
‘We can never dream of taking LGBT issues to a referendum’
When Zimbabwean activist and public health expert Humphrey Ndondo saw The Normal Heart for the first time earlier this year, the film鈥檚 imagery appeared all too familiar.
The film, based on Larry Kramer鈥檚 1985 play of the same name, follows the lives of gay men living through the beginning of the AIDS epidemic in early-1980s New York. The community鈥檚 cries for help in the face of the deaths of friends and lovers are met with indifference from the government.
For Ndondo, early-1980s New York could have been the Zimbabwe of his present.
鈥淢y goodness,鈥 he said, reflecting on the film, 鈥渢his is us today.鈥
Ndondo was speaking on an AIDS 2016 panel of African activists, each highlighting LGBT community responses to HIV and AIDS epidemics in their own countries.
It was a tense discussion鈥攁long with Ndondo from Zimbabwe, panellists from Nigeria and Kenya expressed frustration at a lack of progress made for LGBT people. They said that despite foreign and NGO funding for HIV programs in their countries, LGBT communities rarely seemed to see concrete results. Instead they face persecution and violence from governments content to stir up homophobia for political gain.
Nigerian activist Ifeanyi Orazulike mentioned the hope that came with a new funding model from the Global Fund to Fight HIV, Tuberculosis and Malaria a few years ago, but said 鈥渁lmost two years down the line, nothing has changed鈥.
鈥淭hen tomorrow it will be counted as part of the investment that has come to Nigeria, or has gone to other African countries,鈥 Orazulike said.
鈥淚sn鈥檛 it a sign, and proof, that your investment has failed? If you鈥檝e invested in capacity-building for how many decades, and in 2016 you鈥檙e saying the community doesn鈥檛 have capacity?鈥
In Zimbabwe, Ndondo runs an organisation called the Sexual Rights Centre, based in the city of Bulawayo. The centre does human rights advocacy for LGBT communities and sex workers, with a specific focus on the intersection between the two. As well as helping LGBT people and sex workers to advocate on their own behalf, Ndondo鈥檚 organisation also works with health services, educational institutions, police and other organisations within Zimbabwe to promote the safety and inclusion of these marginalised groups.
Anti-LGBT violence is common in Zimbabwe, and the country鈥檚 President Robert Mugabe has a long history of inciting homophobia. Just last September Mugabe attacked the UN over its criticisms of Zimbabwe鈥檚 appalling record on LGBT rights, telling the UN General Assembly, 鈥渨e are not gays.鈥
Ndondo said little has changed for LGBT people in Zimbabwe since the last International AIDS Conference two years ago.
鈥淭he frustration is that we come to these spaces to tell our stories and fulfil the mandate for an AIDS conference because we are the epidemic, but the challenge is that we don鈥檛 see that translated into actual, practical ways of ensuring that we鈥檙e turning the tide against HIV,鈥 he told the 17c起草社区.
鈥淲e can never dream of a Zimbabwe where we could take LGBT issues to a referendum, like we see in Europe, with Ireland… we can鈥檛 ever dream of that because we know it will have massive backlash. It is bad enough that we have politicians from the state itself propagating hate speech against LGBT communities, against sex workers.鈥
Ndondo expressed particular frustration not only with the gap between funding and outcomes, but with how little the UN鈥檚 rhetoric on human rights and HIV matched their lived reality.
In 2014 the UN announced the 鈥90/90/90鈥 targets, to be reached by 2020: 90 per cent of people living with HIV would know their status, 90 per cent of those people would be on antiretroviral treatment, and 90 per cent of those people would have suppressed levels of the virus.
That same year the UN made a commitment to 鈥渆nd the AIDS epidemic by 2030鈥, a commitment reiterated this year in Durban.
鈥淸The problem] is setting these ambitious targets that are really just in the air,鈥 Ndondo said.
鈥淸It鈥檚 a problem] when you say 90/90/90 and acknowledge that key populations are the drivers of the epidemic, which is the language that we want to hear, but to not put mechanisms in place to hold countries accountable to making that a lived reality for persons within countries.鈥
Other panellists at the AIDS 2016 session were similarly exasperated with the UN rhetoric on progress for the global response to the HIV epidemic.
The panel鈥檚 moderator was Michael Ighodaro, a gay, HIV-positive Nigerian-born activist who in 2012 sought asylum in the United States following a homophobic attack and threats to his life. Ighodaro now works in New York for AVAC, formerly the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition.
鈥淵ou will hear it over and over again at this conference, 鈥榥o one left behind鈥,鈥 said moderator Michael Ighodaro, a gay, HIV-positive Nigerian-born activist who in 2012 sought asylum in the United States following a homophobic attack and threats to his life.
鈥淧lease, stand up and say, people are left behind. African gay men, transgender, sex workers, drug users are left behind, young people are left behind, and we don鈥檛 say that.鈥
For Humphrey Ndondo, the widely-televised celebrations as marriage equality continues to march across the western world seem a million miles away from his reality in Zimbabwe, where his community is fighting for its very existence. He can see more of his experience in The Normal Heart than in gay communities celebrating the success of the Irish referendum on marriage equality.
鈥淭o our colleagues living in Australia and in Europe, hear more of our voices, and really understand the nuances of our struggles,鈥 he said.
鈥淚鈥檓 saying this in light of when we were understanding that there is marriage equality in the west, it is not necessarily the agenda for us鈥攚e are still struggling with basic access to healthcare services and HIV issues that are so stuck, and really threatening the right to live for us.鈥
鈥淪o that kind of sharing, that sympathy that empathy, and speaking with our voices and amplifying our voices, that鈥檚 what we鈥檇 appreciate.鈥
The Victorian AIDS Council (VAC) is supporting 17c起草社区’s coverage of the 2016 International Aids Conference in Durban by providing travel and accommodation for a VAC staff member to attend as a journalist. 17c起草社区 retains editorial control over the content published as part of this agreement.





