• Re: Nigerian Police Jail 5 Gay Men as Anti-LGBTQ+ Purge Continues

    From Lock The FAGGOTS UP Like We Did The@21:1/5 to governor.swill@gmail.com on Sun Jul 17 08:57:05 2022
    XPost: alt.abortion, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.hollywood
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <XnsACB8718F967A9abb2ga@95.216.243.224>
    governor.swill@gmail.com wrote:

    There is a need for education to eliminate homosexual pedophiles.


    Nigerian authorities reportedly arrested 5 men over the weekend
    after they were accused of being gay. The detentions follow a
    worsening trend of anti-LGBTQ+ violence by police.

    The men were arrested on Sunday in Kano, Nigeria’s second
    largest city, by the State Hisbah Board, an Islamic police unit
    established by the local government. Few details were publicized
    about the circumstances leading up to the incident. But Dr.
    Harun Ibn-Sina, the board’s commander general, said the police’s
    actions followed reports of unspecified activity from residents
    in the area, according to Nigerian news site Vanguard.

    Ibn-Sina claimed the suspects would be charged in court but did
    not set forth a date as to when a trial would take place. He
    allegedly urged young people, who he called the “leaders of
    tomorrow,” to “shun unwholesome practices” like homosexuality.

    Kano’s Islamic police force has made similar arrests in the
    past. In January 2020, the Hisbah unit rounded up 15 people
    alleged to be gay at a party hosted by college graduates,
    according to the website Punch Nigeria. At the time, authorities
    announced that arrestees would be taken to a “correctional
    center” to be “re-oriented,” likely referring to the harmful and
    discredited practice of conversion therapy.

    Under the Nigerian criminal code, individuals detained over
    accusations of being gay face potential imprisonment of up to 14
    years. While LGBTQ+ Nigerians have historically been
    criminalized under colonial-era prohibitions of gay sex, the
    situation has grown more tenuous over the past several decades.

    In 2013, Nigeria strenghtened its ban on homosexuality with the
    passage of the Same-Sex Marriage Prohibition Act (SSMPA). While
    the law’s name suggests that it only relates to marriage
    equality, its scope is actually much more broad. According to
    Human Rights Watch (HRW), the legislation bars gay couples from
    cohabitating and prohibits any kind of “public show of same sex
    amorous relationship.” It also forbids LGBTQ+ organizations from
    operating openly in the country.

    Police violence directed at Nigeria’s LGBTQ+ community has
    dramatically increased in the 8 years since the law was enacted,
    according to reports.

    In 2018, at least 47 people accused of being gay were arrested
    after police raided a birthday party and alleged that attendees
    had engaged in “homosexual initiation.” Although a judge
    ultimately released the men last year, their case was dropped
    due to a lack of responsiveness from the prosecution instead of
    a full acquittal. That means those charged could be rearrested
    at any time under the same allegations.

    Many of the men told Reuters that the two years of fighting the
    case had taken its toll — ostracized from their homes and
    communities. “Everyone in the area knew about it,” said 23-year-
    old Chris Agiriga. “I lost my job, I lost my family, I lost a
    lot of my friends — all because of this.”

    Persecution of LGBTQ+ Nigerians has particularly escalated under
    the presidency of anti-gay leader Muhammadu Buhari, according to
    the Initiative for Equal Rights (TIER), a human rights group
    based in the country. According to a 2020 report, there had been
    a total of 482 human rights violations over the past year —
    despite low reporting rates among trans people, intersex
    individuals, and women.

    Anti-LGBTQ+ violence also reportedly spiked due to COVID-19
    restrictions, which kept vulnerable populations trapped at home
    with potential abusers. Additionally, police ramped up
    entrapments of gay men — faking their sexual orientations to
    lure victims into a situation where they can be caught and
    arrested.

    According to global review by the global LGBTQ+ rights group
    ILGA in 2020, homosexuality is legal in just 22 of Africa's 54
    countries. As is the case in Nigeria, anti-gay criminal codes
    are often remnants of colonization.

    "gay" is a personal choice.

    Don't make bad choices.

    https://www.them.us/story/nigerian-police-arrest-gay-men-lgbtq-
    persecution

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