Tag Archives: lesbians with cancer

Morocco: lesbian feminist activist jailed despite health crisis

Moroccan lesbian Ibtissam “Betty” Lachgar has been sentenced to 2.5 years in prison and fined nearly €5,000 for blasphemy in September 2025, after posting a photo wearing a t-shirt that read “Allah is lesbian”. Before her arrest, she spoke out about the backlash to the photo, saying she endured “three days of online harassment and thousands of threats of rape and death, and calls for execution and stoning over using a well-known feminist slogan.”

Lachgar is a long term radical feminist and abolitionist activist, having co-founded the Alternative Movement for Individual Liberties (MALI), a feminist, universalist, secularist and pro-choice movement in Morocco in 2009.

Lachgar told the judge that the photo was taken in May 2025, during a European anti-patriarchy campaign, when she participated took part in a London protest. “I was not referring to Allah in Islam specifically—the concept of God varies from one religion to another, in Islam, Judaism, and Christianity—nor did I wear the shirt in Morocco. I wasn’t even in Morocco when I posted the photo.” Lachgar explained, citing the right to freedom of expression. The slogan itself has roots in feminist and LGBT activist history.

Suffering from cancer, Lachgar requires urgent surgery, originally scheduled for September. Without treatment she risks having her left arm amputated. Lachgar is being held in solitary confinement in Al Arjat prison despite no reason being presented for this additional punishment.

Lachgar’s legal team has demanded urgent release on humanitarian grounds, but courts have repeatedly denied bail.

Naoufal Bouamri, head of the Moroccan Association for Human Rights, warned that “Ibtissam’s health and psychological condition require, from a legal and humanitarian perspective, that she be monitored as a free woman. Legal alternatives like keeping her from travel or providing bail would allow her to undergo treatment in appropriate conditions.”

Lachgar’s case has sparked outrage among human rights groups, who see her imprisonment as part of a broader crackdown on free expression and lesbian visibility in Morocco. Her supporters had hoped for release or the application of newly implemented alternative penalties.

An appeal is underway.

Further reading: https://medfeminiswiya.net/2025/09/04/moroccan-activist-ibtissam-lachgar-held-in-solitary-confinement-health-in-crisis/?lang=en&amp and https://www.newarab.com/news/morocco-arrests-feminist-activist-over-blasphemy (Sources)

Ivory Coast: help Akissi to access cancer tratment

Akissi is a lesbian from Ivory Coast in West Africa, living in Abidjan. She has been diagnosed with rectal cancer and has been able to undergo chemotherapy and one surgery, but she needs a second surgery to fully recover. Medical treatment in Ivory Coast is expensive. Akissi’s surgery costs 3 million CFA francs, or around CA$7,000 (around AU$7630, or 4,690€). Akissi has managed to raise part of the funds, but is still CA$5,000 short of the full cost of the operation. Because she is a lesbian, she is estranged from her family and does not have any support to help raise the additional funds.

Akissi est une lesbienne originaire de Côte d’Ivoire, en Afrique de l’Ouest, qui vit à Abidjan. Elle a été diagnostiquée avec un cancer du rectum et elle a pu suivre une chimiothérapie et subir une intervention chirurgicale, mais elle a besoin d’une seconde opération pour être complètement rétablie. Les traitements médicaux en Côte d’Ivoire sont coûteux. L’opération d’Akissi coûte 3 millions de francs CFA, soit environ CA$7000 dollars canadiens (environ AU$7630 dollars australiens, ou 4 690€). Akissi a réussi à réunir une partie des fonds, mais il lui manque l’équivalent de CA$5000 dollars canadiens pour pouvoir payer le prix de l’opération. Parce qu’elle est lesbienne, elle n’a plus de contact avec sa famille et elle n’a pas de soutien pour réunir le reste de l’argent.

Continue reading, donate and/or share: https://chuffed.org/project/123799-help-akissi-get-life-saving-surgery

‘I Was Fighting Breast Cancer as an Underinsured Woman (and lesbian), and I Couldn’t Get the Care I Needed to Live’

Once she was diagnosed, Tripplett, a real estate agent, says she and her girlfriend called medical offices endlessly, trying to find the right words to say in order to get her the help she needed. When she heard, “We don’t take your insurance,” she’d say, “I’m sure somebody else there does.” When she heard, “Your girlfriend can’t come in the room,” she’d say, “Oh, good thing she’s my best friend, so now she can come in.

Continue reading at: ‘I Was Fighting Breast Cancer as an Underinsured Woman, and I Couldn’t Get the Care I Needed to Live’ | Glamour (Source)