• Saved from a lynching in Touba: B. Guèye, the alleged homosexual, reveals the names of his partners

    A suspected homosexual was arrested in Touba by the Ndamatou Police. According to information from “Source A,” B. Guèye was unmasked in broad daylight on the street. Youths attempted to lynch him before the police quickly intervened. Taken to the police, he let loose as much as possible about his alleged homosexual status.

    An individual was intercepted by a crowd in Touba. Accused of being homosexual because of his effeminate behavior, B. Guèye had a rough time at the hands of the youths. He was pelted with stones before being rescued by some well-wishers. Alerted, the police officers from the Ndamatou Police Station went to his rescue. The 21-year-old fishmonger was removed from the scene and taken into police custody.

    Faced with investigators, B. Guèye admitted his homosexual status. According to him, he has been practicing homosexuality for over a year. The fishmonger also revealed that a certain T. Bèye had introduced him to this dirty business, according to information from “Source A.” “I flirted with a man in Touba to sleep with him, but it didn’t work out. I’ve been practicing homosexuality for over a year. A certain T. Beye introduced me to this dirty work.”

    The alleged homosexual snitched on his partners, who are based in Thiès and Dakar. According to him, they gave him money after their sexual relations. The single man with no children specified that he was flirting with a man in Touba to sleep with him, but it didn’t work out, according to information from Source A.

    Investigators discovered devastating audio clips on his WhatsApp application. Through the audio clips, the alleged man was haggling and chatting with his “gay clients.” Prosecuted for unnatural acts, the fishmonger residing in Touba will be brought before the Diourbel High Court today, Monday, unless there is a last-minute change of circumstances.

  • SENEGAL: “PREPARICATION IS KILLING SENEGALESE FROM THE LGBT+ COMMUNITY”

    The arrest of 24 men in Keur Gorgui, near Dakar, on October 16th, highlighted the shortcomings that had been exposed.

    With introspection, Souleymane Diouf (pseudonym), who coordinates the FREE collective, shares with us the underlying causes of the lack of an early community response to these waves of homophobic arrests that have occurred in Senegal since September.

    Free, determined, and resolved to put an end to certain corrupt practices in Senegal, he denounces the errors and prevaricating abuses for which, according to him, human rights are the alibi.

    In a new interview, 76crimes opens its columns to him so that silence is no longer complicit in certain evils that are killing LGBT+ people in Senegal today.

    What are the anomalies or dysfunctions you say you have witnessed?

    Already, on September 20th, during the arrest of 10 suspected homosexuals in Touba, not a single LGBT+ community organization in Senegal, nor a single Senegalese civil society organization, lifted a finger.

    This is a painful truth to state, but it deserves to be heard, as it raises many questions as well as essential introspection.

    At the time, this situation left me in such disarray that I immediately decided to contact you, a person from outside Senegal who lives in French Guiana, in South America.

    Indeed, I quickly realized that with a foreigner, I would paradoxically be listened to and heard more than within my own country.

    Bis repetita, during the arrest of 24 young suspected homosexuals in Keur Gorgui, Dakar, on October 16th, community organizations and civil society organizations did not immediately step up to the plate. At least at first, in my opinion.

    Have you noticed anything else?

    It was only because international institutions began to address the Senegalese situation, in terms of human rights violations, that local organizations began to react.

    Some often talk about interference or neocolonialism here and there, but the truth is that without our international friends, there would have been a great deal of inertia, with the LGBT+ community under the strict control of Islamists. We must be clear-headed. We, LGBT+ activists in Senegal, have left the public debate on issues related to sexual minorities to the Islamists.

    We saw the situation deteriorate over the years, but instead of anticipating the current situation, we deserted the discussion, due to our lack of political formulation of an inclusive social project, in the face of JAMRA’s deadly Islamist agenda.

    Yet, some see this as a culture of confrontation, when it’s simply a matter of offering new horizons to see, by broadening the range of possibilities. We are democrats, and we recognize that through our past silence, we have unwittingly made ourselves accomplices and objective allies of those who wish to suppress us.

    Silence is a strategy that has never paid off in Senegal, while violence against LGBT+ people has steadily escalated in recent months. We then arrive at the only remaining conclusion: that silence condemns us to failure.

    For the FREE Collective, the political response to Islamism is an intellectual space that has yet to be explored in Senegal. And we intend to become pioneers.

    What other challenges remain?

    Today, we have evidence of fraudulent grant applications and funding in the name of victims of homophobia, without their consent, but in their name.

    This is a windfall, collateral, and undesirable result of the international focus on the situation in Senegal.

    We denounce these practices and this lack of integrity, which, while committed by certain human rights defenders, are now harmful to everyone by casting a veil of suspicion over our ethics.

    Building a reputation, credibility, and a relationship of trust takes too long for us to allow unscrupulous individuals to take advantage of Senegalese LGBT+ people in distress, because embezzlement kills.

    Embezzling funds is taking away resources from the most vulnerable. To put an end to the many recurring situations of breach of trust, the FREE Collective is considering filing a complaint in the coming days.

    Individuals and organizations wishing to provide financial support to the FREE Collective can write to collectiffree@gmail.com.

  • Homophobia in Senegal

    Homophobia in Senegal

    As a close friend to many men and women living in the shadows in Senegal, I write these words with a heavy heart. Homosexuality is a punishable crime in my home country of Senegal. This creates a threatening and harmful environment for my friends, along with an estimated 2% of the Senegalese population who identify as gay, who live their lives in constant fear of persecution, or even worse, death.

    Acts of violence and discrimination against the LGBT+ community in Senegal continue to raise concerns about human rights in the country. Decades of criminalizing homosexuality has contributed to homophobia, exclusion, and inequality. Such discrimination hampers not only social progress, but economic and human rights advancements as well. 

    Decriminalization would lead to a safer and more tolerant society wherein everyone can express themselves freely. It is not about condoning or promoting homosexuality, but rather about countersigning human rights abuses, violence, and discrimination. Our society needs to move towards a future that promotes respect, dignity, and equality for all citizens, regardless of their sexual orientation.

    Let us urge the Senegalese authorities to recognize the universal human rights, and decriminalize homosexuality in Senegal. Members of the LGBT+ community, like my friends, can then live without fear and contribute fully to our nation’s future.