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Nigerian anglican activists warn of 'gay' exodus
18 Mar 2007- The Nigerian branch of the Anglican
Church pressure group on LGBT rights, Changing Attitude Nigeria (CAN),
is warning other countries that the passing of the anti-gay marriage
bill could cause significant problems for them, too.
Restrictions in the bill are so draconian and oppressive
that it could result in a potential flood of gay Nigerians fleeing to
other countries. The main targets would be other countries that
Nigerians often travel to, such as Britain.
"Already we are seeing an increase in homophobic
behaviour and attacks, because people feel they can get away with it,”
said Davis Mac-Iyalla, the head of Changing Attitude Nigeria.
“The climate is already becoming intolerable. Unless the
government tones down its language and cancels the bill, we are going to
see a flood of refugees as people flee for their lives.”
Over the last few months, since the bill has been
proposed, Mr. Mac-Iyalla – a lay minister in the Nigerian Anglican
Church – has already received a series of death threats regarded as
credible and has been forced to go in to hiding.
“We are already getting reports of an increase in attacks
on people who are merely suspected of being gay – people who are not
even being ‘caught in the act’,” he said by email.
“This climate of fear will simply drive many people to
take desperate measures to find somewhere – anywhere – where they can at
least live without imminent fear of death just for existing. For many
people, even being the prospect of being an illegal immigrant in Britain
will seem preferable to a life of perpetual terror and suffocating
oppression in Nigeria,” he suggested.
CAN has already received a report of an increasing number
of Nigerians seeking English partners on gay dating websites in recent
months as gay Nigerians try to seek safe passage out of the country.
The population of Nigeria is approximately 117million,
and if figures from other countries are comparable, approximately 6.5%
of the population is conservatively estimated to be gay.
This means that the population of Nigeria that is coming
under increasing threat is approximately 760,000.
“If only a fraction of those sought sanctuary elsewhere,
that would still create a headache for countries that Nigerians would
naturally flee to,” said Mr. Mac-Iyalla.
“Some of the oldest passages in the Bible – Exodus –
remind us that when people come under intense oppression in one land, a
natural response is to flee to somewhere more hospitable.”
He also warned that countries should not close their
doors to people seeking shelter from extreme persecution.
“Neither those who create the oppression in the first
place nor those who close their doors are well regarded by God,” he
said.
Mr. Mac-Iyalla challenged the notion that the story of
Sodom and Gomorrah was about the sins of homosexuality. “Most Biblical
scholars who have studied the Old Testament in its original Hebrew – and
not the often corruptly-translated versions in other languages such as
English – now recognise that the story of Sodom and Gomorrah was nothing
to do with homosexuality and a lot to do with lack of hospitality to
strangers.
“The often-quoted argument between Lot and the crowd in
Sodom when Lot was trying to protect the visitors from a violent
interrogation was the final straw that caused Sodom and Gomorrah to be
burnt down to the ground.
“Jesus himself reminded us how importantly God regarded
hospitality, telling his disciples that any town that was not hospitable
to them would find the day of judgement tougher than Sodom and
Gomorrah,” he concluded.
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