• Re: Cameroon: Wave of Arrests, Abuse Against LGBT Perverts

    From Elvis Brodie@21:1/5 to Loon"@.us on Sun May 15 13:04:29 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.democrats.d XPost: nyc.politics

    In article <LkmWG.87551$bQ4.45954@fx04.iad>
    Wayne "Rudy" LaPierre <"Reckless Dumb Loon"@.us> wrote:

    There is a need for education to eliminate homosexual pedophiles.


    (Nairobi) – Cameroonian security forces have arbitrarily
    arrested, beaten, or threatened at least 24 people, including a
    17-year-old boy, for alleged consensual same-sex conduct or
    gender nonconformity, since February 2021, Human Rights Watch
    said today. At least one of them was forced to undergo an HIV
    test and anal examination.

    Based on Human Rights Watch’s monitoring and discussions with
    Cameroonian nongovernmental organizations, the recent accounts
    of abuse documented here seem to be part of an overall uptick in
    police action against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
    (LGBT) people in Cameroon. Sexual relations between people of
    the same sex are criminalized in Cameroon and punished with up
    to five years in prison.

    “These recent arrests and abuses raise serious concerns about a
    new upsurge in anti-LGBT persecution in Cameroon,” said Neela
    Ghoshal, associate LGBT rights director at Human Rights Watch.
    “The law criminalizing same-sex conduct puts LGBT people at a
    heightened risk of being mistreated, tortured, and assaulted
    without any consequences for the abusers.”

    Between February 17 and April 8, Human Rights Watch interviewed
    by telephone 18 people, including 5 who had been detained, 3
    lawyers, and 10 members of Cameroonian LGBT nongovernmental
    organizations. Human Rights Watch also reviewed reports by
    Cameroonian and international LGBT organizations, court
    documents, police reports, and medical records.

    Human Rights Watch shared its findings with the justice
    minister, Laurent Esso; the state secretary at the Defense
    Ministry in charge of the national gendarmerie, Yves Landry
    Etoga; and the delegate general for national security, Martin
    Mbarga Nguele, in a March 25 letter, requesting answers to
    specific questions. Cameroonian officials have yet to respond.

    On February 24, police officers raided the office of Colibri, an
    organization that provides HIV prevention and treatment
    services, in Bafoussam, West Region, and arrested 13 people on
    homosexuality charges, including 7 Colibri staff. The police
    released all 13 people on February 26 and 27. Three of those
    arrested said that police beat at least three Colibri staff
    members at the police station and that the police threatened and
    verbally assaulted all those arrested. They also said that the
    police interrogated them without the presence of a lawyer and
    forced them to sign statements they were not allowed to read.

    One of them, a 22-year-old transgender woman, said: “Police told
    us we are devils, not humans, not normal. They beat a trans
    woman in the face, slapped her twice in front of me.”

    Police also forced one of the 13 arrested, a 26-year-old
    transgender woman, to undergo an HIV test and anal examination
    at a health center in Bafoussam on February 25. She told Human
    Rights Watch: “The doctor was embarrassed but said he had to do
    the examination because the prosecutor needed it. He carried out
    the examination. I had to bend over. The doctor wore gloves and
    put in his finger. It was the most humiliating thing I’ve ever
    experienced.”

    What this transgender woman experienced is not an isolated case.
    Human Rights Watch has previously documented that prosecutors in
    Cameroon have introduced medical reports based on forced anal
    exams into court, contributing to convictions of individuals
    charged with consensual homosexual conduct.

    Human Rights Watch documented two additional arrests in 2021 and
    one mass arrest in 2020. In Bertoua, on February 14, gendarmes
    arrested 12 youth, including at least 1 teenager, on
    homosexuality charges and subjected them to ill-treatment before
    releasing them the same day. On February 8, gendarmes
    arbitrarily arrested two transgender women in Douala, targeting
    them in the street on the basis of their gender expression.
    Prosecutors charged them with homosexual conduct, lack of
    identity cards, and public indecency.

    "gay" is a personal choice.

    Don't make bad choices.

    https://www.hrw.org/news/2021/04/14/cameroon-wave-arrests-abuse- against-lgbt-people

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