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Justice 4 Eric Lembembe

Following the murder of Eric Lembembe Cameroon's government's response was appalling. We need to send 3 advocates to Africa's Human Rights body at $2750 each.

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Justice 4 Eric Lembembe

Justice 4 Eric Lembembe

Justice 4 Eric Lembembe

Justice 4 Eric Lembembe

Justice 4 Eric Lembembe

Following the murder of Eric Lembembe Cameroon's government's response was appalling. We need to send 3 advocates to Africa's Human Rights body at $2750 each.

Following the murder of Eric Lembembe Cameroon's government's response was appalling. We need to send 3 advocates to Africa's Human Rights body at $2750 each.

Following the murder of Eric Lembembe Cameroon's government's response was appalling. We need to send 3 advocates to Africa's Human Rights body at $2750 each.

Following the murder of Eric Lembembe Cameroon's government's response was appalling. We need to send 3 advocates to Africa's Human Rights body at $2750 each.

Albert Ogle
Albert Ogle
Albert Ogle
Albert Ogle
4 Campaigns |
San Diego, United States
$2,865 USD 20 backers
104% of $2,750 Flexible Goal Flexible Goal
Highlights
Mountain Filled 4 Projects Mountain Filled 4 Projects

The time is right for a dramatic show of support by Africans on behalf of LGBT rights in Africa, but to do so, they need your help.

Help us continue to exceed our goal so we can send another delegate to the African Commission!

1. Justice 4 Eric: The Short Version

This opportunity has emerged from the work of the St. Paul's Foundation for International Reconciliation*, which has been working closely with several LGBT groups in Cameroon, especially the Cameroonian Foundation for AIDS (CAMFAIDS). In July 2013, just weeks after speaking out publicly about the threats and violence targeting these groups, CAMFAIDS' executive director, Eric Ohena Lembembe, was brutally tortured and murdered in his own home. Since his murder, his colleagues at CAMFAIDS and other LGBT organizations have faced escalating threats.

Eric's tragic fate is all too familiar in Cameroon, where people who are LGBT and their advocates regularly face threats, arrests, torture, and mob attacks.

We are outraged by the Cameroonian's Government's first official response to Eric's murder expressed this week in Geneva by the Cameroonian Ambassador:

“So I reject this alleged case of this young man who allegedly was found dead as a result of his homosexuality. Distinguished Ambassadors, ladies and gentlemen, these are just things that have been made up. Look at the details of this person’s life and you will understand why he died.”

We have raised enough funds to sent two representatives to impress upon African leadership these attitudes are not acceptable. Homosexuality is NOT A REASON TO DIE in any country. We are now upping our goal to make sure we have a delegation of at least three Cameroonians to these conferences in October.

But these kinds or responses and threats have not silenced these brave Cameroonian human rights defenders. Instead, they worked on a 45-page report to the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights detailing the Government of Cameroon's dismal record on LGBT rights. Now, they need your help to travel to the African Commission next month to make their case in person.

With your financial assistance, Africans can stand up for the human rights of LGBT Africans -- the most effective and far-reaching kind of advocacy on that continent. Their voices must be heard. Eric's death must become a wake-up call for Africans to stop persecuting their gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, intersex, and queer brothers and sisters. With your help, the African Human Rights Commission can set a precedent for all African countries that LGBT rights are human rights. Not just in Europe and the United States. But all across Africa, too.

* St. Paul's Foundation for International Reconciliation is a California-based non-profit that engages in dialogue and coalition-building between secular and religious organizations that share the same values and outcomes for marginalized people, particularly women and LGBT people.

2. Justice 4 Eric: We Can Make It Happen

The goal is to send a broad spectrum of Cameroonian organizations working on LGBT issues to attend the African Human Rights Commission session in October. Each additional person who can attend will increase the attention that LGBT rights will receive, amplifying their powerful message and showing strength in numbers.

Each $2,750 will sponsor the travel of one additional representative. We have two sponsored already and are hoping for an additional one so need to raise $5500 in this campaign. The costs we need to cover for two people are:

  • Airfare from Cameroon to the Gambia (where the African Commission meets): $1,600 each
  • Registration for the 3-day NGO Forum before the session: $100
  • Visa to enter the Gambia: $100
  • 7 nights in a hotel, plus food and ground transportation: $700
  • The remaining $250 (each) costs are approximate fees for this online campaign paid to the site.

Our goal is $2,500 each person (and $250 for Indiegogo fees for each person totalling $5,500); meeting that goal will mean one more representative from another Cameroonian organization working on LGBT rights will be able to attend the October 2013 African Commission session and the pre-session NGO Forum. But if we exceed our goal and raise $5,000, representatives from two different groups can go. And if we raise $7,500, we can send representatives from three groups. The more we raise, the more Cameroonian LGBT organizations' voices will be heard, and the more impact their voices will have with the African Commission and in the forum with hundreds of other African human rights groups. (Any funds that do not meet one of the $2,500 benchmarks will go toward improving the security and impact of LGBT groups in Cameroon, especially CAMFAIDS, which has suffered the most from homophobic violence.)

Your donation will make a real difference on the ground in Africa. To show our appreciation, we also have some great gifts for you!

  • For your donation of $25, you'll receive a video called "Love Heals Homophobia," featuring four important straight African American clergy talking about their journeys to full acceptance of LGBT people and how to create congregations that celebrate diversity.
  • For your donation of $100, you'll receive a copy of From Wrongs to Gay Rights: Cruelty and Change for LGBT People in an Uncertain World. This book includes chapters by Eric Ohena Lembembe (who was also a journalist), Erasing 76 Crimes blog editor Colin Stewart, Reverend Albert Ogle of St. Paul's Foundation, Miles Tanhira, Andy Kopsa, Rachel Adams, and Clare Byarugaba.
  • For your donation of $1,000, you'll receive a Granite Pillar Award from St. Paul's Foundation. Emblazoned with St. Paul's logo and your name, these table-size awards honor those pillars of our community who literally support others in their work for global justice.

3. Justice 4 Eric: The Impact

Your donation will make a tangible contribution to promoting LGBT rights in Africa. LGBT people face severe persecution in Cameroon:

For further information, please read the report that these groups on the ground in Cameroon will present to the African Commission. You'll see just how dire conditions really are.

These brave LGBT groups in Cameroon are uniquely positioned to honor Eric's legacy and deliver the message that LGBT rights are human rights. When groups from the United States or Europe raise these concerns, the Government of Cameroon dismisses them, saying it's a matter of "African culture." In fact, when the Government of Cameroon submitted its latest report to the African Commission in April, it didn't mention LGBT rights at all. It asserts that homosexuality is a "western import" and falls back on references to "African values" -- values that apparently condone the torture and murder of people because they are trying to provide services to people who are at risk of HIV/AIDS. Of course, these values are not at all true African values -- but the best people to make this argument are Africans themselves.

When Africans stand up and speak for the rights of LGBT Africans, the Government of Cameroon has a harder time coming up with a plausible response. These groups want to attend the pre-session NGO Forum to meet with hundreds of other African human rights organizations to build momentum for the LGBT rights movement in Africa. If, this October, the African Commission calls out the Government of Cameroon on its horrible human rights record for LGBT people, it could set a precedent for all of the other African countries that persecute people who are LGBT. Half of the countries in the world where it's illegal to be LGBT are in Sub-Saharan Africa, and Africa is more intolerant of homosexuals than any other continent, so a bold statement from the African Human Rights Commission could be groundbreaking.

There are signs that the African Human Rights Commission will be receptive. In July, the Commission's expert on human rights defenders sharply condemned Eric's murder and called for the Government of Cameroon to conduct a prompt and thorough investigation. The Government of Cameroon, meanwhile, has stalled its investigation and lashed out at LGBT rights groups for making the government "look bad" in the western media.

These advocates speak eloquently about human rights conditions in Cameroon and the need for change. They'll use this opportunity to build support among other African human rights organizations and to press their case with the African Commission. We've worked with them in the past, including most recently to raise funds for Eric's funeral. So you know your donation will be put to great use.

4. Justice 4 Eric: Other Ways To Help

Even if you can't contribute financially, there are real ways you can help. First, learn about what's going on in Cameroon. Second, spread the word about this campaign -- use the handy indiegogo share tools! Third, encourage the bloggers you read to devote more attention to LGBT rights in Africa. Finally, stay tuned for updates from the African Human Rights Commission meeting October 18-25 -- if our colleagues can be there, the meeting has the potential to be a turning point for LGBT rights in Africa!

FRENCH VERSION

Aidez nous à envoyer des militants LGBTI camerounais à la Commission africaine des droits de l'homme et des peuples!

Quelques semaines seulement après avoir parlé publiquement des menaces et la violence ciblant les groupes LGBTI au Cameroun, le Directeur de CAMFAIDS, Eric Ohena Lembembe  a été brutalement torturé et assassiné dans son propre appartement. Depuis son assassinat, les menaces n’ont cessé mais elles n'ont
pas fait taire les défenseurs camerounais des droits humains.


Au lieu de cela, trois d’entre-eux ont travaillé à un rapport de 45 pages qui doit
être présenté à la Commission africaine des droits de l'homme et des peuples,
l’équivalent régional du Conseil des Droits de l’Homme des Nations Unies. Il
détaille le triste record des violations des droits des personnes LGBT par le
gouvernement du Cameroun.


Nous avons besoin de votre aide pour que les représentants d'un large éventail
d'organisations camerounaises se rendent le mois prochain à la Commission
africaine des droits de l'homme et des peuples et au forum des ONGs la
précédant. Les militants LGBTI camerounais doivent pouvoir participer à ses
travaux et faire valoir leur point de vue. Nous aimerions être presents en
nombre et souhaiterions envoyer au moins 3 militants pour amplifier notre
message et montrer notre force et notre union.

Le montant nécessaire à la participation d’un militant s’élève à 2750 USD chaque personne.
Soit:

- Billet d'avion du Cameroun à la Gambie (où siege la Commission africaine)

1600$

- Inscription au Forum des ONG de 3 jours, avant la session : 100 $

- Visa pour entrer en Gambie : 100 $

- 7 nuits dans un hôtel, nourriture et transport sur place : 700 $

-Indigogo 250$

Aidez-nous à nous faire entendre! Aidez nous à envoyer des militants LGBTI camerounais à la Commission africaine des droits de l'homme et des peuples!

Une partie des fonds sera consacrée à l'amélioration de la sécurité et de
l'impact des groupes LGBT dont CAMFAIDS au Cameroun. Cette operation est
realisée en collaboration avec la Fondation St Paul Fondation pour la
réconciliation internationale dont l’appel à dons  avait déjà permis de couvrir
les frais liés à l’enterrement d’ Eric Ohena Lembembe.. Basée en Californie et
bénéficiant du statut 501 (c ) pour les associations à but non lucrative, la
Fondation s'engage dans le dialogue et la formation de coalitions entre les
organisations laïques et religieuses qui partagent les mêmes valeurs pour les
personnes marginalisées , en particulier les femmes et les personnes LGBT.


 

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Choose your Perk

DVD:Love Heals Homophobia

$25 USD
In "Love Heals Homophobia," four important straight African American clergy talk about their journeys to full acceptance of LGBT people and how to create congregations that celebrate diversity. A great video!
Estimated Shipping
October 2013
1 out of 300 of claimed

"From Wrongs to Gay Rights"

$100 USD
Eric Lemembe was also a journalist and this book contains several essays written by LGBT activists. This book was one of Eric's last great writings before he was murdered.
Estimated Shipping
October 2013
2 out of 200 of claimed

A Granite Pillar Award

$1,000 USD
Emblazoned with our corporate badge and your name, these table size awards honor those pillars of our community who literally support others in their work of global justice
Estimated Shipping
October 2013
1 out of 10 of claimed

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