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Sunday, January 19, 2014

I Don't Like Cameroon





Gay 'prisoner of conscience' dies in Cameroon


Associated Press

In this July 2012 photo, Roger Jean-Claude Mbede poses for a picture in the home of a friend where he had sought refuge, in Yaounde, Cameroon. Mbede, a gay man who was jailed for sending a text message to another man saying 'I'm very much in love with you,' and who was later declared a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International, died on Friday after his family removed him from the hospital where he had been seeking treatment for a hernia, lawyer Alice Nkom said. 'His family said he was a curse for them and that we should let him die,' she said. (AP Photo/Anne Mireille Nzouankeu)
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In this July 2012 photo, Roger Jean-Claude Mbede poses for a picture in the home of a friend where he …
YAOUNDE, Cameroon (AP) — A gay man in Cameroon who was jailed for sending a text message to another man saying "I'm very much in love with you," and who was later declared a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International, has died, according to a lawyer who worked on his case.

Roger Jean-Claude Mbede, 34, died Friday roughly one month after his family removed him from the hospital where he had been seeking treatment for a hernia, lawyer Alice Nkom said.
"His family said he was a curse for them and that we should let him die," she said.
Mbede was arrested in March 2011 in connection with the text message and convicted the following month under a Cameroonian law that imposes up to five years in prison for homosexual acts. He received a three-year sentence.
Cameroon brings more cases against suspected gays than any other African country, according to Human Rights Watch. The rights group said in a March 2013 report that at least 28 people had been charged under the law in the past three years.
Mbede developed the hernia while in prison. In July 2012, he was granted provisional release on medical grounds, according to Human Rights Watch, and went into hiding. An appeals court upheld his conviction in December 2012.
"I accuse the state," said Nkom, the most prominent of a small group of lawyers in Cameroon willing to defend suspects charged with violating Cameroon's anti-gay law. "If there had not been criminalization of homosexuality, he would not have gone to prison and his life would not be over. His life was finished as soon as he went to prison."
Cameroonian officials have been unapologetic about their enforcement of the anti-gay law, and have rejected recommendations from the U.N. Human Rights Council to protect sexual minorities from violence. Appearing before the council in September 2013, Anatole Nkou, Cameroon's ambassador to Geneva, testified that a prominent gay rights activist found tortured and killed last year died because of his "personal life," prompting outcry from international rights groups.
Lambert Lamba, a Cameroonian activist who works on behalf of sexual minorities, said Mbede had been out of the hospital for about one month prior to his death and had received no medical care during that time.
"His family said they were going to remove the homosexuality which is in him," Lamba said. "I went to see him in his village. He could not stand up, he couldn't speak."
Neela Ghoshal, senior LGBT rights researcher for Human Rights Watch, called on Cameroonian police to investigate Mbede's death in light of reports that he may have been barred from receiving medical treatment.
"Roger was a courageous man who became an accidental activist after he was arrested simply for expressing his love for another man," Ghoshal said.
Alexandre Marcel, president of the French committee for the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia, condemned the family's actions in a statement, saying they were a reminder that sexual minorities must fight prejudice at both the family and state levels in anti-gay countries around the world.
Also on Friday, six men in neighboring Gabon were released after being accused of taking part in a same-sex marriage ceremony last month. Officials who held them for one night decided not to bring charges against them after determining that no marriage had occurred, said prosecutor Sidonie Flore Ouwe.
Gabon is one of 11 countries in sub-Saharan Africa that have not criminalized homosexual acts, according to Amnesty International. However, Ouwe said that a gay marriage ceremony would constitute obscenity and an affront to public order punishable by law.
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Associated Press writers Yves Laurent Goma in Libreville, Gabon and Robbie Corey-Boulet in Dakar, Senegal contributed to this report.

2,844 CommentsMy Comments

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  • Charles Stork 2 minutes ago
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    The LBGT community fails to realize that I do not have to accept their life style or anyone elses for that matter. But I should be tolerant......there is a big difference..I am sorry but in his country he knowingly broke the law and was sentenced accordingly. We do not have the authority to dictate to another sovereign nation what laws they are allowed to have or how they enforce them and yet we try to do it all the time. As with the caning issue in Singapore a few years back.
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  • JJW 4 minutes ago
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    To most of the people who are anti-gay, you are hateful and ignorant people. You have distain for people you have never met. Consider that maybe you are not so perfect and you should tend to your own life and not concern yourself with,of all ridiculous things, what another person is doing with his penis. If you think it is against your religion, then let your god be the judge. Remember that you are not God and have no right to judge or condemn people. So live and let live.
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  • Gregory 3 minutes ago
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    We shouldn't be killing them or locking them up or doing anything to them because they are #$%$. People who are interested in all should never be treated this way. No religion says we should be so mean to these people. They are not trying to violently take over our religion so why should we be so mean to them. Just let them be. We cannot rule the world by brutally punishing all of those who are not really who we want them to be.
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  • LisaD 5 minutes ago
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    I can think of plenty of worse things people can be than homosexual.
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  • Ade 3 minutes ago
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    Africa is still in the Dark Ages, man.
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  • tomf 13 minutes ago
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    "In July 2012, he was granted provisional release on medical grounds"

    so the prisoner was released over 18 months ago, why is he still called a prisoner?

    here is the head line yahoo missed.

    {Roger Jean-Claude Mbede, 34, died Friday}

    the homosexual propagandist will use anyone an any thing to keep this homosexual propaganda in the news.

    Matthew shepherded was a big propaganda marketing smear campaign, making his death out to be something it wasn't just like the guy who in a village somewhere in Africa died!

    move on people there still is nothing here to see, hear or say!
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  • Krista 2 minutes ago
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    Dear gays everywhere - on behalf of all the rest of us, I am sorry for the hate filled comments on this board from the so called Christians. We do not all feel that way, I believe Jesus loves you just as you are. IF homosexuality is in fact a sin, well He died for your sins just the same as He died for mine. Also, the kind of hate these so called Christians are spewing, that does NOT come from God. I just wanted to say that we are not all knuckle dragging, hate filled idiots.
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  • Miriam 33 minutes ago
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    While reading all of these hateful comments, it struck me that no one felt sorry for a 38 year old man who went to prison for telling another man he loved him. I choose to forget about all of the hatred thrown this poor man's way and just grieve for the loss of another human being who did nothing but send a text. His dying is wrong, just wrong and isn't that enough said? If not, then why not?
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  • denise r 4 hours ago
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    USA is not perfect--but I'd rather live here than some of the other parts of the world.
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  • Mr. Wheel 37 minutes ago
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    Ah, the modern demographic trap for the developing world. Import 1st World medicine and aid to keep more people alive, but fail to educate them both to use birth control and provide them a means to support themselves.

    This is profitable for those in the " Peace Keeping and Aid Industry " and yes " Peace Keeping and Aid " is a for profit industry !

    Africa's own self inflicted misery is being used for the profit of others !

    Reality does not cease to exist just because it is ignored !
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