Fear breeds bravery as LGBT+ S.Africans resist ‘war on queerness’

 | 
5/13/21

Three months ago, Chippa Mohanoe’s fiancée was stabbed in the neck and killed in front of their neighbours in South Africa’s Sebokeng township. Every day since, Mohanoe had to push past his fear of a repeat punishment for being transgender, hoping a high profile will stifle the homophobia that he says killed his fiancée and at least seven other LGBT+ South Africans in recent months. Fear is making him brave. “I am still here and I don’t want to hide, I will make sure the justice system upholds her memory,” Mohanoe said outside court after the man accused of her murder was denied bail. Mohanoe, who is 30, said his fiancée, Bonang Gaelae, was stabbed because people thought she was a lesbian. Now friends and LGBT+ allies are massing in public: a vital show of defiance against the spate of hate crime. Despite living in the first African country to legalise same-sex marriage – back in 2006 – and under a constitution that guards against discrimination based on sexual orientation, LGBT+ people say they fear for their lives every single day. All the recent murders – at least eight known to LGBT+ groups since mid-February – happened in townships, where activists say there is less policing and dense housing that makes it harder to hide away. Yet activists refuse to lie low. Spurred by the killings, they are gathering online, massing at courts, police stations and victims’ homes to offer the support they say their government has failed to give. Most hate crimes cases go undetected, according to the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development, because witnesses are reluctant to come forward. “This is a crisis, and it is worse than we thought, it is a war on queerness,” said Kamva Gwana, 23, an organiser from the online LGBT+ movement Queer Lives Matter. “We demand the rights given by our constitution,” Gwana told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.

Regions: ,

Share this:

Latest Global News

Added on: 04/24/2024
04/23/2024
Wales has become the latest UK nation to pause the use of puberty blockers by under-18s. The physically reversible hormone blockers, which suppress unwanted …
Added on: 04/24/2024
04/24/2024
Over the weekend in Japan, 15,000 people took part in the 2024 Tokyo Rainbow Pride parade, one of the biggest LGBTQIA+ events in Southeast …
Added on: 04/24/2024
04/23/2024
Not-for-profit Qtopia has applied to permanently transform a former police station into the Sydney Centre for Queer History and Culture. Along with Create NSW—the …

Explore LGBTQ+ Issues

Other News from ,

Added on: 04/20/2024
The airwaves buzz with a new and exciting podcast called ‘LivenInspirewithMathabatha’ hosted by an advocate for the LBGTQ+ community Mathabatha Joba every Wednesday from …
Added on: 04/19/2024
Burundi’s president said gay people should be stoned, amid a larger crackdown on the LGBTQ community in the East African country. “If you want to …
Added on: 04/19/2024
ACCRA (Reuters) – Members of Ghana’s LGBT community and activists are waiting to see whether the West African country’s president will sign into law …