|
Gay Wedding Stirs
Controversy in Senegal
22 Feb 2008-
Dakar, Senegal- After photos of a reported marriage ceremony between two
men were published in a local magazine in Senegal, politicians,
journalists and religious leaders are weighing in on their views about
homosexuality. Many say laws against homosexuality have not been
sufficiently enforced, but others say the issue is being exploited. For
VOA, Naomi Schwarz has more from Dakar.
In the weeks since a monthly magazine published photos
of what it said was a marriage ceremony between two men in Senegal, the
issue of homosexuality has been all over the news in the largely Islamic
country.
On a nighttime television talk show, a representative
from the government responded to accusations it is not taking the issue
seriously enough.
On call-in shows, many Senegalese are expressing shock
over the reported gay marriage and the presence of homosexuals in the
country. Some link homosexuals to the spread of AIDS and accuse the gay
community of pedophilia. Human rights and homosexuality activists say
both claims are unfounded.
The editor of the magazine that reported the gay
marriage received death threats from some of the men in the published
photographs. Several of the men in the photos were arrested in
connection with the incident but were released without charge, sparking
outrage among some politicians.
On the street, the same attitude against homosexuals
prevails.
Sitting among women selling dried flowers and couscous
on a Dakar street, Khady Diouf, a laundry woman and mother of five,
makes a slashing motion across her throat when asked how she would react
if one of her children told her he or she is gay.
The Muslim woman says she believes God does not
approve of being gay.
Religious leaders in Senegal are spreading the message
that homosexuality, which is illegal in the country, is against Islamic
tradition.
The leader of Dakar's biggest downtown mosque
organized a mass protest against homosexuality. He said the release of
men arrested in connection with the reported gay wedding shows the
government is not enforcing laws against homosexuality.
Offenders can receive up to five years in jail, but
arrests are rare.
At another Dakar mosque, worshippers signed a petition
calling on the government to enforce, on television and in the news,
what it says are Senegal's traditional morals.
Adama Mboup, a businessman and one of the petition's
organizers, says homosexuality reflects the decline of traditional
social and religious values.
But Senegalese human rights activist Alioune Tine says
the issue is being exploited by media outlets aiming for larger profits.
"When newspapers make this kind of sensational news,
the newspaper is bought by people," said Tine.
He says the issue with the pictures of the gay wedding
sold the most copies in the magazine's history. But he says the wedding
was not news.
"The events happened in 2006. It was private and the
wedding [was] very symbolic. You have no mayor, no preacher, no imam,"
he said.
He says the government should protect the privacy
rights of homosexuals, as it would any other minority. But he says with
upcoming local elections, some opposition politicians with ties to
religious fundamentalist groups are using the issue to rile up
supporters.
These opposition politicians have accused the
government of not upholding what they say are the country's religious
values, and some have accused unnamed prominent members of the ruling
party of being homosexual.
|