Buzzfeed, J. Lester Feder, November 2013
“Silence
around issues of men who have sex with men should be stopped and no one should
be discriminated against on the basis of their sexual orientation,” Christine
Kaseba-Saba said in a statement human rights activists have hailed as a
“miracle.”
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| Paul Morigi / WireImage |
Zambia’s
first lady, Dr Christine Kaseba-Sata, called for an end to discrimination on
the basis of sexual orientation during a reception hosted by UNAIDS on Tuesday
evening in the country’s capital, Lusaka.
This took
human rights activists by surprise — this year has seen a rapid deterioration
of LGBT rights in the country, with arrests of men on sodomy charges and the
prosecution of activist Paul Kasonkomona for calling for the decriminalization
of homosexuality during a television appearance. Recently there has also been a
waving of outings of LGBT people by Zambian tabloids.
“Silence
around issues of men who have sex with men should be stopped and no one should
be discriminated against on the basis of their sexual orientation,” Kaseba-Saba
said. “Rather, we should address reproductive health issues around this issue.”
She also
reportedly said those working on public health issues among men who have sex
with men have the president’s support despite the increasingly homophobic
climate in the country.
Kaseba-Sata’s
words could carry special weight because she is one of the country’s leading
OB/GYNs, practicing and teaching in some of the country’s top medical
institutions for more than 25 years. She is also the World Health
Organization’s good will ambassador against gender-based violence for 2014.
“The
statement is a breakthrough to the Zambian HIV/AIDS and reproductive health
response for sexual minority groups, which also has direct implications to the
broader HIV/AIDS and [sexual and reproductive health] response,” said Lilian
Kiefer, executive director of the development and poverty organization Panos
Institute Southern Africa, which is based in Lusaka. “She has demonstrated the
kind of leadership and objectivity that is required in comprehensively
addressing HIV/AIDS and [reproductive health] from a human rights angle.
In a post
published at allAfrica.com Richard Lee of the South African-based human rights
organization the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa called the
statements a “miracle” and “potentially game-changing” for LGBT rights in the
country.
But some
LGBT activists were less impressed.
One LGBT
activist who asked that his name not be used fearing retribution directed at
his organization, told BuzzFeed, “Even as much as we applaud the first lady for
making such a bold statement…. It begs the question as to why she has been
silent all along.”
Her remarks
also do not necessarily change policy, he continued. “If this this was a
statement issued by the president, it would have been a different story, and
then at least it would have had the backing of the head of the executive.
However, as things stand, the first lady’s opinion does not move mountains in
this case.”
J. Lester
Feder is a foreign correspondent for BuzzFeed and 2013 Alicia Patterson

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