- Foundation for Human Rights
Transcription
- Foundation for Human Rights
i Dedication With love we remember Jill Henderson who was a driving force behind this project. We also remember Bomkazi Mbizo fondly who passed away suddenly during our work. We dedicate this work to all the lesbians who fight daily for the right to be themselves. … and to all the activists who believe that human rights should be lived. ii Acknowledgements As always, projects like these do not happen on their own, nor only by those who are made visible in the text. In Triangle Project, Jill Henderson’s tragic and unexpected death left the hard work of coordinating and motivating the project to an already pressurised director, Jayne Arnott. Javin Jagers stepped in to do various tasks including the essential job of data entry and Julie Moreau provided a comprehensive record of the training course through her meticulous record-keeping. Sindiswa Thafeni caught the ball when Jayne left, Mikki van Zyl expanded her role as external consultant to research coordinator and Sharon Ludwig helped to see the first phase of this project to its conclusion. The Action for Justice Team demonstrated their dedication through every stage of completing this project: Funeka Soldaat, Nyameka Mkosana, Velisa Jara, Veronica Sowazi, Thozama Matabata, Pearl Mali, Siya Mcuta, Nomthetho Ndzima, Zithu Dlakavu, Monde Hobongwana and Jean-Marie Nkurunziza. Finally, without funding, no project can be implemented. This project was undertaken in collaboration with Oxfam Canada, with the financial support of the Government of Canada provided through the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). We also sincerely thank the Foundation for Human Rights for their funding support for this project. iii Contents DEDICATION .............................................................................................. II ACKNOWLEDGEMEN TS ............................................................................... III ABBREVIATIONS ........................................................................................ VI GLOSSAR Y ............................................................................................... VII EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ................................................................................ IX JUSTICE DELAYED… .................................................................................... 15 LGBTI hate crimes in South Africa ....................................................................................... 15 A culture of violence .......................................................................................................... 17 Sex, gender and sexuality and the threat to masculinised norms ........................................ 18 Why conduct this study? .................................................................................................... 19 THE R ES EARCH PROCESS ............................................................................. 21 Research aim and objectives .............................................................................................. 21 Using a participatory action research framework ............................................................... 21 Creating the research team ................................................................................................ 22 The research training course .............................................................................................. 22 Description of the participants ........................................................................................... 23 Data collection ................................................................................................................... 24 Data analysis ...................................................................................................................... 25 Ethical considerations ........................................................................................................ 26 BARRIERS AND BRID GES :COM MUNITY M OBILI SATI ON DURING TH E TRIAL .......... 27 The Joint Working Group and Campaign 07-07-07 .............................................................. 27 Barriers to Mobilisation...................................................................................................... 28 Bridges to Mobilisation ...................................................................................................... 35 iv RECOMM ENDATIONS ................................................................................. 40 REFER ENCES ............................................................................................. 41 APPENDIX A: TIM ELINE OF THE Z OLISWA NKONY ANA MURDER TRIAL ................ 42 APPENDIX B: INTERVIEW GUIDE .................................................................. 45 v Abbreviations CGE Commission for Gender Equality FG Free Gender SGJ Sonke Gender Justice SJC Social Justice Coalition TAC Treatment Action Campaign TP Triangle Project WLC Women’s Legal Centre LGBTI lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex WSW women who have sex with women MSM men who have sex with men vi Glossary Bisexual: A term used to refer to a person who is capable of having sexual and romantic attraction to someone of the same gender and/or someone of other genders; such attraction to different genders is not necessarily simultaneous or equal in intensity. Not all people who are attracted to different genders selfidentify as bisexual. Butch: Lesbians with more masculine gender presentations and performances. Femme: Lesbians with more feminine gender presentations and performances. Gay: A term deriving from the global North as a synonym for homosexual men in many parts of the world; its use is more nuanced in South Africa, where it often refers to feminine-identified men (ladies) whose primary erotic orientation is towards gents, other men who may see themselves as "straight" (Reid, 2013). Not all men who are attracted to other men self-identify as gay. Gender: The socially constructed roles, behaviour, activities and attributes that a particular society considers appropriate for women and men based on society’s conceptions of femininity and masculinity. Gender-based violence: Violence directed against a person on the basis of their sex or gender. Genderbased violence includes sexual violence, intimate violence, psychological abuse, sexual exploitation, sexual harassment, harmful traditional practices, and discriminatory practices based on gender. The term is widely understood to include violence targeting women, transgender persons, and men because of how they experience and express their genders and sexualities (Human Rights Watch, 2011). Gender identity: A person’s inner sense of an authentic gendered self, which could range along a continuum from femininity to masculinity, and which varies across social spaces, i.e. cultures and contexts. Gender presentation or performance: The way in which people express their gender identity through behaviours which society deems "feminine" or "masculine". It could include language use, body language, dress, mannerisms and so forth. Hate crime: Any criminal behaviour or expression (verbal or physical) that stems from prejudice or stigmatisation of someone’s perceived identity, e.g. sexual orientation. Homo hate crimes are homophobia enacted. Since they are perpetrated on marginalised and stigmatised groups, services like the police that have entrenched attitudes of homophobia, often do not treat such crimes with due diligence. This leaves the impression that they may be committed with impunity. Heteronormativity: Related to “heterosexism” discussed below, it refers to the privileged position associated with heterosexuality based on a normative assumption that there are only two genders, that vii gender always reflects the person’s biological sex as assigned at birth, and that only sexual attraction between these “opposite” genders is considered normal or natural. Heterosexism: A system of beliefs that privilege heterosexuality and discriminate against other sexual orientations. It assumes that heterosexuality is the only normal or natural option for human relationships and posits that all other sexual relationships are either subordinate to, or perversions of heterosexual relationships. In everyday life, this manifests as the assumption that everyone is heterosexual, until proven otherwise. Homophobia (homoprejudice): Literally the fear of homosexuals (lesbians and gay men) and transgender people. Homophobic attitudes are rooted in prejudice and Othering, and therefore the term homoprejudice is also used. Homophobic behaviour ranges from all forms of discrimination, hostility and contempt to harassment, bullying, and extreme violence like rape, assault and murder. These are all crimes based on hate. LGBTI: An abbreviation referring to lesbian, gay, bisexual and importantly, also trans* and intersex persons. Although neither trans* nor intersex is classified as sexual orientations, similarities in experiences of marginalisation, exclusion, discrimination and victimisation in a heteronormative and heterosexist society are considered enough justification for their inclusion in efforts to ensure equality before the law and equal protection by the law, irrespective of sexual orientation. Lesbian: A term promoted by the global North for a woman whose primary sexual and romantic attraction is toward other women. Not all women who are attracted to other women self-identify as lesbian. Patriarchy: A social hierarchy that privileges men over women and masculinity over femininity. Sex: The biological and physiological characteristics socially agreed upon as defining men and women. Sexual orientation: The way in which a person’s sexual and romantic desires are directed. The term describes whether a person is attracted primarily to people of the same or other sex, or to both. Transgender: People who have a gender identity, and often a gender expression, that is different to the sex they were assigned at birth. Some transgender people opt for gender-affirming treatment, while others choose to not, or only partially, undergo such treatment. "Transgender man" refers to a female-to-male trans person, and "transgender woman" to a male-to-female trans person. Transgender people can be heterosexual, bisexual or homosexual. Trans*: The word "trans" with an asterisk is increasingly used to replace "transgender" and indicates a rejection of the hegemony of the global North in providing the language used to describe the identities and experiences of transgender people. viii Executive Summary In this study we set out to conduct an in-depth analysis of activist engagement surrounding the murder trial of Zoliswa Nkonyana, in order to identify barriers to justice as well as critical areas of intervention for activists. On the 4th of February 2006 Zoliswa Nkonyana was beaten and stabbed to death by a group of young men. Only nine of the men involved in the attack were charged and after a drawn out trial marked by more than 40 postponements, including the escape and recapture of some of the accused, four of the accused were convicted and sentenced. On the 1st of February 2012, almost six years after Zoliswa’s murder, the court handed down a landmark judgement when it was recognised for the first time in a South African case that prejudice directed at sexual orientation was the motivation for the attack. Despite South Africa’s progressive legislative framework, implementation practices for equal justice reflect widespread homophobia, also in the actions of police and prosecution services. Advocacy efforts during the trial were aimed at challenging these inadequacies and addressing the numerous delays. An advocacy process can make use of different methods in order to achieve its goal and objectives. Three main categories of methods in effective advocacy include (1) lobbying, (2) community mobilisation, public education and awareness-raising, and (3) media engagement. This report focuses on the process of public education and awareness-raising during the trial, which had the aim of using the trial to raise LGBTI visibility and awareness, mobilising community support during the trial, and building legitimacy and recognition for the cause of LGBTI hate crimes. To this end, we focus in particular on human rights organisations that mobilised outside the Khayelitsha courts to protest the numerous delays in the trial and pressure the judicial system. Based on the findings, we develop recommendations for future activist engagement around LGBTI hate crimes. The research process We made use of a qualitative methodology situated within a participatory action research framework. A team of community activists trained as researchers through completing a course in research design, data collection methods and data analysis. Using a semi-structured interview guide, the team of 16 activistresearchers captured their experiences through a self-completion exercise. Following this, they identified other community activists who had been active during mobilisation around the trial and conducted a further 26 semi-structured interviews, resulting in a total of 42 community activist interviews. Finally, the researcher-activists identified key informants representing five organisations: Triangle Project; the Social Justice Coalition; Sonke Gender Justice; Free Gender; and the Treatment Action Campaign. These organisations formed part of the task team created to coordinate activism around the trial and could therefore provide more in-depth accounts of the strategies informing this process. Despite an attrition rate ix among the initial group of 16 activists forming the research team, a core group of eight remained active and participated in the presentation of the findings at a final focus group discussion on recommendations. The interviews were transcribed and analysed using thematic analysis. This report forms part of a larger study and a subsequent report will focus on the process of lobbying with the aim of legal reform and media engagement during the trial. Findings The findings are organised around two points of focus. We first discuss barriers to mobilisation identified in participants' accounts, followed by a discussion of the bridges created by activists to overcome these barriers and increase the success of their mobilisation. Four themes were identified in participants’ accounts, related to barriers to effective advocacy: "It was hard...": Activist experiences of emotional pain, frustration and disillusionment This first theme relates to participants’ descriptions of the personal impact of the trial as emotionally harrowing and painful. Participants focused on three main ways in which their involvement in mobilisation around the trial impacted on them. A first component centred on their experience of vicarious trauma, where the brutal murder of a community member and the attendant sense of injustice around the murder impacted on participants and was experienced as a personal loss and trauma by many. As a second component of the personal impact of the trial, participants referred to a shared experience of secondary victimisation through being subjected to inefficiencies in the criminal justice system, causing feelings of frustration, anger and bitterness, as well as a sense of hopelessness and lack of control. This sense of secondary victimisation was particularly profound for community activists who were themselves survivors of sexual assault and hate crimes. A third component referred to participants' accounts of their disillusionment in the ability of the criminal justice system to protect them. Participants' involvement in mobilising around the trial meant that they were closely monitoring the failings of the criminal justice system and they reported becoming increasingly disillusioned with the systems meant to protect them, as the trial proceeded. This experience created a sense disappointment and distrust in the criminal justice system and contributed to the emotional impact of the trial on participants. Awareness of the threat of violence In addition to the impact of the emotional pain, frustration and disillusionment associated with their engagement with the trial, participants also reported feelings of fear, an awareness of a threat of physical violence and even instances of intimidation during the trial. The presence of the perpetrators at the trial and in their community, following the acquittal of some of the accused as well as the escape of others at one point during the trial, caused activists to fear for their safety. It was important for activists to formulate x strategies to ensure their safety and protect them from possible violence and intimidation when mobilising at the trial. A deliberate strategy used by activists to protect lesbian members at the court, was to engage the Treatment Action Campaign as a human rights partner organisation with a large membership base. This diffused the exclusive focus on the LGBTI sector through the attendance and visible presence of heterosexual allies. "They are still puzzled by this phenomenon": Lack of LGBTI-sensitivity and awareness among activists Not all community activists were members of organisations directly involved in the LGBTI- or gender-based violence sectors and instead participated in the mobilisation around the trial due to their more general support for social justice. Consequently, not all participants were empowered with knowledge about LGBTI genders and sexualities or key issues around gender-based violence. While cross-sectoral partnerships were critical to the success of mobilisation, participants noted that it was necessary to educate and sensitise activists from other sectors to empower them with the necessary knowledge. A lack of sensitivity was particularly apparent in instances of victim-blaming where some participants directed admonishments to lesbian women to avoid risky behaviour which could expose them to violence. In particular, many of them focused on risks involved in alcohol and drug use with the implication that it makes lesbian women vulnerable to violence. While such admonishments were offered out of concern, it plays into the notion that women are either partially or entirely responsible for being sexually assaulted or attacked, thereby shifting the blame from the perpetrator to the victim, and can contribute to a sense of secondary victimisation among survivors. Some participants spoke specifically about lesbians’ gender-nonconforming behaviour, especially in their interactions with men, implying that they provoke men through not conforming to normative notions of femininity. While some participants appeared to hold uncritical views regarding LGBTI genders and sexualities, there were also instances in which participants spoke about the transformation they underwent through participation in the mobilisation around the trial and the resultant solidarity they found with LGBTI individuals. Competing for the "winning title": Tensions between NGO's The mobilisation around the trial, while reliant on cooperation among different organisations, was at times led by specific organisations with others acting in supportive or auxiliary roles. These internal dynamics of the networking between organisations rose to prominence towards the end of the trial when some participants felt that all organisations were not being provided with equal visibility and recognition. Participants' accounts emphasise that receiving public recognition remains important in a context where NGO's are competing for visibility and funding. Further to this, activists invest not only time and organisational resources but also emotional resources and the recognition of their involvement might therefore also be important to them on a personal level. xi The summary of the findings now turns to four themes related to effective mobilisation, as identified in participants’ accounts: Shared values of social justice through activism The struggle for human rights in South Africa and the triumph of our progressive constitution means that many citizens consider human rights activism a significant aspect of their identities, reflecting their deeply held values in support of equality. Mobilisation and protests provide social spaces for expressing those values. In the face of massive unemployment, protests provide activities for people of like mind to come together and feel that they belong. Many of the participants were assertive about their activist and human rights defender identities, underscoring their belief in justice, equality and humanity, when describing themselves to their interviewers. Their activist identities were drawn on as a source of motivation for engaging in the often difficult and draining work they do. As briefly referred to above, it was significant that many of the organisations who joined in the process of mobilisation were not active in the LGBTI or genderbased violence sectors. Instead, they became involved out of a concern with the advancement of human rights and social justice, regardless of their own sector of involvement or own identification as heterosexual or as LGBTI. This shared concern with social justice proved instrumental in creating and sustaining a common focus in the mobilisation around the trial. "It made me want to fight for justice even more": Rising above injustice As discussed in the first theme presented in this summary, participants described the emotional impact of the trial as harrowing, painful and filled with frustration. However, instead of allowing this to discourage their activism, participants described using these painful experiences to motivate them to further action to continue fighting for justice. This ability to reframe their negative experiences in order to fuel their activism can be regarded as a source of resilience for activists. While exposure to traumatic events and the frustrations of the criminal justice system might be assumed to cause withdrawal and psychological difficulties for many activists, it appears that participants drew courage and strength from these experiences. It appears that a number of factors can help those exposed to trauma and injustice to transform their negative experiences into intensified efforts to achieve justice. These include the availability of social support, also emphasised by participants when describing how emotional pain, especially for lesbians but also voiced by participants who did not identify as LGBTI, was mitigated by the activism and solidarity from other organisations. Participants also emphasised the importance of more formal resources such as psychological support and debriefing to assist them in managing the emotional impact of their involvement in the trial. xii "It gave me hope": Drawing inspiration from media impact Participants described how seeing media coverage of the trial mitigated the negative emotional impact of their involvement in mobilisation. They were inspired to continue in their activism when they became aware of media coverage of the trial, especially so as it lent a sense of legitimacy to their cause. Seeing their efforts recognised through national and international media attention provided participants with a sense of achievement. This recognition was described as re-energising participants, particularly at points where the frustrations inherent to the trial left them feeling as if they were not making an impact. Coordination and communication While an earlier theme commented on the breakdown in communication among different organisations, participants generally described the relationships between partners as successful. Participants often referred to the positive role of the task team, established to effectively coordinate the NGO response and facilitate communication among organisation. Participants defined the communication among organisations as allowing a space for those usually marginalised in public discourses to be heard. Critical to ensuring effective and continuous communication, was employing not only traditional media but also social media to disseminate information about the trial and assist in mobilisation. Another aspect emphasised in participants' accounts is the importance of sharing resources among organisations. While the task team planned logistical matters, they needed funds and other resources supplied by the participating organisations in order to mobilise people to attend protests at the court. Recommendations for future advocacy and mobilisation A sense of common purpose underpinned the activists’ mobilisation around the trial of Zoliswa Nkonyana’s murderers. The outcomes showed that it was highly successful and that much can be taken from the way the activists mobilised to challenge the justice system. Below is a summary of the recommendations based on the findings of this report. These findings and recommendations will be integrated with those of a subsequent report to arrive at a best practice model for activist engagement in LGBTI hate crimes: Successful networking As an initial step in mobilisation, it is valuable to conduct a stakeholder mapping exercise to identify human rights organisations with a shared focus on social justice and form a joint network of response. Develop a strategic plan for mobilisation. Appoint a task team to coordinate the efforts of network in the campaign. Have on-going mobilisation efforts to mobilise community members. Have designated representatives to speak on behalf of the network. xiii Have education sessions to empower each other with knowledge regarding relevant issues, e.g. LGBTI genders and sexualities. Have education sessions to capacitate the involved activists on issues relevant to the campaign, e.g. effective media engagement or legal issues. Develop a media strategy to publicise the campaign. Logistical support Logistical support, provided by organisations with access to funding, increases the reach and impact of the campaign. Develop a budget for mobilisation campaigns. This would include transport and refreshments, communications as well as publicity materials. Set up effective and wide-ranging communication systems to reach all the group members, including using available and popular social media. Involve the mass media from an early stage to publicise the campaign, especially local radio and press. Develop publicity materials such as T-shirts, caps, pamphlets, posters, placards and banners to amplify the campaign message. Wellbeing of activists Involvement in advocacy around LGBTI hate crimes and gender-based violence takes an emotional toll on activists and adequate support is critical. Ensure the availability of formal psychological counselling and debriefing. Create opportunities for informal support through regular group meetings and peer support groups where experiences can be shared. Increase opportunities for shared decision-making among activists, to mitigate frustration and increase a sense of self-efficacy in the face of the inefficiencies of the criminal justice system. Implement strategies to ensure the physical safety of activists, particularly those who might be subjected to increased risk due to their LGBTI identities. Use effective media engagement to motivate activists and lend broader legitimacy to activism. xiv CHAPTER ONE Justice delayed… On 4 February 2006 Zoliswa Nkonyana, who was open about being lesbian, was with her friend Phindiswa Mangxala at a shebeen in Khayelitsha. They went to the ladies' toilets but were chased out by a group of women who taunted them for “acting like men” yet wanting to use the ladies’ toilets. The 19year-old Zoliswa retaliated by asking them to “go with them” whereupon the women went to their boyfriends (the nine accused) and told them about the incident. The men followed Zoliswa and Phindiswa out of the shebeen and started chasing them and beating them up. They ran but were overpowered by the men, where Zoliswa was stabbed and stoned to death in the street a few hundred metres from her home. Her stepfather saw the commotion but did not realise it was Zoliswa who was being assaulted and murdered. After numerous postponements (see the timeline of the trial attached as appendix A), the state’s main witness finally started giving evidence in December 2008. On the basis of the high number of delays, a Joint Working Group formed by the 070707 Campaign petitioned the National Prosecuting Authority to have the case moved to the High Court. (The 070707 Campaign formed as an advocacy group after the deaths of Sizakele Sigasa and Salome Masooa on 7 July 2007). The National Prosecuting Authority responded by nominally changing the Khayelitsha court into a High Court. In the meantime Zoliswa’s mother had to endure the laughter of the accused and their girlfriends in the gallery. Throughout the case, supporters of the accused verbally abused, threatened, taunted and even threw stones at Zoliswa’s family and friends, other survivors and activists who were protesting. Improper gathering of evidence meant that charges against most of the accused had to be dropped due to lack of evidence. There were more than fifty postponements over the course of the trial, and four of the accused escaped from the court in 2011, but fortunately were soon recaptured. After a six-year trial, only four of the initial group of accused - Lubabalo Ntlabathi, Sicelo Mase, Luyanda Lonzi and Mbulelo Dama - were found guilty of murder and sentenced in a landmark judgment which recognised the influence of prejudice regarding sexual orientation as motivating the murder. LGBTI hate crimes in South Africa Globally, South Africa has one of the most progressive constitutional and legal frameworks for the protection of LGBTI rights. In most African countries active prosecution and persecution of gay, lesbian and bisexual individuals still continue (Anyamele, Lwabaayi, Nguyen, & Binswanger, 2005). South Africa differs in that sexual orientation was enshrined as a protected status in the constitution in 1996 and legal protection against discrimination based on sexual orientation is in place (Isaack, 2003). Same-sex civil unions are legally 15 recognised through legislation introduced in 2006 and the removal of a range of discriminatory laws have followed to increasingly ensure equality for LGBTI individuals (De Vos & Barnard, 2007). The constitutional and legal protection that is largely in place for LGBTI individuals however do not mean that everyday prejudice and victimisation based on sexual orientation do not occur - discrimination persists and there are “patterns of violent harassment” of women in same-sex relationships, particularly in South African townships (Motswapong, 2010, p. 103). Mostly working class men particularly target lesbians and bisexual women with non-normative gender expression as well as transgender men for hate crimes that often include rape and murder. These crimes are exacerbated by men acting in groups, as evidenced in the murder of Zoliswa Nkonyana. Failures in the protection of the rights of lesbians and bisexual women, transgender men and other gender non-conforming people contribute to the impunity with which LGBTI hate crimes are committed and since 2007 South Africa has seen an increase in reported rape/murder crimes where sexual orientation or gender non-conformity was described as relevant to the attack (Mkhize, Bennett, Reddy, & Moletsane, 2010). While the progressive legal and policy framework should provide some protection or recourse for those affected by LGBTI hate crimes, many survivors instead describe an apathetic and inefficient response when attempting to access criminal justice system services (Human Rights Watch, 2011). Survivors and their families and friends also report secondary victimisation by the police, where they are subjected to verbal abuse and demeaning treatment, such as being asked mocking questions about lesbian sexual acts. The Human Rights Watch (2011) report also describes cases of direct victimisation, where members of the police themselves are the primary perpetrators of violence against lesbian and bisexual women, transgender men and other gender non-conforming people. This lack of trust in the police and others in the criminal justice system means that survivors are wary of reporting hate crimes. For those who do report and have their cases come to trial, LGBTI civil society organisations have to mobilise to ensure that the prosecutions proceed effectively, if at all. Considering that crimes against lesbian and bisexual women, transgender men and other gender non-conforming people are distributed not only according to gender and race lines, but also according to class lines, it is not surprising that many survivors live in communities that are under-resourced (Human Rights Watch, 2011). They consequently do not have easy access to legal resources to ensure the protection of their rights and it is important for investigations into hate crimes and proposed legal reforms to take into account how genderbased violence and LGBTI-related hate crimes intersect with class. 16 A further factor impeding the success of hate crime prosecutions is the fact that there are currently no legal provisions in South Africa acknowledging the influence of perceived gender, gender identity or sexual orientation in motivating hate crimes. Specialised hate crime legislation that could strengthen the prosecution of offences has been proposed and its promulgation will be an important next step in addressing hate crimes in South Africa (Mkhize et al., 2010). In the discussion that follows we highlight two key considerations in understanding hate crimes directed at lesbian and bisexual women, transgender men and gender non-conforming people. First, high levels of gender based- and sexual violence in South Africa define the society within which LGBTI hate crimes are committed. Second, the dominance of a heteronormative and patriarchal view of gender and sexuality prescribes strong sanctions against gender non-conformity and create the social conditions within which women's gender performances and sexualities are regulated, at times through violence. A culture of violence The depth of misogyny and its concomitant violence against women in South Africa has reached epidemic proportions with Jewkes et al. (2009) asserting that almost a third (27.6%) of men have admitted to raping women. The female homicide rate in South Africa is six times that of the global average and half of these murders occur at the hands of an intimate partner (Mathews, Jewkes, & Abrahams, 2011). Sexual assault also occurs at staggeringly high rates - research reports place South Africa among the countries with the highest rates of reported cases of rape, and considering the severely under-reported nature of sexual assault the figures are likely to represent only a portion of cases (Hirschowitz, Worku, & Orkin, 2000). Prevalence of sexual violence also differs according to factors such as class, which influences women’s access to increased security (Dosekun, 2007). A study conducted in Cape Town posits that 40 percent of the women participating in the research reported at least one instance of sexual assault (Kalichman et al., 2005). Regardless of personal risk or direct experience of sexual violence, it has become so pervasive that it is normative and "fear of sexual assault stalks the imagination of many South African women" (Mkhize et al., 2010, p. 4). As a group, however, LGBTI individuals are singled out for particular forms of abuse and violence, not only from other people in their communities, but also by police and other service providers (Nel & Judge 2008; Mkhize et al. 2010). Provisional findings from research conducted by the South African Hate Crimes Working Group state that almost half of hate crimes studied in their sample were related to sexual orientation and/or gender expression (Nel, 2013). Research by the Triangle Project found that 86% of black lesbians in South Africa report that they fear being victims of sexual violence, compared to 44% of white lesbians 17 reporting the same (Rich, 2006). The following section explores the links between sex, gender and sexuality in informing hate crimes and violence against LGBTI individuals. Sex, gender and sexuality and the threat to masculinised norms What ties various hate crimes against LGBTI individuals together is the perceived threat to dominant masculine norms presented by lesbian and bisexual women, transgender men and other gender nonconforming people. A patriarchal orientation towards women as subservient to men is so entrenched that in many African communities female same-sex sexuality is not only seen in light of it being “deviant” sexually but is also regarded as a transgression of a woman’s gendered position in communities. South African political figures, such as Jacob Zuma, have repeatedly uttered homophobic statements (Msibi 2011), supporting a reified and regressive concept of "African" masculinity that is “heterosexist, patriarchal, implicitly violent and that glorifie[s] ideas of male sexual entitlement, notably polygamy [sic], and conspicuous sexual success with women” (Morrell, Jewkes & Lindegger, 2012, p. 17). In the recuperation of post-colonial African identities, the construction by national leaders of idealised black identities as exclusively heterosexual, has exacerbated the dangers for black lesbians. Such a reassertion of a patriarchal traditionalism expects of women to submit to men and assume a passive role – a romantic relationship with another woman is then often regarded as desiring to be like a man and therefore as threatening the traditional order of male dominance and female passivity (Henderson, Cloete, & Van Zyl, 2011; Lynch, 2013). The extent to which female same-sex sexuality is regarded as a threat to male norms is apparent in hate crimes against lesbian and bisexual women termed in some reports as "corrective" rape, where women are targeted in sexual assaults where the perpetrator has the aim of using rape to “cure” their victim of their same-sex orientation (Actionaid, n.d.; Britton, 2006; Muholi, 2004). Victims often report that during the attack their perpetrators tell them that they are being “taught a lesson” and being “shown how to be real women” (Actionaid, n.d., p. 12). LGBTI hate crimes are fuelled by strong sanctions against women’s transgression of their prescribed gendered role, and therefore function to "discipline" gender nonconformity and deviations from heterosexuality (Currier, 2011). This demonstrates its roots as a misogynist hate crime that ultimately has implications for all women, regardless of their sexual orientation. While media reports focus on lesbian women as the victims of "corrective" rape, bisexual women and transgender men are also at risk as any indication of involvement with a woman or gendered presentation which diverges from a normative feminine identity makes a person vulnerable. A participant in a South African study focused on bisexual women refers to her awareness of the risk of physical violence or even death when she states that if you are seen with another woman “you’re putting your life in danger really” (Lynch, p. 186, 2013). This points to the regulative function of LGBTI hate crimes, in that it impacts not only on the person directly affected, but conveys a powerful message of intolerance to all persons who share in 18 the victim's identity or social grouping. This wider ripple effect has the consequence that "hate crimes can and do intimidate and disrupt entire communities" (N.Y. State Penal Law, 2000, para 1). Another gendered dimension of safety for lesbians and bisexual women in townships is shaped by a continuum of "guilt" and "innocence" – in the eyes of society, people’s identities position them according to those who are to "blame" and those who are "victims". Women and children are frequently positioned as "innocent victims", yet those seen to be breaking social and cultural codes and mores, will forfeit the right to protection reserved for victims (Pisani, 2008). Common-sense prejudiced beliefs regarding lesbian women include the notion that butch lesbians "corrupt" women, and that "femme" lesbians are "innocent victims" who have no agency, and would otherwise be heterosexual. This belief perpetuates and maintains the ideology of men’s ownership of women, and that women do not and should not have sexual agency or autonomy. It positions butch lesbians as predators who need to be controlled. Consequently, lesbians who present or identify as butch have to work the hardest to attain images of respectability and dignity in their communities and are at the frontline of lesbian rapes and murders. Notions of "decency" and "innocence" are however also constructed through class and race - where poor people are deemed less "decent" and racist discourses value whiteness - as well as other axes of social power. Therefore black working class butch lesbians are positioned through a variety of identities that would fall outside the parameters of "decent" and "innocent". While women behave according to the "acceptable" and "passive" sexual norms, they may be seen as innocent, and their sexual rights will be protected. Women who exercise agency and autonomy with their bodies and sexuality risk the abrogation of innocence and therefore their claim to their rights. Phillips (2009) argues that we “need to reconfigure the relationship so that innocence/guilt attaches to issues of harm and autonomy rather than morality or social value” (p. 358-359). Though lesbians have constitutional rights, in terms of cultural values they do not have rights. This could be one of the reasons why it has been so difficult for LGBTI hate crimes to be defined as such in the courts and for the lack of efficiency and urgency in the Zoliswa Nkonyana trial. Why conduct this study? The murder trial of Zoliswa Nkonyana is unique in that it represents the first case in which the judgement passed by the court recognised that prejudice towards the victim's sexual orientation informed the motivation for the crime. This indicates an important step towards legal reform in addressing LGBTI hate crimes and a study of the process of activism surrounding the trial can serve as a basis for developing recommendations for future activism. 19 An advocacy process can make use of different methods in order to achieve its goal and objectives. Three main categories of methods in effective advocacy include (1) lobbying, (2) community mobilisation, public education and awareness-raising, and (3) media engagement (Carroll, 2010). This report focuses on the process of public education and awareness-raising during the trial, which had the aim of using the trial to raise LGBTI visibility and awareness, mobilise community support during the trial, and build legitimacy and recognition for the cause of LGBTI hate crimes. During the murder trial numerous community activists defending human rights mobilised and protested outside the Khayelitsha courts to challenge the judicial system. They wanted hate crimes against lesbians to be dealt with seriously by the police and courts. The civil society organisations involved were not all focused on the LGBTI sector, but instead represented a range of human rights organisations, such as Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), Sonke Gender Justice (SGJ) and the Social Justice Coalition (SJC). These organisations mobilised around a shared concern, which proved instrumental in creating and sustaining a common focus in the activism around the trial. It is this process of mobilisation and awareness-raising through partnerships across organisations which we explore in the current report, using a participatory action research framework. A subsequent report will focus on the process of lobbying with the aim of legal reform as well as the media engagement during the trial. The next chapter outlines the research process that informed the study. 20 CHAPTER TWO The research process Research is the methods one uses to interpret a given situation or condition and make recommendations (written by a community activist team member during the research training course). Research aim and objectives The aim of this study is to conduct an in-depth analysis of activist engagement surrounding the murder trial of Zoliswa Nkonyana, to arrive at recommendations for future activist engagement around LGBTI hate crimes. Specific objectives include: Objective 1: To identify critical areas of intervention by activists in the murder trial of Zoliswa Nkonyana Objective 2: To identify barriers to as well as opportunities for justice in the process of activism around the trial Objective 3: To formulate recommendations for effective activist engagement in criminal justice system processes around LGBTI hate crimes Using a participatory action research framework The research team made use of a qualitative participatory action research framework. The team conducted semi-structured interviews with 42 activists involved in the mobilisation around the trial, as well as semistructured interviews with five key informants representing different civil society organisations. Participatory action research entails working in collaborative groups to study problems of mutual concern and integrates knowledge production with the implementation of actions to effect change (Cornwall & Jewkes, 1995; Heron & Reason, 1997). The community activists that participated in the research process were members of grassroots organisations involved in the mobilisation around the trial, and adopted a dual role as researcher-activists when they joined the research team. They were partners in defining the research questions, the concepts underlying them and the methodology employed to address them (Maiter, Joseph, & Saeid, 2013). 21 Creating the research team Participatory action research relies on a cyclical self-reflective process, where practitioners (in this case a group of researcher-activists) evaluate their actions and the impact thereof to arrive at recommendations to improve their practice (Bradbury & Reason, 2003). As one of the key organisations involved in the mobilisation around the Zoliswa Nkonyana trial, Triangle Project initiated the research process and obtained funding from donor agencies. Activists from other organisations who had been part of the mobilisation joined the research team, coordinated by Triangle Project. The team members can be described as researcher-activists as they occupy a dual position both as activists involved in the process of mobilisation as well as forming part of the research team documenting and analysing this process. This had the advantage of developing contextualised research accounts that offer an insider perspective, where those responsible for producing knowledge during the research process are also those who experienced the phenomenon under study, an approach which is consistent with participatory action research principles (Bradbury & Reason, 2003). To ensure rigor while assuming such a dual position, researcher-activists carefully examined their subjective involvement in the project through keeping field notes and conducting group discussions at regular team meetings. The majority of the research team, eight from a total of 16, were members of the organisation Free Gender. The remaining eight members were from Treatment Action Campaign and the Social Justice Coalition. Further details regarding the team members' sociodemographic details are provided in a subsequent section of this chapter. The team developed their own corporate identity and was known as the "Action for Justice" team with the slogan “Equal and accessible justice for all”. Team members also collectively designed a logo. The research training course The team of researcher-activists participated in a five-day experiential training programme on research methods and were provided with a training manual for own reference when conducting the research. The training course was also used as a space to come to common understandings about the concepts used, and to begin some processes for documentation in the report, e.g. compiling a time-line of significant events during the trial. In order to qualify as a researcher various criteria were set and agreed by the coordinators of the research. Research skills were assessed during the course and participants were issued with a certificate upon successful completion of the training. The course outline is provided below: 22 Figure 1: Researcher-activists training course outline Description of the participants This project drew on information obtained from two main groups of participants. The first is that of activists involved in mobilisation around the trial and comprised of the researcher-activist team of 16 members. This core group of activists expanded their sample to include a further 26 participants who were also involved in mobilisation in the trial, bringing the total of activist accounts to 42. Of the group of 42 participants, the majority identified themselves as black. Their ages ranged between 21 and 50, with the average age being 29 years. The majority of the participants indicated that they reside in Khayelitsha, the township in Cape Town where Zoliswa Nkonyana lived and also where she was murdered. Thirteen participants identified as lesbian, eleven simply as men, seven as "straight" women, six as "straight" men and five simply as women. It is interesting to note the number of participants who explicitly identified themselves as "straight". Heterosexuality is typically assumed as the norm and consequently not often explicitly identified as someone's sexual orientation. Such deliberate naming could be due to the context of speaking about LGBTI issues, in that some participants perhaps felt the need for heterosexuality 23 to be differentiated and made visible. It might also indicate an awareness of being a minority of heterosexual men and women in a lesbian-majority space. The second group of participants comprised of key informants who were selected to represent five organisations: Triangle Project; the Social Justice Coalition; Sonke Gender Justice; Free Gender; and the Treatment Action Campaign. These organisations were selected based on them forming part of the task team created to coordinate activism around the trial, and were therefore closely involved in mobilisation and could provide in-depth accounts of the strategies informing this process. Data collection To address the research questions formulated by the team, we collected data from four main sources: (1) A desk-top study involving trial transcripts, media reports and other relevant documentation to develop and anchor the key narrative of the trial and surrounding activism; (2) semi-structured interviews with 42 community activists involved in the mobilisation around the trial; (3) semi-structured key informant interviews with representatives from five of the civil society organisations involved in the task team coordinating activism surrounding the trial and (4) a focus group discussion with eight community activists forming part of the research team. Below we provide more information regarding the semi-structured interviews with community activists, the key informant interviews with civil society organisations, and the focus group discussion with community activists conducted at the end of the data collection period. Semi-structured interviews We made use of semi-structured interviews to explore the personal experiences of community activists involved in mobilisation around the trial as well as that of representatives selected for the key informant interviews. Using the semi-structured interview guide discussed below, the original team of 16 activistresearchers captured their experiences through a self-completion exercise. Following this, they then had to identify other community activists who had been active during the mobilisation for the trial and request their participation. Potential participants did not need to belong to an organisation, although ultimately all did, and could be any community member who took part in the picketing or mobilisation at the courts. The team of activist-researchers conducted 26 semi-structured interviews with other community activists, resulting in a total of 42 community activist interviews. Finally, the researcher-activists identified the five key informants and set up and conducted the interviews. The semi-structured interview guide A semi-structured interview guide designed by the research team guided directed both the community activist interviews as well as the key informant interviews. Based on the aim and objectives of the study, the 24 research team first formulated appropriate questions in small groups and then finalised the questions in plenary after which the guide was translated into isiXhosa. The main content areas explored during the interviews include demographic information; personal, organisational and community involvement in mobilisation around the trial; and recommendations for successful activist and other sectoral engagement around LGBTI hate crimes (the full interview guide is attached as appendix B). The focus of the community activist interviews and the key informant interviews differed somewhat in that the former elicited more discussion of activists' personal experiences in mobilising around the trial, while the latter emphasised organisational responses to mobilisation. Interviews were recorded using digital tape recorders, transcribed and when necessary, translated into English. Focus group discussion with community activists After the data had been analysed, the team of activist-researchers were invited to a workshop where the findings were presented and the recommendations reviewed with plans made for strategic implementation. The outcomes of this workshop were also incorporated into the findings and recommendations. The participatory action framework within which the research was conducted necessitated the focus group discussion, in that it is anticipated that the team of activist-researchers will be actively involved in implementing recommendations stemming from the research. Since a number of members had jobs, and employed members of the participating organisations returned to other concerns, there was an attrition rate in the original team of 16. A core group of 8 team members, consisting mainly of Free Gender members and one Treatment Action Campaign member, remained and participated in the focus group discussion. Data analysis We used thematic analysis to identify themes relevant to the aim and objectives of the study. The transcribed material from all the data sources was imported into Nvivo 10, a qualitative data analysis software programme, to facilitate the process of coding and analysis. Thematic analysis is an accessible and theoretically flexible approach to identifying patterns in qualitative data (Braun & Clarke, 2006). The process of thematic analysis used in this study entailed the following six steps: (1) familiarisation with the data; (2) generating initial codes; (3) collating codes into potential themes; (4) reviewing themes by checking themes in relation to coded extracts as well as the entire data set and generating a thematic map of the analysis; (5) generating clear definitions and names for themes; and (6) producing the integrated report (Braun & Clarke, 2006). 25 Ethical considerations We followed standard ethical guidelines for conducting social research: participants received information sheets describing the nature of the research and their participation, who was conducting the research and what it would be used for. Permission was obtained to record the interviews. Confidentiality was emphasised and participants could choose whether to use a pseudonym or their real name in the research documents such as the informed consent form (Van Zyl, 2011). Most participants chose to use their real names and codes were later assigned to the data sources to protect participants' identities. Participants not involved in the core research team were also invited to attend the workshop where the findings were shared and plans for implementing the recommendations were developed. Many of the community activists forming part of the research team were unemployed and were all paid as independent contractors for conducting interviews. They were also reimbursed for transport costs to and from the team meetings. Once an interview was completed and submitted, the research coordinator assessed the quality of the information and when it was deemed satisfactory the researcher was paid. We established a network of accountability through conducting monthly meetings throughout the research period. The research coordinator approved all payments for interviews, but Triangle Project was responsible for disbursement of all funds. Team members had to attend all meetings. The next chapter presents the findings of the research. 26 CHAPTER THREE Barriers and Bridges: Community Mobilisation and Awareness-Raising During the Trial This chapter focuses on the findings related to the advocacy context of community mobilisation, awarenessraising and public education, as it formed part of activist engagement during the trial. Human rights organisations with diverse emphases mobilised outside the court in Khayelitsha, picketing and focussing attention on the delays in the trial. The aim of this advocacy strategy was to create and sustain public pressure on role-players in the criminal justice system in order to remedy the inefficiency in the trial, particularly following numerous postponements. This strategy also aimed to use the trial to raise LGBTI visibility and awareness, to mobilise community support during the trial, and build legitimacy and recognition for the cause of LGBTI hate crimes. In this chapter we report on the subjective experiences of activists involved in the protest actions at the Khayelitsha court and in awareness-raising and public education among community members in Khayelitsha regarding LGBTI hate crimes. These advocacy activities gained momentum as the trial proceeded and were sustained up until the end of the trial. The focus in this chapter is on identifying challenges and opportunities in effective activism, as encountered in this particular context of advocacy. The Joint Working Group and Campaign 07 -07-07 I am an activist because it is in my blood and I can’t change it. I am an activist because I want to play a big role in my community. Lesbians are killed because guys are jealous. I am an activist because I believe in human rights (written by a community activist team member during the research training course). During the initial stages of the civil society response to the delays in the trial, it was recognised that there was a need for an organised platform for mobilisation. One of the key activities was to set up a task team the Joint Working Group - that would meet regularly to keep everyone informed, monitor legal developments, plan activities, advocacy, media engagement and mobilise others: We formed a task team so that we can work together in mobilising the media and the community at 1 large (SS08 ). 1 In this report, extracts from the self-completed interviews are indicated by SC; the face-to-face interviews by SS; and the key informant interviews by KI. 27 I was part of the task team; initially where we were looking at strategies to pressure the government and the court (SS16). The Joint Working Group comprised a network of 26 LGBTI organisations across South Africa, headed by national coordinator Emily Craven. The focus of the working group was to create a space for national and provincial communication regarding the trial, in order to coordinate activities and share resources. A second focus of the Joint Working Group emerged when it created the Campaign 07-07-07. The campaign was initiated to call attention to hate crimes perpetrated against lesbian women and was named after the date, 7th of July 2007, on which Sizakele Sigasa and Salome Massoa were brutally killed in Soweto. Attached, as appendix A, is a timeline of the duration of the trial, which although not complete illustrates some of the critical points at which activists employed various advocacy strategies. The rest of this chapter is dedicated to presenting the findings from the thematic analysis of the semistructured interviews with activists and key informants involved in the mobilisation around the trial, and particularly in the activities outside the court. The discussion first focuses on barriers to mobilisation identified in participants' accounts, followed by bridges created by activists to overcome these barriers in order to increase the success of their mobilisation. Barriers to Mobilisation "It was hard...": Activist experiences of emotional pain, frustration and disillusionment Participants described the personal impact of the trial as "painful" (SS05), "emotional" (SS12) and "hurtful" (SC01). Participants focused on three main ways in which the trial impacted on them: through an experience of vicarious trauma, of secondary victimisation and of disillusionment in the ability of the criminal justice system to protect them. The vicarious trauma of being exposed to the horror of Zoliswa's violent death and the pain it caused to those close to her was referred to often during the interviews. Vicarious trauma describes the emotional and psychological effect on activists when working with the trauma experiences of others (Hesse, 2002). Participants, as community activists residing in or close to Khayelitsha, were in many instances closely involved with Zoliswa prior to her death and/or knew her family and friends, with the implication that they were exposed to details of the traumatic event and the painful stories of those affected by it when it occurred and also throughout the trial. The brutal murder of a community member and the attendant sense 28 of injustice around the murder impacted on them and was experienced as a personal loss and trauma by many of the participants: This case really affected me because I used to cry thinking what if Zoliswa was my sister (SS07). It was hard and painful to deal with the case of a young girl being killed (SS19). It was very emotional for me because when I think of Zoliswa's mother, how I felt she was affected by all this (SS12). It affected me in a very bad way; it caused anger and hurt to me (SS03). As a second component of the personal impact of the trial, participants referred to a shared experience of secondary victimisation through being subjected to inefficiencies in the criminal justice system, causing feelings of frustration, anger and bitterness, as well as a sense of hopelessness and lack of control. Secondary victimisation refers to the impact of events following an initial traumatic event, where survivors are further traumatised through their experiences with medical personal, legal systems, and community responses such as victim-blaming (Logan, Evans, Stevenson, & Jordan, 2005). In recounting their involvement in the trial, participants appear to mirror this experience of secondary victimisation often reported by survivors of crime and violence when dealing with the criminal justice system: I was so hurt, especially the day when some of the accused were released (SC05). [The case] was handled very badly because there were so many delays and postponements and it was emotional for the Nkonyana family and the organisations (SC04). I was very angry with how the judgement ended. Because I was wishing to see those guys suffer for years in jail (SS25). This sense of secondary victimisation was particularly profound for community activists who were themselves survivors of sexual assault and hate crimes. One participant described how the trial evoked her own experience of being raped: During the trial I was so angry, frustrated, full of fear. I just had these mixed emotions. I would break down and cry every time the case is being postponed. The trial took all my energy. It just made me feel hopeless. Because I was raped, got pregnant and got HIV. I always prayed that the case comes to an end because the guy who raped me passed away 2 months after I got pregnant. 29 So to me it would have been better knowing that he’s behind bars and that I won’t have to live with the fear of what might happen to me tomorrow only because of being a lesbian. All in all the trial had a great impact on me; it took me back to where I hated to be (KI01, TAC). The emotional toll of being involved in such a protracted trial with continuous postponements and judicial inefficiencies, causing stress, feelings of being drained and emotionally exhausted, was emphasised in participants' descriptions: I became out of control, stressed all the time I had to be in court; ended up "losing my mind" (SS02). It drained my brains out; was stressed out every day thinking of what will happen on the next court date (SS26). Participants' involvement in mobilising around the trial meant that they were closely monitoring the failings of the criminal justice system and they reported becoming increasingly disillusioned with the systems meant to protect them, as the trial proceeded. In particular, participants commented on the numerous postponements and the six-year duration of the trial, the escape of four accused (who were subsequently apprehended again) and the outcome of only four of the accused ultimately being convicted and sentenced. These experiences created a sense of disappointment and distrust in the criminal justice system and contributed to the emotional impact of the trial on participants: [It] had a negative impact on how we viewed the system. It gave the impression that our justice system is failing us (SS06). After years of fighting with the justice system to pay more attention to the trial, having four jailed was the best they can do (SS18). It has showed me how poor the justice system cares for human rights (SS23). It really made me not to believe in the justice system (SC04). Participants spoke about their awareness of inequalities in the criminal justice system, where the likelihood of attaining justice appears to be determined by a person's positioning along lines of class, race, gender and sexuality. Participants felt that justice was compromised during the trial because of Zoliswa’s marginalisation as a black lesbian from an under-resourced community: 30 I think the reason why Zoliswa’s case was delayed by the justice system was because she was a black lesbian (SS24). … if it was a white person the case would have been solved faster (SS12). It took too long because it is an ordinary case and there was no response from our government, I related it with Jacob Zuma’s rape case it only took less than 4 months process because he is in power, meaning that ordinary people have no power but those who are in power are respected (KI02, Sonke Gender Justice). I think that if only the cases could be handled equally and not depend on your race, religion, gender, sexuality and class (KI01, TAC). It felt as if this case was ignored because this girl was a lesbian. That made me angry (SS19). The case was not handled in a good way. It was not on top of the list like the cases of all the people with authority (SS03). Awareness of the threat of violence In addition to the impact of the emotional pain, frustration and disillusionment associated with their engagement with the trial, participants also reported feelings of fear, an awareness of a threat of physical violence and even instances of intimidation during the trial. The presence of the perpetrators at the trial and in their community, following the acquittal of some of the accused, caused activists to fear for their safety: For me it’s very challenging because I live on the same street as one of perpetrators. I am scared to even to wear my TAC T-shirt (SS16). I was very traumatised by the postponement of the case as those who were found not guilty were threatening our TAC members (SS09). It was emotionally draining because as a lesbian woman I felt like we are not taken as human beings and it made me not feel safe in my own area (SC04). There were times where I wanted to give up, worried they would target us as lesbians as well (SC17). 31 To a question concerning the safety and support received from the police during the trial, a participant answered: Not at all. There was not any safety during the trial because we were not kept safe by the police and also the family members of the killers were there and we did not know what will happen to us as activists. I think police did not care and they did not get warned about the accused escaping from custody. Just because they had nothing to do with LGBTI issues at that time and also they were not even supporting us when we were picketing in court (KI10, Triangle Project). Although many lesbians felt more unsafe than usual at various stages during the trial, their fears particularly increased during the time when four of the accused escaped from custody: When four of the suspects escaped … I called the investigating officer Geldenhuys who confirmed it. I was very scared and I still recall those five days every night. If I hear something I will wake up thinking they are there to kill me. I was relieved to hear that they were rearrested on Sunday (KI15, Free Gender). I was so scared I thought my life was in danger (SC02). Feelings of fear were also referred to in a researcher-activist's field notes, where she described her concerns about being targeted for victimisation due to identifying as lesbian: I was very scared of [the interviewee’s] place when I was doing my fieldwork. It was bad because the community members discriminated against me but I didn’t talk to anyone till I found the interviewee's place (SS19). It was important for activists to formulate strategies to ensure their safety and protect them from possible violence and intimidation when mobilising at the trial. A deliberate strategy used by activists to protect lesbian members at the court, was to engage the Treatment Action Campaign as a human rights partner organisation with a large membership base. This diffused the exclusive focus on the LGBTI sector through the attendance of heterosexual allies: We worked closely with TAC because of the masses of people affiliated to TAC as members. This was a strategy to protect lesbians who are attending the case. If there are masses of people outside the court singing no one will identify lesbians (KI15, Free Gender). 32 "They are still puzzled by this phenomenon": Lack of LGBTI-sensitivity and awareness among activists Not all community activists were from organisations directly involved in the LGBTI- or gender-based violence sectors and instead participated in the mobilisation around the trial due to their more general support for social justice. Consequently, not all participants were empowered with knowledge about LGBTI genders and sexualities or key issues around gender-based violence. While cross-sectoral partnerships were critical to the success of mobilisation, a participant noted that it was necessary to educate and sensitise activists from other sectors to empower them with the necessary knowledge regarding LGBTI genders and sexualities: Sexual orientation and gender dynamics [training] was needed to orientate many of our TAC SJC…volunteers who on close observations on their attitudes: They are still puzzled by this phenomenon (SC15). A lack of sensitivity was particularly apparent in instances of victim-blaming where some participants directed admonishments to lesbian women to avoid risky behaviour which could expose them to violence. Amongst the activists who were interviewed several men and women who identified themselves as heterosexual reprimanded lesbians for what they perceived as "masculine" behaviour and activities. In particular, many of them focused on risks involved in alcohol and drug use with the implication that it makes lesbian women vulnerable to violence. While such admonishments were often offered out of concern, it plays into the notion that women are either partially or entirely responsible for being sexually assaulted or attacked, thereby shifting the blame from the perpetrator to the victim, and can contribute to a sense of secondary victimisation among survivors (Bieneck & Krahe, 2011). Two women forming part of the research team expressed their concerns as follows: LGBTI must live in communities safe and secure … but they mustn’t abuse drugs and alcohol (SC13). [I want] to say to the LGBTI they must stop drinking and using drugs, because most of the time they are in trouble with that (SC03). A few of the participants spoke specifically about lesbians’ gender-nonconforming behaviour, especially towards men. A male participant who did not identify his sexuality said: LGBTI community have to show respect … lesbians shouldn’t undermine men as most of them do … most of the lesbians contribute to the fight by giving the fools what they want (SS07). A woman who did not identify her sexuality also gave a warning: 33 They [lesbians] must always be careful in our community, they must not be drinking with other guys (SS12). While some participants appeared to hold uncritical views regarding LGBTI genders and sexualities, there were also instances in which participants spoke about the transformation they underwent through their participation in the mobilisation around the trial. A heterosexual participant said that while he previously held homophobic views, his participation in the trial changed him and he has found solidarity with LGBTI individuals: It gave me strength to confront hate crimes. I can tell my friends that they are fools when they try to make fun out of gays (SS07). Competing for the "winning title": Tensions between NGO's The mobilisation around the trial, while reliant on cooperation among different organisations, was at times led by specific organisations with others acting in supportive or auxiliary roles. These internal dynamics of the networking between organisations rose to prominence towards the end of the trial when some participants felt that not all organisations were provided with equal visibility and recognition: Because of the case dragging out for such a long time the communication broke – Triangle wanted to take over (SS02). [Cooperation was] good, most of the time. Getting very complicated towards the end when organisations started wanting to gain the “winning title” (SS06). The challenges with working with other NGOs were lines of communication and they wanted credit (SS21). Receiving public recognition is important in a context where NGO's often have to compete for visibility and funding. Further to this, activists invest not only time and organisational resources but also emotional resources and the recognition of their involvement might therefore also impact on them on a personal level. A further tension noted by participants was that of the distribution of decision-making power between the different organisations’ members: At some point we were not communicating properly, because some of the decisions were taken by one organisation ...Organisations need to strategise and work together not only to get credit for a 34 particular organisation but working together to promote equality and address gender-based violence (SS13). The presentation of the findings now turns to aspects related to effective mobilisation, as identified in participants’ accounts. Bridges to Mobilisation Shared values of social justice through activism The struggle for human rights in South Africa and the triumph of our progressive constitution means that many citizens consider human rights activism a significant aspect of their identities, reflecting deeply held values of equality. Mobilisation and protests provide social spaces for expressing those values. In the face of massive unemployment, protests provide activities for people of like mind to come together and feel that they belong. Many of the participants were assertive about their activist and human rights defender identities, underscoring their belief in justice, equality and humanity, when describing themselves to their interviewers. Their activist identities were drawn on as source of motivation for engaging in the often difficult and draining work they do. During the training course, activists-researchers described themselves as follows: Activist, human rights defender, community member (SS02). Independent young woman, who is committed to activism (SS23). Activist, feminist, lesbian, friend (SS26). It was significant that many of the organisations who joined in the process of mobilisation were not active in the LGBTI or gender-based violence sectors. Instead, they became involved out of a concern with the advancement of human rights and social justice, regardless of their own sector of involvement or own identification as heterosexual or as LGBTI. This shared concern with social justice proved instrumental in creating and sustaining a common focus in the mobilisation around the trial. Participants referred to such a common focus when commenting on their motivation for becoming involved in the trial: Because I believe in justice (SS01). I believe in social justice and defending the rule of law (SS23). I was concerned about the crippled justice system we have (SC01). 35 Coming together in democracy to bring justice in our country (KI02, Sonke Gender Justice). I want to make change in my community (SS20). "It made me want to fight for justice even more": Rising above injustice As discussed earlier in this chapter, participants described the emotional impact of the trial as harrowing, painful and filled with frustration. However, instead of allowing this to discourage their activism, participants commented on using these painful experiences to motivate them to further action. They described how they used the anger, frustration and hurt they experienced when faced with the trauma of Zoliswa's death and the inefficiency of the justice system to inspire them to continue fighting for justice: It made me want to fight for justice even more. It made me realise that without the presence of organisations to push the system justice would never be served (SS06). Eish, sometimes I want to give up, don’t want to go to court again but it makes me a strong leader today, a better person (SS11). It actually made me stronger, gave me a reason to go to court; pickets and every protest that involves the LGBTI community (SS06). [The emotional toll of the trial] really disturbed me and as an activist I wanted to be more involved in case than before (SS01). I deal with it by running and becoming a stronger activist (SS15). It brought so many doubts on my activism whether to continue or just drop out, but I stood on my activism and I told myself not to give up easily (SC05). This ability to reframe their negative experiences in order to fuel their activism can be regarded as a source of resilience for activists. While exposure to traumatic events and the frustrations of the criminal justice system might be assumed to cause withdrawal and psychological difficulties for activists, it appears that participants instead drew courage and strength from these experiences. Staub and Vollhardt (2008) note that a number of factors can help those exposed to trauma and injustice transform their negative experiences into intensified efforts to fight injustice. These include the availability of social support, emphasised by participants when describing how emotional pain, especially for lesbians but also voiced by participants who did not identify as LGBTI, was mitigated by the activism and solidarity from other 36 organisations. Participants described how the frustration they experienced during the trial was lessened when they saw other activists also fighting for justice: By being present at court all the time gave me a lot of strength because I saw everyone protesting and wanting justice do for Zoliswa (SC04). The mobilisation of the trial created a good friendship amongst Free Gender, TAC, Justice System, Media and SJC (KI15, Free Gender) [I dealt with the emotional impact] by always talking about it and seeing that there are many supporters (SS22). Participants emphasised the importance of informal and formal resources, such as psychological support and debriefing sessions, to assist them in managing the emotional impact of their involvement in the trial: By examining with community organisation, faith based organisations and to attend the debriefing session organised by TAC and similar rape survivors (SS08). We all had to go talk to other people and went for counselling sessions because I was stressing a lot (SS26). On our weekly meetings I always share or speak to my friends (SS02). Further to this, the very act of being involved in activism and making an impact can decrease feelings of helplessness and assist in the wellbeing of activists (Staub & Vollhardt, 2008). "It gave me hope": Drawing inspiration from media impact Participants described how seeing media coverage of the trial also mitigated the negative emotional impact of their involvement in mobilisation. Participants were inspired to continue in their activism when they became aware of media coverage of the trial, especially so as it lent a sense of legitimacy to their cause. Seeing their efforts recognised through national and international media attention provided participants with a sense of achievement: [The media made me feel] that this organisation that I joined is real and is fighting for our right and that made me feel so strong in going forward (SS23). 37 It boosted us even more knowing that our stories would be heard nationwide and raised more awareness (SS26). We mobilised the government, community and different people from around the country, and the world as a whole (SC06). This recognition was described as re-energising participants, particularly at points where the frustrations inherent to the trial left them feeling as if they were not making an impact: Media give me hope every day because we read paper or listen to Zibonele radio (a local radio station) they talk about the case so I can go again to fight (SS14). The media brought courage to my activism and they made me realise that we were not alone as activists to this fight for justice, the media was so helpful (SC05). Coordination and communication While an earlier theme commented on the breakdown in communication among different organisations, participants generally described the relationships between partner organisations as successful. Participants often referred to the role of the task team in effectively coordinating the NGO response: Because of the task team it was easy to communicate with our organisation (SS08). We treasure and embrace partnership that is why we were working with Free Gender during the case of Zoliswa’s murder. As an organisation we were playing a supportive role with Free Gender to ensure that the justice is served for Zoliswa and her family (KI02, Sonke Gender Justice). Partnering as an organisation brings good results (KI02, Sonke Gender Justice). Participants defined the communication among organisations as a sense of "speak[ing] the same language" (SS01) and as allowing a space for organisations that are usually marginalised in public discourses to be heard: The communication was good; we have a voice for those few hours (SS26). Critical to ensuring effective and continuous communication, was employing not only traditional media but also social media to disseminate information about the trial and assist in mobilisation: 38 We were mobilising through Facebook, texting messages, Mxit and email to update people about the court cases (SC05). We used Facebook, pamphlets, Mxit and our blog, and by talking about the case where we live and where we go (SC06). Having events, Facebook and our blog (SS03). The networking around the trial enabled activists from different organisations with the same vision of justice to get to know each other, and in particular learn about LGBTI issues: What I have experienced during the trial was something that will always be in me, I grew to love, accept and to understand how gay/ lesbians people live and that they never chose their sexuality (KI07, Social Justice Coalition). An aspect emphasised in participants' accounts is the importance of sharing resources among organisations. While the task team planned logistical matters, they needed funds and other resources supplied by the participating organisations. Free Gender acknowledged their reliance on the other organisations for financial support, especially the Treatment Action Campaign: We were the only organisation without funding, we relied too much on other organisations in terms of transport and food, so we interacted all the time (SC02). TAC was generous on providing their resources (KI15, Free Gender). The duration of the case also impacted on their resources for other activities, as a Free Gender member observed: Delay of the case itself [was a challenge] because it costs to mobilise people and travelling to court – we were running out of resources as an organisation (SS02). Members of the Treatment Action Campaign described their strategic focus in using funds and other resources to mobilise people to attend protests at the court: TAC branches which had risen to 17 branches were our focal point – on average, each branch could organise approximately 2 taxis (30 people) if required, depending on budget (SC15). We gave out food during court cases, transporting people and of course making sure that justice be served (KI01, TAC). Having presented the findings of the interviews with community activists and key informants from human rights organisations, the following chapter provides recommendations based on these findings. 39 CHAPTER FIVE Recommendations A sense of common purpose underpinned the activists’ mobilisation around the trial of Zoliswa Nkonyana’s murderers. The outcomes showed that it was highly successful and that much can be taken from the way the activists mobilised to challenge the justice system. Below is a summary of the recommendations based on the findings of this report. These findings and recommendations will be integrated with those of a subsequent report to arrive at a best practice model for activist engagement in LGBTI hate crimes. Successful networking As an initial step in mobilisation, it is valuable to conduct a stakeholder mapping exercise to identify human rights organisations with a shared focus on social justice and form a joint network of response. Develop a strategic plan for mobilisation. Appoint a task team to coordinate the efforts of network in the campaign. Have on-going mobilisation efforts to mobilise community members. Have designated representatives to speak on behalf of the network. Have education sessions to empower each other with knowledge regarding relevant issues, e.g. LGBTI genders and sexualities. Have education sessions to capacitate the involved activists on issues relevant to the campaign, e.g. effective media engagement or legal issues. Develop a media strategy to publicise the campaign. Logistical support Logistical support, provided by organisations with access to funding, increases the reach and impact of the campaign. Develop a budget for mobilisation campaigns. This would include transport and refreshments, communications as well as publicity materials. Set up effective and wide-ranging communication systems to reach all the group members, including using the available and popular social media. Involve the mass media from an early stage to publicise the campaign, especially local radio and press. Develop publicity materials such as T-shirts, caps, pamphlets, posters, placards and banners to amplify the campaign message. 40 Wellbeing of activists Involvement in advocacy around LGBTI hate crimes and gender-based violence takes an emotional toll on activists and adequate support is critical. Ensure the availability of formal psychological counselling and debriefing. Create opportunities for informal support through regular group meetings and peer support groups where experiences can be shared. 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Levels of empowerment among LGBT people in the Western Cape, South Africa. Retrieved April 22, 2011, from http://www.health24.com/images/pdf/chapter1.pdf Van Zyl, M. (2011). Are same-sex marriages unAfrican? Same-sex relationships and belonging in postapartheid South Africa. Journal of Social Issues, 67(2), 335-357. 43 APPENDIX A: TIMELINE OF THE ZOLISWA NKONYANA TRIAL 44 APPENDIX B: INTERVIEW GUIDE Interviewer’s name: .......................................................................................................... Date: .................................................................................................................................. Section A – Personal Details Icandelo A – Iinkcukacha zakho I’D LIKE TO ASK YOU SOME PERSONAL DETAILS. I WON’T WRITE DOWN YOUR NAME ANYWHERE IF YOU DON’T WANT ME TO. NDICELA UKUBUZA NGEENKCUKACHA ZAKHO, UKUBA IGAMA LAKHO AWUFUNI LIBHALWE ALIZUKUBHALWA. 1. Name/ Pseudonym? Igama/ Igama olithandayo? .......................................................................................................................................... 2. How old are you? Mingaphi iminyaka yakho? .......................................................................................................................................... 3. Where do you live? Uhlala phi? .......................................................................................................................................... Please tell me how would you identify yourself to someone you trust. Ungazichaza kanjani kumntu omthembileyo ngobuni bakho. I am a … ............................................................................................................................. Mna ndi ............................................................................................................................ 4. Are you a member of any organisation(s)? Please explain. Ulilungu lowuphi umbutho(imibutho)? Cacisa. .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 45 5. How long have you been a member? Lixesha elingakanani ulilungu lalombutho? .......................................................................................................................................... 6. Why did you join? Yontoni ekwenze ukuba ubelilungu lalombutho? .......................................................................................................................................... 7. If you’ve left any organisation, why did you leave? Ukuba ukhona umbutho owaphuma kuwo, chaza ukuba waphumela ntoni? .......................................................................................................................................... Section B – The trial of Zoliswa Nkonyana’s murder Icandelo B – Ityala lokubulawa kukaZoliswa Nkonyana NOW I’D LIKE US TO TALK A BIT ABOUT THE TRIAL OF ZOLISWA’S MURDER NDINGATHANDA UKUBA SITHETHE KANCINCI NGELITYALA LOKUBUWA KUKAZOLISWA 8. How did you come to know of the case of Zoliswa Nkonyana’s murder? Uye wazi njani ngetyala lokubulawa kukaZoliswa Nkonyana? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 9. Can you tell me about your involvement with the case. (When? How? Why?) Ndixelele ngokuzibandakanya kwakho kwelityala? (Nini? Njani? kwakutheni?) .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 10. How do you think the justice system handled the case? Ucinga ukuba ingalo yomthetho yaliphatha njani elityala? 46 .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 11. Is there anything in particular about how the justice system handled the case that stands out for you? (Please explain.) Ingaba ikhona enye into owayiqaphelayo ngendlela ingalo yomthetho yayiphethe ngayo elityala? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 12. How did the case affect you emotionally? Elityala lakuphatha njani emphefumlweni/emoyeni wakho? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 13. How did you deal with it? Wamelana nayo njani? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 14. What impact did it [the emotional stuff you experienced] have on your activism? Leliphi igalelo elibenayo kubuqabane bakho? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 47 15. What do you think about how the media represented this case? Ucinga ntoni ngendima edlalwe ngabachola-choli bendaba kwelityala? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 16. What impact did the media have on your activism? Leliphi igalelo elenziwe ngabachola-choli bendaba kubuqabane bakho? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... Section C – Organisational mobilisation Icandelo C – Uququzelelo lwemibutho CAN WE NOW DISCUSS THE ORGANISATIONS INVOLVED IN THE CASE? NDICELA SIXOXE NGALEMIBUTHO IBIZIBANDAKANYE KWELITYALA? 17. When did your organisation get involved in the case? Umbutho wakho uzibandakanye nini kwelityala? .......................................................................................................................................... 18. Why did your organisation get involved in this case? Yintoni ebangela umbutho wakho azibandakanye kewlityala? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 19. How did you mobilise? Wawuqokelela njani? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 48 20. Who did you mobilise? Wawuqokelela bani? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 21. To what extent did mobilising in the case affect other activities in your organisation? Elityala liniphazamise kanjani kwizinto ebenizenza kumbutho wenu xa kwakuqokelelwa abantu? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 22. What was your interaction with other organisations? Ubusebenzisana njani neminye imibutho? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 23. How was the communication between the organisations? Lwalunjani unxibelelwano phakathi kwemibutho? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 24. What did you think of the involvement of political organisations? Ucinga ntoni ngokuzibandakanya kwemibutho yezopolitiko? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 49 25. Were there any challenges working with other organisations? Ingaba ayekhona na amagingx-gingxi ekusebenzeni neminye imibutho? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 26. Is there anything else you want to say about the mobilisation in this case? Ingaba ikhona na enye into ofuna ukuyithetha ngoququzelelo lweli tyala? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... Section D – Community involvement Icandelo D – Ukuzibandakanya kwabahlali WHAT ABOUT THE INVOLVEMENT OF YOUR COMMUNITY IN THE TRIAL? UKUBONE NJANI UKUBANDAKANYEKA KWABAHLALI KWELITYALA? 27. Who would you say is part of your ‘community’? Ngubani onokuthi yinxalenye yabantu ohlangana nabo? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 28. What was being done to raise awareness in communities about the case? Yintoni eyenziwayo ukuze abahlali bazi ngelityala? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 29. What was the response of those communities? Ngawaphi amanyathelo abawathathayo abahlali? 50 .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 30. What role do you think the media played in raising awareness about this case in communities? Yeyiphi indima edlalwe ngabaqokeleli beendaba ekufundiseni abantu ngelityala ekuhlaleni? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... Section E – Looking to the future Icandelo E – Sijonge Ikamva NOW WE’D LIKE TO LOOK AT WHAT WE’VE LEARNT FROM THIS EXPERIENCE. NGOKU MASIJONGE UKUBA SIFUNDE NTONI NGALAMAVA ESIWAFUMENEYO. 31. What can be done to reach more activists to become involved in court cases? Yintoni engenziwa ukuze kuphumelele amaqabane amaninzi aye ematyaleni? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 32. What can be done to monitor the police investigation? Zeziphi izixhobo ezinokusetyenziswa ukuhlola uphando lwamapolisa? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 33. What can be done to monitor the prosecution? Zeziphi izixhobo ezinokusetyenziswa ukuhlola ukutshutshisa? 51 .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 34. What can activists do to sensitise the police to lgbti issues? Yintoni enokwenziwa ngamaqabane ukufundisa amapolisa aziqonde iimeko zeLGBTI? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 35. What can activists do to sensitise prosecutors to lgbti issues? Yintoni enokwenziwa ngamaqabane ukufundisa abatshutshisi ukuze bayiqonde imeko yamatyala eLGBTI? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 36. What role can activists play to support: family members; survivors; witnesses of these hate crimes? Yeyiphi inxaxheba enokuthathwa ngamaqabane ekuxhaseni ama lungu osapho, abaphumeleli, namangqina amatyala entiyo? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 37. What can LGBTI organisations do to raise awareness of other organisations about LGBTI issues? 52 Zeziphi izinto ekumele zenziwe yimibutho yeLGBTI ukuphuhlusisa uluwazi kweminye imibutho ngemiba yeLGBTI? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 38. What more can we do to raise awareness of hate crimes against the LGBTI community? Yintoni enye enokwenziwa ukwazisa ngamatyala entiyo angqamene nemibutho yeLGBTI? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 39. What can be done to support the safety of the LGBTI community in our townships? Yeyiphi inkxaso esinokuyinika uluntu lweLGBTI ukuze lukhuseleke ekuhlaleni? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... WE’VE NOW COME TO THE END OF OUR QUESTIONNAIRE. SIFIKELELE ESIPHELWENI SEMIBUZO BUCIKO YETHU. 40. Is there anything you’d like to add or say? Ingaba ikhona na enye into ofuna ukuyongeza okanye ukuyithetha? .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... .......................................................................................................................................... 53