Ivory Coast’s shameful silence after anti-gay attacks
Colin Stewart is a 45-year journalism veteran living in Southern…
Human rights consultant Jean Marc Yao analyzes the shameful silence of Ivory Coast’s non-governmental organizations in the wake of multiple attacks in January by an anti-gay mob that shut down the headquarters of the LGBT-friendly anti-AIDS group Alternative CI. Published in English and in French.
Attack on the headquarters of Alternative Côte d’Ivoire:
Why has Ivorian civil society not spoken up?
By JEAN MARC YAO
Following the recent attacks on the headquarters of Alternative Côte d’Ivoire — the local non-governmental organization that fights against AIDS in local LGBT communities — you would expect that local human rights organizations and other members of Ivorian civil society would unanimously condemn this assault on freedom.
But no. The executive director of Alternative Côte d’Ivoire said he was contacted by the president of a coalition of Ivory Coast’s human rights advocates, but no public statement followed this contact. No NGO and no leader of the nation’s civil society stepped forth to publicly condemn this brutal attack .
This is a striking contrast to the strong reactions that came after the attack on the headquarters of the Ivorian League of Human Rights (LIDHO ) on May 21, 2007. An outburst of sharp, biting public criticisms followed that attack, which was exactly like the attacks on Alternative Côte d’Ivoire. In 2007, when LIDHO’s chief executive went to the scene to inspect the damage, the NGO was greeted with sympathetic words from the state about the disaster..
Why such a double standard? Why have we heard nothing from anyone when Alternative Côte d’Ivoire suffered an attack of the same kind? Doesn’t this show that anti-LGBT discrimination is at the heart of Ivorian civil society?
In fact, because it works to help LGBT people, Alternative Côte d’ Ivoire is a pariah in Ivorian civil society. On a national level, its bitter experience mirrors what sexual minorities experience daily in this country: ostracism, stigmatization , marginalization, discrimination , etc.
Yet the principle of non-discrimination is the foundation of human rights. By ignoring this principle, are not NGOs that work to defend human rights in Ivory Coast revealing that they do not consider Alternative CI to be one of them, that they do not think that LGBT people are not humans who deserve same human rights as others?
Isn’t this silence from civil society a form of complicity with the anti-gay mob?
In fact , it seems as though Ivorian civil society is pleased with the misfortunes of the association led by Touré Claver. Here and there, one can hear approving comments such as “That was well done” and “They got what they deserved.”
It’s easy to see that in Ivory Coast, Alternative CI cannot count on many people defending the right of LGBT people to live in peace.
It’s not just our legislators and ordinary citizens who need to be sensitized to the importance of LGBT rights and tolerance of a diversity of sexual orientation. Civil society needs that too.
Ivory Coast resident Jean Marc Yao is a human rights defender who works at the Interafrican Association for the Promotion of Health and Human Rights (IPSDH). He is an anthropologist with a Ph.D. in philosophy, a member of the Ivorian League of Human Rights (LIDHO) and a consultant at the Association of Midwives of Côte d’Ivoire (ASF-CI) and at Alternative Côte d’Ivoire.
Related articles
- Ivory Coast: Activists under attack by anti-gay mobs (Jan. 24, 2014, 76crimes.com)
- Ivory Coast: Seeking help for LGBT activists under attack (Jan. 24, 2014, 76crimes.com)
- Anti-gay Ivory Coast attack sends guard to hospital (Jan. 25, 2014, 76crimes.com)
- Anti-gay attacks disrupt AIDS efforts in Ivory Coast (Jan. 29, 2014, 76crimes.com)
- Police block anti-gay violence in Senegal (Feb. 3, 2014, 76crimes.com)
- Global conflict: Gay rights, repression in Africa (Feb. 6, 2014, 76crimes.com)
- Commentary: Violence, hypocrisy imperil LGBT people in Ivory Coast (Feb. 10, 2014, 76crimes.com)
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