http://sciencespeaksblog.org/2013/07/24/murdered-gay-rightshiv-advocate-and-journalist-documented-deadly-conditions/

Murdered gay rights/HIV advocate and journalist documented deadly conditions

By Antigone Barton <http://sciencespeaksblog.org/author/antigone-barton/>
 on July 24, 
2013<http://sciencespeaksblog.org/2013/07/24/murdered-gay-rightshiv-advocate-and-journalist-documented-deadly-conditions/>
.
[image: Eric O 
Lembembe]<http://sciencespeaksblog.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Eric-O-Lembembe.jpg>

Eric O Lembembe
photo courtesy of Colin E. Stewart, 76 Crimes

*At the end of a Senate briefing last
week<http://sciencespeaksblog.org/2013/07/18/hiv-briefing-panelists-science-yielded-answers-now-is-the-time-to-intensify-expand-and-speed-their-use/>
offering
updates on science’s strides against HIV and AIDS worldwide, Dr. Chris
Beyrer of John Hopkins University, and president-elect of the International
AIDS Society offered a sobering counterpoint to the news of encouraging
advances. “We’re not really there yet, for a group of people who are
sometimes called ‘key populations,’ sometimes called ‘MARPs’ . . .” Noting
that group includes gay men and other sexual minorities, Beyrer added that
in recent years, movements to fight homophobic laws and neglect that
interfere with access to health services have swept Africa in increasing
numbers but that activism comes at a cost and requires great courage. Just
three days earlier, Beyrer pointed out, one such activist, Cameroonian HIV
treatment advocate and journalist Eric Ohena Lembembe had been found beaten
and tortured to death in his home.*

With seven people in prison, and 15 awaiting trial on homosexuality related
criminal charges, Cameroon leads the world in reported arrests and
prosecutions springing from antigay laws, according to the book *From
Wrongs to Gay Rights: Cruelty and change for LGBT people in an uncertain
world<http://www.amazon.com/Wrongs-Gay-Rights-uncertain-ebook/dp/B00BTMRBYQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1374591386&sr=1-1&keywords=from+wrongs+to+gay+rights>
* to which Lembembe was a contributing author.

That doesn’t mean that Cameroon is necessarily the site of more antigay
arrests and prosecutions; it is likely that many more occur in countries
where records and reporting are rigidly restricted, the book’s lead author
Colin E. Stewart points out. Reporting on persecutions of sexual minorities
was one of the roles Lembembe played in confronting barriers standing
between gay Cameroonians and HIV services.

Stewart, a retired longtime columnist and editor for the *Orange County
Register*, launched 76 Crimes <http://76crimes.com/>, a blog examining, as
it says, “The human toll of 76 countries’ anti-gay laws, The struggle to
repeal them,” a little more than a year ago, and was referred to Lembembe
shortly after. In addition to his career as a professional journalist,
Lembembe at the time was communications director
forCAMFAIDS<http://www.aidsmap.com/org/bdfb9740-5c21-4fd5-868a-483c457f5bfc/page/1411896/>,
the Cameroonian Foundation for AIDS, a human rights advocacy and peer
education organization.

*“Knowing historical truths lets us avoid unhistorical lies  . . .”*

Lembembe’s first post for the blog appeared in May 2012. The post, What
traditional African homosexuality learned from the
West<http://76crimes.com/2012/05/08/traditional-african-homosexuality-has-learned-from-west/>,
an interview with anthropologist Patrick Awondo, who said “knowing
historical truths lets us avoid unhistorical lies,” discussed the cultural
history of same sex sexual relationships, and their acceptance, across the
continent.

Over the year that followed, Lembembe wrote with increasing frequency for
the blog, about the death from malaria of Cameroonian journalist and gay
rights advocate Stephane Tchakam, about a growing number of gay rights
advocacy efforts in Cameroon, about pressures on government, from both
within and outside of the country to address persecution of gay
Cameroonians<http://76crimes.com/2012/12/27/pressure-on-cameroon-leader-to-halt-human-rights-abuses/>.
The latter post cited an October Human Rights Watch report that included
among its findings, “Human rights violations targeting lesbian, gay,
bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people in Cameroon extend beyond the
threat of criminal prosecution. Police abuse against LGBT people is rife,
with documented cases of police beatings that rise to the level of
torture.” The report had been submitted to the United Nations Human Rights
Council, Lembembe wrote. In the post, he cited one more impact of
Cameroon’s homophobic environment: “Another argument for decriminalization
of homosexuality in Cameroon is that the anti-homosexuality law obstructs
the work of associations fighting against HIV/AIDS among men who have sex
with men.”

*Responses to “MARPs”*

With more than five percent of its people living with HIV, Cameroon’s
epidemic is among the worst in West and Central Africa, according to the
overview for the President’s Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief 2012 Country
Operating Plan, “Pockets” of higher prevalence exist among specific
populations, including, at 24 percent, a rate nearly five times that of the
general population among men who have sex with men in Doula, the country’s
largest city, and a rate nearly doubling*that *– 44 percent — in the
nation’s capital, the overview says. Among the four focus points of
PEPFAR’s “vision” for the next two years, according to the plan was
“Prevention of sexual transmission activites focused on reducing HIV
incidence in MARPS [Most At Risk Populations]” which the plan said include
“CSW’s [Commercial Sex Workers] as well as MSM, Among the ways to achieve
that, the plan says, would be signing agreements with “MARP-friendly”
clinics. In a podcast discussing USAID’s support for Cameroon’s health
system, the agency’s country coordinator cited “increasing access to high
quality prevention services to Most-At-Risk-Populations (MARPs) and
promoting behavior change.” That year, the civil society organization
Cameroon National Association for Family Welfare received a $1.4 million
grant from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,
targeting prevention of mother to child transmission, care for people
living with HIV and AIDS, and “prevention among most at risk populations in
Cameroon,” Among the indicators listed for the grant’s performance: “number
of condoms distributed to sex workers, men having sexual intercourse with
men and lorry/truck drivers”  and “number of MARP peer educators trained
and who are active on the ground.”

*“They shall surely be put to death”*

In the meantime, Lembembe continued to document conditions on the ground.

“In Cameroon, the topic of homosexuality is no longer taboo,” he wrote,
with some irony, on March 5, in a post headlined: In Cameroon anti-gay
voices grow 
louder<http://76crimes.com/2013/03/05/in-cameroon-anti-gay-voices-grow-louder/>.
He described a backlash to a Jan. 24 Amnesty International report which
found that in addition to the arrests of people suspected of homosexuality,
those who defended them were subjected to violence and harassment, while
authorities did nothing to protect them. Lembembe also reported that
prominent clergy — from the Catholic Church as well as the Christian Men’s
Fellowship of the Presbyterian Church in Cameroon — had launched
anti-homosexuality campaigns in recent months. “They shall surely be put to
death: their blood shall be on them,” the lawyer for the latter group is
quoted as saying, alluding to a passage in *Leviticus*.

Lembembe, who became executive director of CAMFAIDS also had positive news
to report. On March 8, in a post headlined Sharpening AIDS-fighting skills
in 
Cameroon<http://76crimes.com/2013/03/08/sharpening-aids-fighting-skills-in-cameroon/>,
he wrote about how the Cameroon National Association for Family Welfare was
providing training on HIV prevention and treatment that focused on the
challenges of sexual minorities.

But most of the news from Cameroon over the months that followed was bleak,
with Lembembe reporting a series of arrests, convictions, death threats,
burglaries and violence against gay people and those supporting gay rights.
In a June 
23<http://76crimes.com/2013/06/23/after-death-threats-burglars-strike-cameroon-lgbt-defender/>post
he reported on the break-in at the office of one of Cameroon’s few
attorneys who represented gay clients, who already had sent his family out
of the country in the face of threats against them. Lembembe noted that the
lawyer himself stayed, “to continue the fight. In light of what happened on
June 16, it’s clear that the fight will be long and difficult.”

Lembembe’s last post appeared on July 5: After attacks, LGBTI defenders in
Cameroon seek 
safety<http://76crimes.com/2013/07/05/after-attacks-lgbti-defenders-in-cameroon-seek-safety/>,
about the aftermath of an arson attack on a center providing health
information and care for men who have sex with men, particularly for those
living with HIV. Furniture, equipment, supplies and patients medical
records were all destroyed. “Cameroonian officials show no signs that they
are aware of the problem,” Lembembe wrote. “No one has denounced the
attacks.”
[image: 
Eric-3-Lembembe-FB2-dwnld-07-20-2013]<http://sciencespeaksblog.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Eric-3-Lembembe-FB2-dwnld-07-20-2013.jpg>

Eric Lembembe
Photo courtesy CAMFAIDS

He lived for a little more than a  week after that post appeared. After he
didn’t show up at meetings over the following weekend, his burned and
beaten body was found in his home July 15. His neck and feet were broken
and he had been tortured with a hot clothing iron, according to news
reports.

Human Rights Watch, the United Nations and the U.S. Department of State
called for investigations into Lemembe’s murder. The Global Fund issued a
statement denouncing the killing, offering condolences to Lemembe’s family
and friends, and stressing its support for lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender people in Cameroon. “We are committed to supporting the
essential work done by organizations like Eric’s that focus on the right to
health,” Global Fund executive director Mark Dybul says in the statement.

This week, a newly formed coalition of organizations supporting the sexual
minority community of Cameroon issued a
statement<http://www.msmgf.org/files/msmgf/documents/MEMORANDUM_EN.pdf>
asking
for help — with funding for security measures and emergencies, and a
central and safe meeting place. The dangers confronting them had reached a
critical point, and without additional support, they could not go on as
they had, they said.

*“Because of the dangers of the current situation, in cities of Yaoundé and
Douala we are forced to suspend immediately the projects we have with USAID
through Care Cameroon and with the Global Fund through CAMNAFAW (Cameroon
National Association for Family Welfare).  Minimal services will continue
to be provided to our clients.*

*“We reject a partnership that reduces our associations to simply a labor
force that must work in precarious, dangerous conditions.”*

For more on Eric Lembembe and the aftermath of his murder, visit 76
Crimes<http://76crimes.com/>
.
This entry was posted in Health and Human
Rights<http://sciencespeaksblog.org/category/policy-2/health-and-human-rights/>
, U.S. Policy and Funding <http://sciencespeaksblog.org/category/policy-2/> and
tagged 76 Crimes <http://sciencespeaksblog.org/tag/76-crimes/>, anti-gay
laws <http://sciencespeaksblog.org/tag/anti-gay-laws/>,
Cameroon<http://sciencespeaksblog.org/tag/cameroon/>
, Colin Stewart <http://sciencespeaksblog.org/tag/colin-stewart/>, Eric
Lembembe <http://sciencespeaksblog.org/tag/eric-lembembe/>,Global Fund to
Fight AIDS <http://sciencespeaksblog.org/tag/global-fund-to-fight-aids/>, Mark
Dybul <http://sciencespeaksblog.org/tag/mark-dybul/>,
PEPFAR<http://sciencespeaksblog.org/tag/pepfar/>
, USAID <http://sciencespeaksblog.org/tag/usaid/> on July 24,
2013<http://sciencespeaksblog.org/2013/07/24/murdered-gay-rightshiv-advocate-and-journalist-documented-deadly-conditions/>
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