Gay rights in Cameroon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Around the world · By country

History · Groups · Activists

Declaration of Montreal

Same-sex relationships

Marriage · Adoption

Opposition · Persecution

Violence

This box: view  talk  edit

Contents

[edit] Law against gays

Homosexual acts are banned in Cameroon, and are punishable with up to five years in jail according to Section 347 of the country's penal code. In May 2005, 11 men were arrested at a nightclub on suspicion of sodomy, and the government threatened to conduct medical examinations to "prove" their homosexual activity. As of February 2006, nearly all were still being detained, with trials scheduled in March 2006[1].

[edit] Gay life in the country

Cameroon is a conservative society. Homosexuality is frowned upon. In 2006, a number of tabloids published the names of at least 50 very prominent people they claimed were homosexual. They condemned them for deviant behaviour. The stories boosted newspaper circulation, but were criticized by the state communication council for invading people's privacy. The campaign provoked a national debate about gay rights and privacy[2].

A Cameroon court jailed Jean Pierre Amougou Belinga for four months for defaming Gregoire Owona, a government minister named in the list of 50 presumed homosexuals in Cameroon[3].

[edit] Related topics

Joel Gustave Nana Ngongang, a leading African LGBT human rights activist from Cameroon

[edit] References

  1.  "Cameroon jails two men for gay sex" PlanetOut Network. February 28, 2006. Accessed March 1, 2006. <http://news.yahoo.com/s/po/20060301/co_po/cameroonjailstwomenforgaysex>
  2.  "Row over Cameroon 'gay' witchhunt" BBC News. Updated 6 February 2006, 11:43 GMT Accessed February 7, 2006. <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4685298.stm>
  3.  Cameroon gay list publisher jailed Ninemsn. Saturday Mar 4 09:23 AEDT.