The two gay men arrested and sentenced for 15 years on anti-LGBTQ sodomy charges that culminated in the expulsion of a US Ambassador have been pardoned by the Zambian President.
Japhet Chataba and Steven Samba, the victims, were among 3,000 individuals pardoned by President Edgar Chagwa Lungu on Africa Freedom Day approximately six months after a High Court in the nation’s capital of Lusaka slapped the pair with the decade-plus-long sentences on charges of having sex “against the order of nature.”
The pair were staying at a hotel when a worker claimed she looked through a window and saw them having sex.
It is not clear whether the president’s decision to pardon the couple was related to international pressure or if they were merely two individuals out of thousands who were freed in a mass pardon.
Daniel Lewis Foote, who was then the US ambassador to Zambia, voiced his displeasure with the 15-year sentence, saying he was “personally horrified.”
Those comments drew criticism in Zambia, an overwhelmingly Christian nation where it is not uncommon for folks to express homophobic sentiments, and the nation’s government was angered by what it felt was an example of an American diplomat meddling in Zambian affairs.
Although the controversy boiled over with Foote’s comments, the quarrel also became seeped in themes of colonialism.
On one hand, the anti-LGBTQ laws at the core of the controversy originated under British colonial rule, and on the other hand the issue revived simmering controversies about whether Western nations should condition international aid on a given set of rules that must be followed by those who are receiving the money.
As the dispute spilled out into the public, Foote used the opportunity to blurt out his longstanding frustrations over his lack of access to President Lungu.
Foote bemoaned that he was only able to secure five meetings with Lungu during a two-year span when the US pumped $500 million in aid into Zambia.
“Both the American taxpayers, and Zambian citizens, deserve a privileged, two-way partnership, not a one-way donation that works out to $200 million per meeting with the Head of State,” Foote said in a written statement in December of last year.
Soon enough, Zambia demanded that Foote leave the country, prompting the State Department to pull him from his post in late December.
Following the release of Chataba and Samba, however, the leader of the opposition party has called on Lungu to apologize to Foote.
In an interview with Hot FM in Zambia, Sean Tembo, the president of the Patriots for Economic Progress, said Lungu victimized and humiliated Foote and is left with no other option than to apologize to the former US ambassador, according to the Lusaka Times.
Foote has remained quiet during the time following his departure from Zambia and it is not clear whether he is working in a different capacity with the State Department.
Last Updated on Jun 2, 2020
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