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- Title
Homosexuality in Cameroon.
- Authors
Nywa Nfobin, E. H.
- Abstract
Should society be protected against homosexuality? To an overwhelming number of Cameroonians, the answer is too obvious for the question of its criminalization, for a little more than four decades, to be revisited. Far beyond questioning the law, it invokes the Spirit of Evil and this is even what creates the abomination. This reasoning would have permitted us to look the other way while the repression of gay people in the country completes its course, if at all the practice could ever be stamped out. But there is a perceptible hardening of resolve within the Cameroonian gay community not to cringe further, the advance of democracy and the heroism of their kind elsewhere in the world being encouraging factors. They boldly demand social rehabilitation and more interestingly are taking their fight into the legal arena where they were thought for decades to be shut out from, even arguing that their non-conforming sexual orientation is a constitutional right. The Cameroonian leadership is exhibiting hints of fatigue as regards a repression that seems to be backfiring. It is apparently weighing its options and biding its time. This article examines the arguments of the forces involved in the stalemate and strives to provide information that may be of help at this defining moment.
- Subjects
CAMEROON; HOMOSEXUALITY; SEXUAL orientation; HOMOPHOBIA; RELIGIOUS life of gay people; RELIGIOUS life of LGBTQ+ people; SOCIAL history
- Publication
International Journal on Minority & Group Rights, 2014, Vol 21, Issue 1, p72
- ISSN
1385-4879
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1163/15718115-02101004