressure on the delegate from Zimbabwe to withdraw,” said Coenie Kukkuk, the contest’s Africa director. “His family was followed by agents of the regime in Zimbabwe. His mother is employed by the government, she surely would have lost her job. And with 80 percent unemployment, she was looking after a lot of people,” he said.

The Ethiopian delegate, Robel Hailu, is a student in South Africa but was disinherited after a radio station in Addis Ababa announced his title.

The contrast between the rest of the continent and South Africa couldn’t be greater. Gay rights are enshrined in the constitution, and gays can legally marry and adopt.

This year’s contestant, Lance Weyer, is an elected local councillor for the opposition Democratic Alliance in the coastal city of East London. He praised South Africa for supporting gay rights in forums like the UN Human Rights Council, even in the face of opposition from many other African countries.

“We need to be working with those governments to educate them,” he said from the stage. “You can’t just decide that you’re going to support certain rights and not others.”

Many black gay South Africans still suffer discrimination and attacks. Lesbians in particular are the target of “corrective rapes” – in which their attackers claim the rape will “cure” their homosexuality.

In some African countries, like Botswana and Malawi, younger gays are grouping together aided by the spread of cell phones and the Internet. They’re beginning to form new organisations or work with other rights groups to push for change.

And it’s not just Africans who face challenges. In Bulgaria, former Olympian Chavdar Arsov lost his job as the luge coach for the national team after he participated in the contest.

China has banned the competition and officially reprimanded the country’s only-ever contestant, Xiao Dai, who defied a ban by Beijing to participate in the 2010 contest in Oslo.

Most of the contestants came from Europe and the Americas, with none from the Muslim world and few from Africa and Asia.

And while the competition features extravagant costumes and skimpy swimwear, Kukkuk said such contests can be a force for change. “It’s the search for a global ambassador who can represent human rights,” he said. “Beautiful men yes, but beautiful with a purpose.”

In Ethiopia, Kukkuk said, “there was never a talk or discussion or debate about (gay) issues before. Now there is.”

In Namibia, Wendelinus Hamutenya drew global attention when he was beaten and hospitalised two weeks after winning his local title. He’s not sure the attack was a hate crime, and he says that since winning his title, he’s started a support group for gay Namibians on Facebook that has attracted more than 900 members.

Namibia’s government has also approached him to work on the nation’s first survey of men who have sex with men.
“It was a breakthrough,” he said.

Mar 012012
 
Serial Killer Stalks Joburg

Johannesburg – South African police reported that man was murdered in his flat in Braamfontein, Johannesburg, possibly because he was gay. Sergeant Jenny Pillay said 67-year-old Joburg Theatre manager Rulov Senekal was found by a neighbour on Sunday afternoon. He was tied up and had been strangled. Pillay said it was too soon to say [...]

Feb 262012
 
Time To Lock This Man Up

Mutare – The bigoted and homophobic leader of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe, has let fly at Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron at a birthday rally in eastern Zimbabwe. He told Cameron: “To hell with you…” over the UK’s stance to link aid to gay rights. “Nature is nature. It has created male and female,” Mugabe told [...]

Feb 222012
 
More Africans At Mr Gay World

Johannesburg – Africa has more finalists in the Mr Gay World competition than ever before this year with representatives from Namibia, South Africa, Ethiopia and Zimbabwe. Coenie Kukkuk, Africa Director for Mr. Gay World told Mambaonline.com: “It’s a major development. It’s the first time that black Africans will participate, which sends out a powerful message [...]

Feb 172012
 

New York -Libya’s delegate to the UN Human Rights Council has made a strongly homophobic outburst saying gay and trans issues threatened the continuation of the human race. Protesting the Council’s first panel on discrimination and violence based on sexual orientation, due to take place next month, the Libyan delegate said gay and trans topics [...]

Jan 012012
 
Gays Call To End Homophobia

Johannesburg – Members of the gay and lesbian community in South Africa say they want the government to step up its fight against homophobia in 2012. They say 2011 saw a rise in a number of attacks targeted at lesbians and transgender people in the country. A Human Rights Watch report released early in December [...]

Dec 092011
 
Gay Contest Winner Beaten & Robbed

Windhoek – A gay rights group on Thursday condemned a physical assault on a man who won the first ever Mr Gay Namibia contest. Out-Right Namibia (ORN) said it “strongly condemns the homophobic, and what could be a politically motivated attack on the first ever Mr Gay Namibia, Wendelinus Hamutenya”. According to the organisers of [...]

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