Gay Nigerians share Stories of Abuse by Christians & Muslims, Police Brutality & Death | Watch the PBS Documentary
This morning, BN TV published
the PBS documentary focusing on corruption in Nigeria. That episode was
focused on corruption in Nigeria. This one tackles “being gay in
Nigeria”.
The official synopsis says;
Nigeria made same-sex marriage and gay rights activism illegal last January. Since then, gay Nigerians say abuse and extortion have become commonplace by state-sponsored vigilantes, police and public mobs. As part of a week-long series “Nigeria: Pain and Promise” special correspondent Nick Schifrin reports on the threats and violence that LGBT citizens face in that country.JUDY WOODRUFF: We now turn to our series “Nigeria: Pain and Promise.” Tonight, Special Correspondent, Nick Schifrin, details the abuse and mistreatment of gays in the country, by law enforcement and by Muslim and Christian groups. A warning, it contains some disturbing images.
NICK SCHIFRIN: In Bauchi, Nigeria this House of God has become a home for hate. Do you believe that gay men deserve the same rights as everyone else?
Nigeria made same-sex marriage and gay rights activism illegal last January. Since then, gay Nigerians say abuse and extortion have become commonplace by state-sponsored vigilantes, police and public mobs. As part of a week-long series “Nigeria: Pain and Promise” special correspondent Nick Schifrin reports on the threats and violence that LGBT citizens face in that country.JUDY WOODRUFF: We now turn to our series “Nigeria: Pain and Promise.” Tonight, Special Correspondent, Nick Schifrin, details the abuse and mistreatment of gays in the country, by law enforcement and by Muslim and Christian groups. A warning, it contains some disturbing images.
NICK SCHIFRIN: In Bauchi, Nigeria this House of God has become a home for hate. Do you believe that gay men deserve the same rights as everyone else?
JOSHUA
MAINA, Reverend, Bauchi Christian Association: The gay man knows that
because of his practices, he has no right equal to another person.
NICK
SCHIFRIN: Reverend Joshua Maina leads the state’s 50,000 Christians. As
his service begins, the band starts a hymn about Christ’s sacrifice and
then it delivers a warning: “end times are here.” Reverend Maina says
they’re here because of one thing.
JOSHUA
MAINA: Homosexuality, sodomy. It is evil to this country. It is evil to
our culture. It is evil to what we believe and that is Christianity. It
is evil to what we inherited from our fathers. It is evil against
anything that we hold so dear. Preach against them. Stand against them.
If you want to go by them, the wrath of god will fall upon you.
NICK SCHIFRIN: In the west, his sermon has become the outlier. In Nigeria, it’s red meat;
ESTHER
DAUDA, Parishioner: It’s very abominable and I think that is one of the
reasons why Sodom and Gomorrah had to be wiped out of the face of the
earth, because of homosexualism and whatever.
NICK SCHIFRIN: Pope Francis said, “Who am I to judge a gay man?” Why do you think you should judge?
JOSHUA
MAINA: If there is a gay, you judge him based on the law of the land,
and if the land says he should be killed, leave that one to the law
enforcement agent.
NICK SCHIFRIN: The
problem is that’s exactly what’s happened. Last January, Nigeria made
same-sex marriage and advocating for gay rights crimes. Since then,
nobody’s been sentenced, but police, State-sponsored vigilantes, even
public mobs are accused of exploiting the law to abuse and extort. In
another video, a mob accuses a man of being gay and then the accusers
take off their belts. Gay Nigerians say since the law was passed this
kind of abuse has become common, and not just by vigilantes.
BRIAN
IFENNA: They beat me. They would hit me with a gun on my body. One of
them wanted to take a plywood to put on my ass because he said I should
lie down.
NICK SCHIFRIN: Brian Ifenna says police officers picked him off the street and beat him inside this police station.
BRIAN IFENNA: The law has given them the right to do what they want to do to anyone who is an LGBT person.
NICK SCHIFRIN: In Lagos, Brian and a group of gay men agreed to meet and openly discuss their homosexuality.
MAN: You remove yourself from Facebook. You remove yourself from social media because one day you might talk trap.
SIMEON
LANRE, LGBT Activist: Once you’re gay, you’re gay. This thing is
actually a mindset. You can’t erase it. This is who you are.
NICK SCHIFRIN: Simeon Lanre is gay and HIV positive.
SIMEON
LANRE: Has it gone to that extent that my people started excluding me
simply because I’m HIV positive or what? So, I was, that’s how I got
fired from my place of work.
NICK SCHIFRIN: You’ve considered committing suicide?
SIMEON LANRE: Yes, actually, because I was like, positive because that was actually the last thing I was expecting.
MAN: Why do you think this law is actually passed?
NICK
SCHIFRIN: The law doesn’t only punish same-sex marriage. By advocating
for gay rights, these men could be sentenced to 10 years. By talking to
them, I also could be sentenced to 10 years.
PETER KASS, LGBT activist: We’re responsible for ourselves, okay?
MAN: Yes.
PETER KASS: We cannot have heterosexuals come and be responsible for you.
NICK
SCHIFRIN: 27-year-old Peter Kass is the group’s organizer. He’s been a
gay rights activist since before the law, ever since one day in church
his pastor told him.
PETER KASS:
You’re gay. You’re homosexual. You’re perverted. You’re possessed, and
it started to rain all slandering words and me, that I needed
deliverance and that I was trying to bring Sodom and Gomorrah, into
their church, and not only that, that I was the reason why God was not
answering their prayers.
NICK SCHIFRIN: can you show me your house?
PETER KASS: Okay. Why not?
NICK
SCHIFRIN: Down the street, Kass shows me the safe house he runs for gay
men and women. It’s often overwhelmed. And you have to share this space
with how many people?
PETER KASS: Seven people, sometimes.
NICK SCHIFRIN: You said yourself this is relatively basic. Do you wish you could offer more?
PETER
KASS: Yeah, I wish I could offer more, seriously, because we have too
many issues of the LGBT being kicked out of their homes because they are
gay.
NICK SCHIFRIN: When Brian told his family he was gay, he was disowned.
BRIAN
IFENNA: My dad said he doesn’t want to see me in the house. He doesn’t
want to – that it’s better for him to have no son instead of a gay son.
I’m so scared of meeting anyone. I hardly meeting people. I need people
to come see me.
NICK SCHIFRIN: As difficult as life is for gay Christians in Nigeria, it’s worse for Muslims.
In
Northern Nigeria, the Bouche Security Committee enforces this state’s
Islamic law. Every night they walk through alleys and markets, hoping to
punish what they consider vice. For them, the criminals include gay
men. Their leader believes homosexuality is the same as pedophilia.
Why do you equate gay activity with pedophilia, with children?
AMINU
ABUBAKER, Bauchi Security Group: It’s what is happening. It’s what is
happening. How did they start to do it? A child who is not matured
enough to understand something and somebody who is a gay, an adult, will
now draw him, entice him.
NICK SCHIFRIN: After they patrol, they’re calm. In this community, they’re the hunters; their prey are terrified.
MAN:
The vigilante people came and raided the hotel, so we were arrested and
taken to prison. We were seriously tortured; beaten; persecuted;
insulted in the prison. Look at these pigs. Look at these animals.
NICK SCHIFRIN: Can you tell me what the vigilantes did to you?
MAN: I was seriously beat up. If they took me to Sharia Court, I think they can even stone me to death.
NICK
SCHIFRIN: These three men are gay and Muslim, and live in northern
Nigeria under Islamic law. It’s too risky to show their faces.
MAN:
You can’t display your sexuality. So it becomes, like, you’re just
hiding, you know, you don’t want anyone to know what your sexuality is.
NICK SCHIFRIN: Because what would happen if you displayed your sexuality?
MAN: You might be killed.
NICK SCHIFRIN: What happened when your family found out you were gay?
MAN: My father said I had to promise him that I would quit.
NICK SCHIFRIN: Quit being gay?
MAN: Yes, or else my parents threatened to disown me, so I had to pretend.
NICK SCHIFRIN: Does your family know you’re gay?
MAN:
No. I have to lie to them that I’m not. If they knew that I’m gay, they
would cut any relation with me. So I was forced to get married.
NICK SCHIFRIN: You were forced to get married. What’s that like?
MAN: I have not any option. I don’t like it. I’m forcing myself to be something that I’m not.
NICK
SCHIFRIN: Newly elected Nigerian President, Mohammed Buhari, has
promised change, but so far, that doesn’t extend to gay men. On Twitter,
Buhari’s spokesman said, in a meeting in Washington, Buhari was point
blank: Sodomy is against the law in Nigeria and abhorrent to our
culture. In a second tweet the spokesman added, “the issue was not
pushed.”
Despite some international
protests, U.S. officials tell PBS Newshour they don’t push the issue
because they fear public criticism would backfire; but gay Nigerians say
that policy helps increase public hate and private pain.
PETER
KASS: When somebody tells you, you cannot amount to anything because of
your sexuality, when the pastor tells you you’re going to go to
hellfire because you’re homosexual, a lot of people’s spirits get
broken. Sometimes I get calls, I get text messages, I get e-mails
threatening my life. That’s– if you don’t stop what you’re doing as an
activist, as a gay activist, then, we’ll kill you. I mean, sometimes I
get scared but I tell myself, no. If I don’t fight, who will?
NICK SCHIFRIN: That courage comes from the brotherhood that their religions and their state try to deny them.
On a day like today, when you’re with this group, how do you feel?
BRIAN IFENNA: I feel at home. I feel welcomed. I feel loved. I feel like I’m with a family.
NICK SCHIFRIN: Where do you get your courage from?
MAN:
From friends that always encourage me, that, look, we are all human
beings. So I have the courage, I can stand firm, and say, yes, I’m gay
and say, yes, I’m gay but still I’m very, very careful because it can
cost me my life.
Nick Schifrin, PBS Newshour, in Northern Nigeria.
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