AFP – Tiwonge Chimbalanga (R) and his gay husband Steven Monjeza prior to a press conference on June 2, 2010, five days after Malawi President Bingu wa Mutharika pardoned them. Thrown into jail for 14 years under Malawi’s anti-gay laws, Chimbalanga has no regrets about the marriage ceremony that became a symbol of Africa’s intolerance toward homosexuality.
Known as Aunt Tiwo, Tiwonge Chimbalanga (pictured) and partner Steven Monjeza drew a harsh spotlight on deeply conservative Malawi after the couple were arrested for holding a traditional engagement ceremony in late 2009. Branded as Malawi’s first openly “gay lovebirds”, the pair were sentenced to a maximum 14 years with hard labour as an “horrendous example”.
Steven Monjeza is seen prior to a press conference in Liongwe on June 2, 2010, five days after Malawi’s President Bingu wa Mutharika pardoned him and his gay husband. Husband Tiwonge Chimbalanga believes the couple were targeted as they were the first to take their relationship so public.
AFP – Thrown into jail for 14 years under Malawi’s anti-gay laws, Tiwonge Chimbalanga has no regrets about the marriage ceremony that became a symbol of Africa’s intolerance toward homosexuality.
In the first press interview since being granted asylum in South Africa, the 24-year-old, who was freed amid global pressure, urged more Malawians to come out from the shadows as the country’s ban on same-sex relationships eases.
“I don’t have any regrets, I didn’t do anything wrong,” Chimbalanga, who identifies as a transgender woman despite being tried as a gay man, told AFP.
Known as Aunt Tiwo, Chimbalanga and partner Steven Monjeza drew a harsh spotlight on deeply conservative Malawi after the couple were arrested for holding a traditional engagement ceremony in late 2009.
Branded as Malawi’s first openly “gay lovebirds”, the pair were sentenced to a maximum 14 years with hard labour as an “horrendous example” and led away from the court handcuffed to one another while onlookers jeered.
“I had mixed feelings because on the one hand I felt it was a wonderful thing for me to do a normal, natural thing like getting married, whilst on the other hand it was very painful,” said Chimbalanga.
“I was beaten in prison. During the trial the security guards ill-treated me. I was verbally abused and suffered all sorts of inhumane treatments, I have scars from the beatings. Yet I felt good that I was able to do what I wanted to do.”
International outrage eventually forced a begrudging presidential pardon from the late Bingu wa Mutharika who doggedly described the couple as “insane” and their ceremony as “satanic.”
A recent moratorium on the ban on same-sex relationships under new President Joyce Banda is encouraging, but the war is far from over, said Chimbalanga.
“The thing that I wish for in Malawi is that all gays, lesbians and transgenders must come out and have their rights like everybody else. It seems that in Malawi there are human rights for the rich and another set for the poor,” she said.
“I want everyone to have their human rights and freedom to choose what they want to be and the only way to achieve that is by coming out and claiming their rights.”
After their release, the couple broke up and Chimbalanga spent months hiding in a safe house before being ferried last year to South Africa, which has equality rights enshrined in the constitution.
It is also the only African country where gay marriage is legal. Homosexuality is illegal in 37 countries on the continent.
Chimbalanga is supported by local transgender NGO Gender Dynamix and Amnesty International and in her new one-room home, reached by an outdoor staircase lined with pot plants, a bulging file of papers documents her ordeal.
Inside are letters of horrified outrage and support from around the world, a sheet detailing the British-era colonial charge of “buggery” and newspaper clippings which scream headlines like “I still love Aunt Tiwo – Monjeza”.
Chimbalanga said that mostly “there was no accurate reporting, I felt the stories were sensationalised, exaggerated and taken out of context. In other parts they reported fairly.”
She added that “there was a point that I was turned into a cartoon and they wrote stories that were defamatory to me. Up to now I don’t trust reporters from Malawi, I refuse to talk to them.”
Chimbalanga believes the couple were targeted as they were the first to take their relationship so public.
“I did nothing wrong not even a tiny bit,” she said.
“Even here in South Africa I want to get married and I am going to invite the reporters from Malawi to come and witness for themselves and to report the truth about it. I want the whole world to know because this is not the end.”
by AFP
Source – France 24