Reports say a man has been sentenced to nine years
in jail for breaking Cameroon’s laws against homosexuality – even though
the country’s penal code stipulates a maximum sentence of five years
for those found guilty of same-sex sexual acts.
LGBT campaign blog
Erasing 76 Crimes,
which charts 76 countries with anti-gay laws, said last Wednesday a
35-year-old man named Cornelius Fonya in the coastal city of Limbe was
sentenced to nine years imprisonment.
Erasing 76 quotes LGBT activists from CAMEF, the Cameroon Empowerment
Association for Outreach Programmes in Limbe, as saying that the
defendant had been accused of same-sex relations with a boy of 14 – but
that it was later proven that the youth was 19-years-old, and legally an
adult.
CAMEF say the judge presiding over the case had been accused of
letting the original charge stand, and that the younger man and his
family, who reportedly made the accusation, never appeared in court and
never testified against Mr Fonya.
It’s claimed Mr Fonya has been held in custody since 29 October 2012,
after being seized by a mob and hauled to a police station.
Even though he posted bail, CAMEF said the judge refused.
CAMEF said: “The legal system in Cameroon has proven once more the
homophobic context in which we are currently living in, where it is
enough for one to get imprisoned for his or her perceived or actual
sexual preferences.
“We need to do something so as to put an end to this continuous human
rights violation suffered by members of the LGBT community here in
Cameroon.”
It added: “CAMEF has been working hand in hand with barrister Walter
Atoh, who is actually on this case so together we can put an end to this
present situation. We hope together with your support, we can do
something for Cornelius.”
In July,
prominent
Cameroonian gay rights and HIV campaigner Eric Ohena Lembembe was
brutally murdered in his home, just days after speaking out against
increasing violence against the country’s LGBT community.
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