LGBT Groups in Cameroon Forced to Suspend AIDS Education
Author:
David Garmaise
Article Type:Article Number: 6
ABSTRACT Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender organisations in Cameroon have informed the Global Fund and other donors that they have decided to halt AIDS education programmes until security can be improved. The announcement follows the discovery of the murdered body of activist and journalist Eric Lembembe.
Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) organisations in Cameroon have informed the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and other donors that have decided to halt AIDS education programmes āuntil their international partners help them to improve security so activists wonāt be killed while trying to curb the spread of HIV among LGBT people there.ā
The announcement, reported in a post on 22 July by Colin Stewart on the website 76crimes.com, came a week after the discovery of the murdered body ofĀ activist and journalist Eric Lembembe in Cameroon (see separate post).
āWe need protection,ā said Dominique Menoga, president of Lembembeās anti-AIDS group, the Cameroonian Foundation for AIDS in YaoundĆ©.
āIt was urgent that we stop so we would not be further exposed to danger. We will work with our partners to see how we can improve working conditions and especially the security of our organizations and members,ā said Yves Yomb, executive director of the anti-AIDS organisation Alternatives-Cameroon in Douala.
In a memorandum to donors, the LGBT organisations stated that Cameroonās ālong-decried climate of homophobia has intensified and now has reached a critical point. The pursuit of our various missions (prevention of STIs/HIV, medical care, advocacy for rights, support of people imprisoned for their sexual orientation or gender identity) requires a minimum level of security, institutional support and financial support.ā
The memorandum said that ābecause of the dangers of the current situation, in cities of YaoundĆ© and Douala, we are forced to suspend immediately the projects we have with USAID through Care Cameroon and with the Global Fund through CAMNAFAW. Minimal services will continue to be provided to our clients.ā
CAMNAFAW is the Cameroon National Association for Family Welfare, principal recipient for a Round 10 HIV grant.