Two Kenyans in gay sex case lose bid to outlaw anal examinations

Two men being prosecuted for having gay sex in Kenya lost their legal bid on Thursday to challenge the authorities' right to force suspects to have anal examinations to determine sexual orientation.

File picture shows a masked Kenyan supporter of the LGBTI community holds a condom as he joins others in protest against Uganda's anti-gay bill in 2014

File picture shows a masked Kenyan supporter of the LGBTI community holds a condom as he joins others in protest against Uganda's anti-gay bill in 2014 Source: Getty Images

In a ruling labeled "totally unacceptable" by Amnesty International, two men being prosecuted for having gay sex in Kenya lost their legal bid to challenge the authorities' right to force anal examinations.

The two unnamed men who deny the gay sex charges, said in their petition they had been coerced into undergoing anal examinations by security personnel and a public hospital in Mombasa in February 2015.

They wanted the court to declare that the forced examinations - which are used to try to prove gay sex has taken place - amounted to "degrading treatment" and a violation of human rights.

But high court judge Matthew Emukule said on Thursday there was sufficient justification under Kenyan law to allow the intrusion into the human body for the purpose of gathering evidence to prove a sexually related crime.
"The petition has no merit and is dismissed," he said in his ruling in the Kenyan port of Mombasa.

Homosexual acts are illegal in Kenya and many other African countries. Rights groups have regularly condemned both those laws and the examinations.

Amnesty's regional director Muthoni Wanyeki said the court ruling was unacceptable and "also absurd as the government has no business proving or disproving consensual homosexual activity."

New York-based Human Rights Watch has said the examinations might amount to torture under international law.

On a visit to Kenya in July last year U.S. President Barack Obama equated discrimination against gays to treating people differently because of race, adding: "That's the path whereby freedoms begin to erode."

The two men's trial for having gay sex is ongoing.



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2 min read
Published 17 June 2016 4:58pm
Updated 17 June 2016 5:00pm
Source: Reuters


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