Sacked, shunned and suicidal - the
Cameroon sports stars battling anti-gay laws
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[November 14, 2019]
YAOUNDE (Thomson Reuters
Foundation) - Cameroonian athlete Thierry Essamba still trains every
day, even though he has little hope of reviving a career cut off
when he was ousted from the national squad in a scandal over
homosexuality.
The 38-year-old hurdling champion was training for the 2014
Commonwealth Games when a senior sports official told a crowd of
journalists and fellow athletes that he was gay - a career-ending
slur in a country where homosexual acts are illegal.
"I felt as if my body was being torn apart from the inside," Essamba
told the Thomson Reuters Foundation as he sat on the bleachers after
finishing his daily solitary training in a dilapidated stadium in
Yaounde.
"That day I saw all the people in the stadium who used to look up to
me with admiration, with respect. Now they regarded me with
contempt."
Same-sex relationships are taboo across much of Africa, which has
some of the world's most prohibitive laws against homosexuality.
But few countries are as assiduous in applying them as Cameroon,
whose penal code punishes "sexual relations between persons of the
same sex" with up to five years in prison.
Between 2010 and 2014, at least 50 people were convicted for crimes
ranging from cross-dressing to a man texting "I love you" to another
man, according to CAMFAIDS, an LGBT+ advocacy group.
Essamba said he was suspended from the national squad after the
public accusation, which was broadcast on national television,
leaving him fearful for his life.
The Cameroonian Athletics Federation did not respond to requests for
comment about Essamba, whose case the U.S. State Department cited in
its 2014 human rights report on the African country.
He is not the only top athlete to have suffered from such claims in
a country where sports officials openly express homophobic views.
Berthe Ngoume, who runs a support group for female footballers in
Yaounde, said she knew of at least three women who were forced to
leave the national team and banned from international competitions
over rumours they were gay.
"One player who was ousted from the national team emigrated to the
U.S. Another ended up killing herself with drugs," said Ngoume.
KICKED OUT
Stenie was made to leave her football club in 2018 after her coach
heard rumours from a relative that she was in a gay relationship.
"I was accused of having a relationship with another woman like me,
which is strictly forbidden in female teams," said the 19-year-old,
who asked that her real name be concealed because she feared for her
safety.
Unwilling to give up her dream of being a professional footballer,
Stenie continued to attend training sessions, but was never again
asked to compete.
When she tried out for two other football clubs, she found the
rumours had followed her.
"I was already known as a disruptive element," said Stenie. "No one
could accept me."
Like Essamba, she worried about her safety after the allegations
emerged.
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Athlete Thierry Essamba displaying his medals in a stadium in
Yaounde, Cameroon
Being a lesbian is considered an "abomination" in Cameroon, Stenie
said, and witch-doctors are sometimes called upon to perform
so-called corrective rape as a "cure".
Bechem Peter Tanyi, who coaches the Cameroonian women's football
team, summed up the official attitude to homosexuality when he said
Stenie's idol, the openly gay U.S. footballer Megan Rapinoe, could
not have had a career in Cameroon.
"We don't accept lesbians in the Cameroon national female team,"
Tanyi told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"A girl who is playing football in Cameroon is not supposed to be a
lesbian. She is supposed to play as a normal creature of God."
SUICIDAL
Both Stenie and Essamba have suffered well beyond the loss of their
dream careers, and both say they have been suicidal.
When Essamba's family heard the media reports about him, they kicked
him out. Unemployed, shunned by relatives and ridiculed by his
peers, the one-time star said he tried to take his own life more
than once.
He has received some support from the Swiss division of Lawyers
Without Borders, a charity, which has taken up his case with the
global athletics governing body the International Association of
Athletics Federations (IAAF).
The division's president, Saskia Ditisheim, accused Cameroon's
athletics federation of "trampling on universal values of
tolerance that we all thought were no longer up for discussion".
Ditisheim also criticised the IAAF for accepting an assertion from
the Cameroon athletics federation that it had not suspended Essamba.
"The denials of the IAAF leave question marks and are unacceptable,"
she said.
The IAAF said in an email to the Thomson Reuters Foundation that it
had not received any evidence that Essamba had been suspended, but
that if any came to light it would be investigated.
This year Ditisheim's organisation helped Essamba travel to Geneva
for an athletics meeting organised by a local club.
For the most part though Essamba, who now works in a hotel, aspires
to helping others who face similar difficulties.
"With my experience I would be able to give them all the necessary
support, morally, physically. (I want) this discrimination to stop,"
he said.
"It's something that I wouldn't wish on any other human being on the
planet."
(Reporting by Thomson Reuters Foundation, Editing by Chris Michaud
and Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the
charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news,
women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and
climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)
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