allAfrica reports:
Mbikayi's bill - which has yet to be made
public but which has been seen by Think Africa Press - contains 37
articles that would render homosexuality and transgenderism illegal. The
proposed penalty for engaging in a homosexual act is 3 to 5 years in
prison and a fine of 1 million Congolese francs (about $1,000); while a
transgender person would face the same fine and a jail sentence of 3 to
12 years.
The draft also contains a passage
promising that the Congolese government will pay three quarters of any
medical costs to "correct hormonal disorders that may result in
homosexuality."
"The bill emanates from the Travailliste
Party's philosophy," Mbikayi explained to Think Africa Press. "In
relation to our culture, homosexuality is an 'anti-value' that comes
from abroad. Already, in our country, seeing a man with a man or a woman
with a woman is considered scandalous. So I promised my base that I
would take care of the issue and penalise homosexuals."
"In the city [Kinshasa], we know gays and
transvestites who are known and accepted by their communities. No-one
would try to attack them," explains Okakessema Olivier Nyamana, a lawyer
from an NGO that works with HIV-positive people. "To me, it seems like
political opportunism."
...
With the next parliamentary session
looming, however, others are more pessimistic. "My fear is that the bill
will pass next week without anyone noticing," says Françoise Mukuku,
the executive director of Si Jeunesse Savait, a feminist organisation
that also advocates for the rights of LGBT people in the DRC.
If the Congolese National Assembly approves the bill, which could
enter into debate as soon as March 15th, it would become the 38th
country in Africa to criminalize homosexuality. Hopefully the activist's
outcries and campaigning will overcome Mbikayi's attempt to sign such
discrimination into law.
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