President Obama is visiting Africa next month. The AP wonders
if anti-gay human rights abuses on the continent and/or the SCOTUS
marriage cases will play any role in his dialogue with the countries he
will visit:
Homosexuality
is considered a criminal offense in many African nations, including
Senegal and Tanzania, two of the countries Obama will visit. South
Africa, the third country on the president's itinerary, has broad
protections for homosexuals and is the only African country to legalize
gay marriage.
"If the timing works out so that he's
there, it may provide a perfect opportunity for him to speak out about
the principles we value in our democracy and how we would hope that
others follow it," said Socarides, who worked in the White House during
the Clinton administration.
Two of the countries Obama will visit outlaw homosexuality:
According to the State Department's 2012
human rights report on Tanzania, consensual same-sex sexual conduct is
illegal and carries a prison sentence of 30 years to life. The report
also concluded that gays and lesbians face "societal discrimination that
restricted their access to health care, housing and employment" and
that there were no government efforts to combat such discrimination.
Conditions are similar in Senegal,
according to the State Department. The agency's 2012 human rights report
on the West African nation says consensual same-sex activity, referred
to in the law as an "act against nature," is a criminal offense.
And, Nigeria, as you may know, yesterday passed a law that would jail gays for up to 14 years for a variety of offenses.
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