promoting human rights and the rule of law in southern africa
A Zimbabwe court on Thursday freed two employees of a gay organisation after six days in jail on allegations of possessing indecent material and displaying a placard seen as insulting to President Robert Mugabe, an outspoken critic of homosexuality.
The Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (GALZ) organisation said on Thursday that the two employees were assaulted by police while in custody.
Mugabe had been in power for three decades since Zimbabwe gained independence from Britain. Last year, he entered a power-sharing coalition government with his long-time rival Morgan Tsvangirai following a disputed 2008 election. However, the fragile partnership has been fraught with disagreements, including allegations that Mugabe's party has not done enough to promote democratic and human rights reforms.
Mugabe has vowed not to allow gay rights to be written into a new constitution being drafted by the coalition.
A disturbing trend
Last week in the southeast African nation of Malawi, a judge sentenced a gay couple to a maximum 14 years in prison with hard labour after the men celebrated their engagement with a party at a hotel.
In Uganda, lawmakers are considering a bill under which homosexuals could be sentenced to life in prison and "repeat offenders" could be executed. Ugandan church groups have accused Western countries of exporting homosexuality to Africa under the guise of human rights. Even in South Africa, the only African country that recognises gay rights, there are strong homophobic tendencies in some sections of the community.
-- Sapa-AFP