By: Natasha Archary
Mohale Motaung spent the weekend trending for publicly calling out Cassper Nyovest over his “homophobic” post.
Paying tribute to Riky Rick, Cassper aka Don Billiato, shared one of his favourite snaps he had with the late artist.
“As a man, I am very uncomfortable with another man touching me or worse, being behind me. So when Riky creeped up behind me in the middle of an interview, what I really wanna do is turn around and ask, “which one is this now?” lol…but when I heard his voice, I had to put my guard down and chill ’cause it was him.” Cassper shared to Instagram

Mohale, Somizi Mhlongo’s estranged husband, found Cassper’s words to be “very homophobic” and he asked Cassper to remove the post.
In a since deleted tweet, Mohale didn’t take lightly to Cassper’s feelings of discomfort over another man touching him or coming up behind him.
Mohale’s response was met with mixed reactions by both straight people as well as members of the LGBTIQ+ community.
While some agreed, many others, including the LGBTIQ+ community said that Cassper wasn’t being homophobic, he was merely establishing his boundaries.
If it’s not okay to touch woman without their consent, why is it acceptable to invade a man’s personal space?
This was the general sentiment shared in response to Mohale admonishing Cassper.
“As part of the 🏳️🌈 community, nah not really hey. If a straight man is uncomfortable being touched like that by another man it doesn’t make him homophobic.. it makes him a straight man, who doesn’t feel comfortable being touched like that by another man. 🤷🏽♀️ let’s not do this,” tweeted Mandisa
“These LGBTQ double standards are starting to be overwhelming. Like, why is it always wrong for heterosexual people to be uncomfortable with certain things? Cassper feels that way, and there’s nothing wrong with it,” shared Mbalenhle Ziya.
Meanwhile a few felt that straight men are not comfortable to even hug other men, because it’s considered “too gay.”
Mohale caught fire because many felt that he should respect people’s boundaries. Whether they’re straight or not, everyone has a personal boundary and things they’re not comfortable with.
“Just because I don’t want you touching my thighs or breathing down my neck, doesn’t mean I’m homophobic. It simply means I’m not comfortable with you crossing a personal boundary.”



