Two men are seeking a Kenyan court ruling
declaring enforced anal examinations unconstitutional after they were subjected
to such tests last year to see if they had been involved in gay sex, the men's
lawyer said on Tuesday.
Rights
activists have condemned the examinations as inhuman and humiliating. New
York-based Human Rights Watch said such coerced examinations might amount to
torture under international law.
Kenya, like many African
nations, outlaws homosexuality. The law calls for jailing those involved in
homosexual acts, but violations are rarely prosecuted.
In court papers filed in
September, the two men, whose names have not been made public, alleged they
were coerced into undergoing anal examination by security personnel and a
public hospital in Kenya's coastal city of Mombasa in February 2015.
Sande Ligunya, the men's lawyer, told Reuters a
court in Mombasa would conduct the case's first hearing on Wednesday.
Police
said they could not comment on the men's claims since they were a subject of
court proceedings.
In
the petition, the men say they want the court to declare that forced anal
examination "amounts to degrading treatment" and "a violation of
the human and constitutional rights".
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."
Human
Rights Watch senior researcher Neela Ghoshal said the medical procedures "accomplish
nothing, other than humiliating and demeaning people who are considered moral
‘outcasts.’”
Reuters
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