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Gay Men's Bodies Desecrated In Senegal

RUKMINI CALLIMACHI   04/12/10 12:01 AM ET  AP

THIES, Senegal — Even death cannot stop the violence against gays in this corner of the world any more.

Madieye Diallo's body had only been in the ground for a few hours when the mob descended on the weedy cemetery with shovels. They yanked out the corpse, spit on its torso, dragged it away and dumped it in front of the home of his elderly parents.

The scene of May 2, 2009 was filmed on a cell phone and the video sold at the market. It passed from phone to phone, sowing panic among gay men who say they now feel like hunted animals.

"I locked myself inside my room and didn't come out for days," says a 31-year-old gay friend of Diallo's who is ill with HIV. "I'm afraid of what will happen to me after I die. Will my parents be able to bury me?"

A wave of intense homophobia is washing across Africa, where homosexuality is already illegal in at least 37 countries.

In the last year alone, gay men have been arrested in Kenya, Malawi, Sierra Leone and Nigeria. In Uganda, lawmakers are considering a bill that would sentence homosexuals to life in prison and include capital punishment for 'repeat offenders.' And in South Africa, the only country that recognizes gay rights, gangs have carried out so-called "corrective" rapes on lesbians.

"Across many parts of Africa, we've seen a rise in homophobic violence," says London-based gay-rights activist Peter Tatchell, whose organization tracks abuse against gays and lesbians in Africa. "It's been steadily building for the last 10 years but has got markedly worse in the last year."

To the long list of abuse meted out to suspected homosexuals in Africa, Senegal has added a new form of degradation – the desecration of their bodies.

In the past two years, at least four men suspected of being gay have been exhumed by angry mobs in cemeteries in Senegal. The violence is especially shocking because Senegal, unlike other countries in the region, is considered a model of tolerance.

"It's jarring to see this happen in Senegal," says Ryan Thoreson, a fellow at the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission who has been researching the rise of homophobia here. "When something like this happens in an established democracy, it's alarming."

Even though homosexuality is illegal in Senegal, colonial documents indicate the country has long had a clandestine gay community. In many towns, they were tacitly accepted, says Cheikh Ibrahima Niang, a professor of social anthropology at Senegal's largest university. In fact, the visibility of gays in Senegal may have helped to prompt the backlash against them.

The backlash dates back to at least February 2008, when a Senegalese tabloid published photographs of a clandestine gay wedding in a suburb of Dakar, the capital. The wedding was held inside a rented banquet hall and was attended by dozens of gay men, some of whom snapped pictures that included the gay couple exchanging rings and sharing slices of cake.

The day after the tabloid published the photographs, police began rounding up men suspected of being homosexual. Some were beaten in captivity and forced to turn over the names of other gay men, according to research by the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission.

Gays immediately went into hiding and those who could fled to neighboring countries, including Gambia to the south, according to the New York-based commission. Gambia's erratic president declared that gays who had entered his country had 24 hours to leave or face decapitation. Many returned to Senegal, where they lived on the run, moving from safehouse to safehouse.

In March 2008, Senegal hosted an international summit of Muslim nations, which prompted a nationwide crackdown on behaviors deemed un-Islamic, including homosexuality.

The crackdown also coincided with spiraling food prices. Niang says political and religious leaders saw an easy way to reach constituents through the inflammatory topic of homosexuality.

"They found a way to explain the difficulties people are facing as a deviation from religious life," says Niang. "So if people are poor – it's because there are prostitutes in the street. If they don't have enough to eat, it's because there are homosexuals."

Imams began using Friday sermons to preach against homosexuality.

"During the time of the Prophet, anytime two men were found together, they were taken to the top of a mountain and thrown off," says Massamba Diop, the imam of a mosque in Pikine and the head of Jamra, an Islamic lobby linked to a political party in Senegal's parliament.

"If they didn't die when they hit the ground, then rocks would be thrown on them until they were killed," says Diop, whose mosque is so packed during Friday prayer that people bring their own carpets and line up outside on the asphalt.

Sermons like Diop's were carried on the mosque's loudspeakers as well as in Senegal's more than 30 newspapers and magazines.

Around this time, in May 2008, a middle-aged man called Serigne Mbaye fell ill and died in a suburb of Dakar.

His children tried to bury him in his village but were turned back from the cemetery because of widespread rumors that he was gay. His sons drove his body around trying to find a cemetery that would accept him. They were finally forced to bury him on the side of a road, using their own hands to dig a hole, according to media reports.

The grave was too shallow and the wind blew away the dirt. When the decomposing body was later discovered, Mbaye's children were arrested and charged with improperly burying their father.

In the town of Kaolack three months later, residents exhumed the grave of another man believed to be gay. In November 2008, residents in Pikine removed a corpse from a mosque of another suspected homosexual and left it on the side of the road.

The grave-robbing has shocked even hardened gay activists, such as Nigerian Davis Mac-Iyalla.

"People have done horrible things (in Nigeria). I have seen people spit on coffins and people spit on graves," he said. "But it stopped there."

Among the people who appeared in the photograph published from the gay wedding was a young man in his 30s from Thies. He was an activist and a leader of a gay organization called And Ligay, meaning 'Working together,' which he ran out of his parents' house.

He was HIV-positive and on medication.

When the tabloid published the photograph, Diallo went into hiding, according to a close friend who asked not to be named because he too is gay. Unable to go to the doctor, Diallo stopped taking his anti-retrovirals. By the spring of 2009, he was so ill that his family checked him into St. Jean de Dieu, a Catholic hospital in downtown Thies, says the friend.

He was in a coma when he died at 5:50 a.m. on May 2, 2009, according to the hospital's records. Although the hospital has a unit dedicated to treating HIV patients, the young man's family never disclosed his illness, according to the doctor in charge.

Several gay friends tried to see Diallo in the hospital but were told to stay away by his family, says the friend.

When the AP tried to speak to Diallo's elderly father at his shop on the main thoroughfare in Thies, his other children demanded the reporter leave. One sister covered her face and sobbed. Another said, "There are no homosexuals here."

Hours after he died, his family took Diallo's body to a nearby mosque, where custom holds the corpse should be bathed and wrapped in a white cloth. Before the family could bathe him, news reached the mosque that Diallo was gay and they were chased out, says the dead man's friend. His relatives hastily wrapped him in a sheet and headed to the cemetery, where they carried him past the home of Babacar Sene.

"A man that's known as being a homosexual can't be buried in a cemetery. His body needs to be thrown away like trash," says Sene. "His parents knew that he was gay and they did nothing about it. So when he died we wanted to make sure he was punished."

The video footage captured on a cell phone shows what happened next. His thin body was placed inside a narrow trough in the middle of the bald cemetery dotted with clumps of weeds. Then you hear shouting.

The shaky image shows a group of men jerking around the edges of the grave. One of them straddles the pit and shovels away the fine gray dirt until you can see the shrouded body. It's still inside the trough when they tie a rope around its feet.

They yank it out, cheering as the body bends over the lip of the grave. The shroud catches on the ground and tears off, revealing the dead man's torso.

Rassul Djitte, 48, watched from behind the wall of a nearby school. He had not known Diallo personally, but says he felt a stab. "People were rejoicing," he says. "They dragged him past me and his body left tracks in the sand. Like a car passing through snow."

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Elrancho2
Nature boy
06:21 PM on 04/17/2010
And all in the name of religion. It really makes we wonder if there is a God and if there is, what he/she makes of all this hatred done in their name.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
charlot
06:59 AM on 04/16/2010
I couldn't even finish reading this story; it is so upsetting. I will never, ever understand how people can be filled with so much hatred.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mario Trujillo
06:37 PM on 04/16/2010
Its called religion. It gives otherwise decent acting people a means to express themselves in their darkest manner without regrets.
06:36 PM on 04/13/2010
This story was reported by the BBC on May 9, 2009, almost a year ago. Interesting that the Associated Press only picked it up today. I'm glad whoever is pushing this story did not let it die so quietly.
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WoodyCPM
Now what?
12:02 AM on 04/13/2010
I suspect that traditional, nearly all pre-colonial Africans had little or no problem with homosexual behavior. There is little if anything in the anthropological record to indicate cultures outside of the Middle East with active, vigorous homophobic attitudes. The degree of homophobic behavior and beliefs first entered African cultures primarily through colonization by European powers and Christian and Muslim missionaries over the past four hundred years, and is now ramped up in post-colonial Africa by homegrown political regimes playing on religious hatreds, ignorance and fear. Kind of like it's done in the United States.
12:52 AM on 04/13/2010
Yep.
08:30 AM on 04/13/2010
I do not know if anyone knows of a group called "The Family" but they are the ones who are encouraging these laws. "The Family" knows that it would be impossible to enact these types of laws in America so they have set their sights on Africa and other developing countries.

They seem like a pretty scary bunch.

For more information on these people read the following articles.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fellowship_%28Christian_organization%29

http://www.alternet.org/blogs/reproductivejustice
10:46 PM on 04/12/2010
It is amazing and a deeply depraved kind of hate that would make someone did up a dead body to punish it further. I would call them animals, but I love animals and animals are far more noble than that. to do this out of hate? what can cause someone to be that horrible? I would like to hear from a professional psychologist to get an answer...honestly how low can any human actually go?this has to be the worst case of insane ugliness I have ever heard of. what is wrong with these people???
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canuckdjs
Logically enlightened
07:50 PM on 04/12/2010
As long as education is denied, or generally unavailable in these parts of the world, religious fanatics from all walks will continue to impose their will upon the ignorant. These people committing these sinister acts are not fully functioning humans - they are brainwashed to the point where fantasy and reality are indistinguishable. It will take generations, but the path to enlightenment runs through the library, not the mosque, temple or church.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
05:14 PM on 04/12/2010
Opression of Women, The vilification of the LGBT Community, it's the Jews. There is always a convenient "other" for the focus of Hate and these Islamic, Judeo-Christian Cults of Jesus are Hate organizations as demonstrated from the Catholic Cults of Jesus, Evangelical and LDS/Mormons spending $42 million on hate pogroms here in the USA last year. Their world wide reach with creatures from the C-Street Family, The Rick Warrens and Salt Lake Cities just amplify the hate.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Veniidiici
03:30 PM on 04/12/2010
At first religion targeted Jews and not it's the turn fo the LGBTQ community.
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DCCommuter
03:09 PM on 04/12/2010
People target "others" (gays, minorities, etc.) because then that diverts from the wrong things they are doing in their own life.
I heard a guy say the world is experiencing disasters (God's wrath) because of gay marriage. Yet he said nothing about fornication, adultery, drug use, alcoholism, out of wedlock children....
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anothervoice
How many trees have you planted in your life?
03:43 PM on 04/12/2010
...climate change, global economic collapse, racism, sexism, class-ism, despotism, tyranny,....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kudzumaster
People are more than political affiliation.
10:49 PM on 04/15/2010
Envy, sloth, pride, vanity, greed...
02:31 PM on 04/12/2010
Hey Huff Po! How about some stories on gay persecution in the Middle East, Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia, the US, or Europe? Oh that's right, bad things only happen in Africa.
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02:53 PM on 04/12/2010
The reason that Africa has made the news on this a lot lately is because of African leaders like Mugabe making homophobia a major political point and a democratic state like Uganda has considered a death penalty for gays.

A figure no less than Bishop Desmond Tutu has chastised Africa for its bizarre, counterproductive obsession with homosexuality. Bottom line: Africa has puts itself in the news. Don't like it? Fight homophobia there.
03:45 PM on 04/12/2010
Homosexuality is illegal in more than 80 countries.

Hatred and homophobia are not the sole domain of sub-saharan Africa. How many of these stories have you heard about?

Homophobic incidents in past 5 years:

AUSTRALIA
• On December 3, 2007, Craig Gee was attacked by four men whilst holding his boyfriend's hand walking down Crown Street in Surry Hills, Sydney, Australia. Part of his skull was reduced to powder and his leg was broken during the attack.

BRAZIL
â–ª In September 2007, Osvan Inacio dos Santos, 19, was attacked and murdered in a street near a bar where he had just won the local "Miss Gay" competition in the town of Batingas in northeast Brazil. dos Santos' naked body was found on Sunday morning and forensic examination found his skull had been fractured and indicated sexual assault.
â–ª In February 2008, Brazilian gay rights activist Alexandre Peixe dos Santos was attacked and beaten at the Sao Paulo's Gay Pride Association offices in Brazil.
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goddessNdiva
Internet surfer extraordinaire.
04:08 PM on 04/12/2010
Oh Please....America won't even let their gays marry. Till you give your gays the same rights as your other citizens, YOU ARE in no position to judge others.

Bottom line, fight your homophobes first.
10:48 PM on 04/12/2010
Its not a contest. Its just a news story. lighten up
06:41 AM on 04/13/2010
You obviously missed my point.
06:44 AM on 04/13/2010
Bingo. Fanned.
02:06 PM on 04/12/2010
my god that gets me mad
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Steamboater
Forget hope. Agitate.
01:54 PM on 04/12/2010
This isn't just about homphobia in a sense because it' sabout the ignorance about HIV and AIDS in Africa, a continent devatsed with it and mainly a disease predominant with heterosexuals. Either no one's listening there because a lot of effforts have been made to educate them, or everyone's looking to still scapegoat Gay men.
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samthor
Infinite diversity in infinite combinations
01:46 PM on 04/12/2010
just when i thought humanity couldn't sink lower...
Its a real shame that all of this is extreme acts of hate comes from religious teachings... is what they mean when they say, "you will know them by their fruits"
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etiennemacchias
Thinking is anathema to religion.
12:29 PM on 04/12/2010
I don't understand the originating sentiments of homophobia. What's the purpose or motivation? Will someone walk me through this quandary?
12:49 PM on 04/12/2010
All hatred is based on weakness and ignorance, most of it caused by religion.
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etiennemacchias
Thinking is anathema to religion.
02:22 PM on 04/12/2010
How baseless; that is a real shame for all humanity.
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jones
Dances with Weims
12:09 PM on 04/12/2010
I think the Koran dictates that followers of Islam s/b tolerant of all beings but I guess ppl can twist its instructions in any way that profits them.
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anothervoice
How many trees have you planted in your life?
03:45 PM on 04/12/2010
As does the Bible and probably the Torah.

Not too sure what Buddha had to say, but I suspect he was a lot more tolerant.