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Dana Gonzales

Malawian gay couple Tiwonge Chimbalanga and Steven Monjeza have been sentenced to 14 years of hard labour, after a court found them guilty of sodomy, under criminal code provisions originating from the UK, writes L. Muthoni Wanyeki. ‘The law as it stands may criminalise sodomy and whatever the powers determine to be indecent’, writes Wanyeki, but ‘it is not the business of any state to determine how consenting adults derive sexual pleasure.’ What’s more, Wanykei notes, sodomy is not ‘a sexual practice unique to gay men’, and the right to privacy that heterosexuals currently enjoy should apply equally to homosexuals.

Tiwonge Chimbalanga and Steven Monjeza are two Malawians who happen to be gay. The Malawian criminal code, like those in most former British colonies, does not outright criminalise being gay.

But it does contain provisions criminalising sexual behaviour assumed to be uniquely engaged in by gay men – that is, sodomy.

It also contains other, more vague provisions as well such as those relating to indecency. On those two counts – sodomy and indecency – Chimbalanga and Monjeza were sentenced last week by a magistrate’s court to 14 years’ imprisonment with hard labour.

It is a sad irony that criminal code provisions originating from the UK – which has since deleted them – were used to so severely punish people whose sexual orientation is wrongly perceived ‘a Western perversion’. But there are other problems.

First, the law itself. The law as it stands may criminalise sodomy and whatever the powers determine to be indecent. But it is not the business of any state to determine how consenting adults derive sexual pleasure.

The state can only intervene when there is no consent – for example, when those involved are legal minors or when coercion, force or violence is involved.

In such instances everyone’s right to privacy is obviously superseded by everyone’s right to safety and security of the person. The struggle to decriminalise sodomy, for example, is thus at base a larger battle about the limits of the state in regards to the individual.

The state cannot tell any of us what we can or cannot do in our own bedrooms – as long as we are doing it as fully consenting adults.

Second, the law’s execution. The assumption is that sodomy is a sexual practice unique to gay men. This assumption is obviously untrue, if we are honest.

Imagine if the state started forciby to anally examine married women to determine if they and their husbands had engaged in sodomy – whether experimentally or because they had mutually determined they liked doing so as a matter of practice.

Or imagine if, as happened in this particular case, the state lined up a bunch of ‘witnesses’ to testify to their belief that a married couple had, in fact, engaged in sodomy as though they were actually present when the said sodomy occurred.

I do not write to be crude or titillating. I write to make a point; that however conservative we are as a society and however uncomfortable we are talking explicitly about what we actually do in our bedrooms, we would have a problem with both possibilities – being forcibly examined and having people who have no business with what we do comment on it.

And if we would have a problem with these possibilities, we should have a problem with the fact that they are routine realities for Africans who are gay men – leading in this case to a conviction of 14 years with hard labour. This raises yet another right that is violated in the law’s execution; the right to equality, which implies the right to equal treatment by the law.

So, it is obvious that when we speak of the need to respect the human rights of Africans who are gay, we are not speaking of creating new rights – we are speaking about the fact that all existing rights apply to all Africans, including the right to privacy and the right to equality.

In this sense, the judgment of the Malawian magistrate’s court is an absolute outrage. I trust the couple will appeal on constitutional and human rights grounds. And I hope even more that the Malawian state will step in before the appeal.

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* This article first appeared in The East African.
* L. Muthoni Wanyeki is executive director of the Kenya Human Rights Commission.
* Please send comments to [email protected] or comment online at Pambazuka News.