Any person in
Kenya can now be legally tortured in order to find out if they are gay.
The
High Court has ruled ‘anal probe torture’ is legal and is a ‘reasonable’ way to
prove the crime of homosexuality today (16 June).
Mathew
Emukule, the Mombasa High Court judge, denied there was any right violated
under the Kenyan constitution and international law and dismissed the case.’I
find no violation of human dignity, right to privacy and right to freedom of
the petitioners,’ he said.
Two
men had sought a court ruling to stop these tests for homosexuality after they
were arrested in February 2015 on suspicion of engaging in gay sex. If
convicted, they could face 14 years in jail.
These ‘tests’
involve examining someone’s anus to see if they had been penetrated, check for
traces of sperm and taking a picture to ‘study’ the shape of the hole. If it is
wider, the more ‘likely’ the person has engaged in gay sex, according to the
widely discredited test from the 19th century.
Forbidden under
international law, they are widely known across Africa as the ‘tests of shame’.
And now human
rights activists have said if a person is suspected of being gay someone can
call the police, and that person can be arrested. If they refuse to submit to
the torture, the court has ruled it is legal to force the torture on them and
then charge them with suspicion of ‘unnatural’ sex.
‘I was absolutely
devastated and shocked. It was very unexpected. I had presumed, with faith and
belief, the High Court would deliver a very robust upholding of the
constitution,’ Eric Gitari, director of the National Gay and Lesbian Human
Rights Commission, told Gay Star News.
‘Today we filed
our notice of appeal. We’re hoping for a just and fair judgement.’
Gitari accused
the judge of being ‘deliberately homophobic’ and was abusing his judicial
powers to express his personal opinion. In Emukule’s ruling, he gave a long
rant about how the food is processed by the human body. He proclaimed the
‘mouth and the anus are not sexual organs’ and compared ‘sodomists’ to dogs.
It was a major
surprise as the court date was postponed due to the shootings in Orlando.
‘Right now if
anyone is rumored to be gay, anyone can inform the police and that person can
be forced to be anally tested. If they refuse to go to anal testing, then they
will be forced,’ Gitari told GSN.
‘Every person who
is believed to be gay is vulnerable to blackmail and extortion. It’s an open
field for discrimination.’
He added: ‘We
thought he’d be compassionate but he just went ahead. This is confirming to the
country to treat gay people as less than human.’ (gaystarnews.com, 16/6/2016)
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