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Anti-Gay Demonstrations Across Mombasa Leaves LGBTQ Community With Fear

Anti-Gay Demonstrations Across Mombasa Leaves LGBTQ Community With Fear
LGBTQ
LGBTQ
LGBTQ

The LGBTQ community in Mombasa is living in fear following the announcement of anti-gay demonstrations across Mombasa, Lamu, and Nairobi on Friday.

Already, more than 80 people have left Mombasa, fearing for their lives, according to some of the members.

SK, an LGBTQ community member in Mombasa, on Thursday, said his life was in danger.

“Since the start of the protests following that Supreme Court judgment, I have not been feeling safe,” SK said.

He said he was born gay and not seduced or indoctrinated.

Experts say there is no single gene responsible for a person being gay or a lesbian.

According to a study by ‘Science’, an American magazine, human DNA cannot predict who is gay or heterosexual.

SK on Thursday said his friends have escaped to other counties including Kisumu, Kiambu, Kericho, and Makueni, among others.

“I cannot sleep in my house for the next three to four days. I have already been threatened by people I do not know. They call us bedbugs,” SK said.

“We were told there would be protests last Friday but they did not happen. Now we are told tomorrow there is another one and this one feels real because even my friends have left Mombasa,” SK said.

He said he has not reported to the police because previous attempts were unsuccessful.

Concerned Citizens Kenya executive director Bradley Ouna said since the Supreme Court judgment that allowed the LGBTQ community to form an association, a number of attacks have taken place in Mombasa.

“There is tension among the gay community because of the planned demonstrations on Friday. We don’t know what will happen to them,” Ouna said.

Some have shifted residences, some have moved out of the city, and some try to appear as ‘straight’ as possible and avoid gay bars and hangouts.

Already, Ouna said, they have received more than 10 cases of threats to the security and lives of LGBTQ community members since the Supreme Court judgment, which allowed them to form an association.

“If the government does not protect these people, we will end up having dead bodies,” Ouna said.

The Kenyan Penal Code does not criminalize homosexuality, only homosexual acts, even between consenting adults in private.

However, Anti-LGBTQ Movement chairman Salim Karama on Thursday told the Star the fear of attacks by LGBTQ community members is unfounded.

Karama said no one will be attacked in Friday’s anti-gay protests planned for Mombasa, Lamu and Nairobi under his umbrella.

He said Friday’s demonstrations will involve three groups led by religious leaders from all religions, including Muslims, Christians, Hindus, and the Bohora.

They will begin after the Jumaa prayers.

In Mombasa, three different groups will march from three different zones and converge at Makadara ground, behind GPO.

One group from the Majengo zone will gather at Sakina Mosque, from where they will make their way to Makadara ground.

The second group will gather at the mosque behind the Fayaza bakery in the Kilifi stage near Alidina Visram High School.

The third group will meet at Naivas Likoni and march to Makadara ground.

“It is better for them to come out and condemn the actions and return to the religious ways and the African cultures,” Karama said.