[Note: These days, I don’t get out as much as I used to: age, ailments, etc. That means I don’t keep up well as I once did.
So I may be missing some stuff, and I hope somebody will catch me up.
This anti-LGBTQ news from Ghana and Burundi (and Kenya & Uganda) is really tough. And Quaker groups have connections there, and in that region, some long-running.
So, they’ve gotta be taking this on, right?
They must be working to protect LGBTQ Friends (& non-Quakes too), of course?
Good Samaritan and all that great Bible stuff? Don’t they still teach that all the time?
And helping warn North American Quakes about the U.S. groups that have been pushing and paying for this intercontinental homophobic campaign for years . . . .??
Not to mention lobbying for the feds to be looking into this: I mean, freedom of religion is one thing; but using it to jail & kill LGBTQs or people who affirm them is something else.
Isn’t it?
Quaker groups like FUM are standing up against this kind of hate & persecution, naturally, yes? They wouldn’t be telling Friends to shut up about it, would they?
They wouldn’t be ignoring reports like this one— we can count on them, yes?
Just asking. And asking. . . . Is it okay to ask??
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The Guardian view on Africa’s homophobic legislation: western influences are encouraging hatred
March 14, 2024
The continent is seeing a surge in repressive laws. Campaigners say US evangelists are fuelling discrimination and hatred
There was widespread horror and condemnation last year when Uganda passed a draconian anti-gay law that included the death penalty for some same-sex acts and a 20-year sentence for “promoting” homosexuality. Yet it was only the harshest in a wave of homophobic new legislation across Africa, which has yet to ebb.
In February, Ghana’s parliament passed a bill making “wilful promotion, sponsorship or support of LGBTQ+ activities” punishable with up to five years in jail, and identifying as gay with up to three years’ imprisonment. It was supported by both major parties, though the president has yet to validate it – and the finance ministry has urged him not to do so, warning that it could cost the country $3.8bn (£3bn) in World Bank funding. There is particular concern that Kenya, which has previously given asylum to LGBTQ+ people forced to flee other countries, could toughen laws.
Around half of the 60 or so countries worldwide which criminalise same-sex relations are in Africa, though six countries – Angola, Botswana, Mozambique, Lesotho, Seychelles and Mauritius – have decriminalised it in recent years, and South Sudan lifted the death penalty. South Africa, which legalised same-sex marriage in 2006, has constitutional protections against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, and has continued to enact legislation to protect gay rights, though homophobic crime persists.
But the surge of lobbying for anti-gay legislation is disturbing. In addition to the fear and stigma that such laws breed, in Mauritania, Somalia and parts of Nigeria, as well as Uganda, same-sex relations are punishable by death.
In practice, laws do not need to lead to death row to cost lives. Criminalisation legitimates and fuels homophobia and violence, including by security forces. Activists in Ghana say its bill has already prompted a sharp rise in violence. Experts have also warned that such legislation is setting back the fight against HIV/Aids on the continent, with gay men too frightened to access sexual health services.
Homophobic campaigning is usually couched as “protecting families” against malign foreign influences. Burundi’s president, Évariste Ndayishimiye, who declared in December that gay people should be stoned, describes homosexuality as a western import. LGBTQ+ activists, however, argue that it is homophobia that is foreign. Many have pointed out that persecution often relies on colonial-era laws, and that the recent surge in legislation comes as US evangelical groups have poured large sums into campaigning on the continent. An openDemocracy investigationin 2020 found that US campaigners who seek to limit sexual and reproductive rights had spent more than $50m in Africa since 2007, with much of that going to Uganda.
“Ugandan society has always lived … with LGBTQ persons … The homophobia, the transphobia we are seeing … is from the west. It is mostly peddled by extreme American evangelicals,” argues the Ugandan activist Frank Mugisha. Last year the pope and the archbishop of Canterbury denounced the criminalisation of homosexuality. Donors have also halted funding to Uganda. Given the attempts to portray LGBTQ+ rights as a foreign imposition, however, it is especially essential to listen to domestic activists and support their priorities. Countries such as South Africa should also take a lead in challenging anti-gay legislation and homophobic attitudes. Finally, it is essential to expose and hold accountable those in the west who, not content to sow division at home, are spreading poison abroad.
So what you are missing is the Friends Ugandan Safe Transport (FUST – http://www.friendsugandansafetransport.org ), sponsored by Olympia Friends Meeting, and joined in the work by more than 40 Friends Meetings and churches across North America. Since 2014, FUST has helped Ugandan “conductors” rescue some 3,011 LGBTQ folks (and a few allies and children), who are now located in countries around the world. Along the way, we have dealt with 11 murders, lynchings, ritual rapes (of lesbians). To my knowledge, it is the largest Quaker-related Global South support organization located in the Pacific Northwest.
There is also a welcoming and affirming Friends Meeting – Bulungi Tree Shade Friends Meeting – based in Jinja, Uganda. At its peak, it had 250 members and attenders. They took 19 children who had been sex-trafficked under their care. For a time, they had a transgender co-clerk and a lesbian co-clerk. Roughly 1/3 of its membership are LGBTQ. They are the only welcoming and affirming Friends Meeting in East and Central Africa. They use North Pacific Yearly Meeting’s Faith and Practice.
But all isn’t well. A worship group leader was murdered. Nine members were taken in and tortured for six days. Many have been kicked out of their homes. 28 of them are currently in hiding with no food. Their children have been kicked out of schools. Still they continue their courageous witness, and continue to meet.
The racist and homophobic Friends World Committee for Consultation refuses to even acknowledge that they exist. (I’m not sure that Chuck Fager has either.) I am using “racist” and “homophobic” exactly and appropriately – imagine if the same thing had happened to a Friends Meeting in northern Belgium. FUM doesn’t either, nor Uganda Yearly Meeting (though there are individuals within UYM who are supportive.)