Lawmakers Reintroduce Anti-LGBTQ Bill In Ghana

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Ghanaian lawmakers have reintroduced a stringent anti-LGBTQ bill that proposes tougher penalties for same-sex acts and activities supporting LGBTQ rights.

Same-sex sexual acts are currently punishable by up to three years in prison in Ghana. The bill would increase the maximum penalty to five years and also impose jail time for the “wilful promotion, sponsorship, or support of LGBTQ+ activities.”

Ghana’s parliament approved the bill in February 2024, but then-President Nana Akufo-Addo did not sign it before his term ended, and John Dramani Mahama took office in January.

Any bill passed by parliament must go to the president to be signed into law.

Ruling party lawmakers Samuel Nartey George and Emmanuel Kwasi Bedzrah and opposition lawmaker John Ntim Fordjour said that the same bill had been reintroduced in parliament on February 25, sponsored by 10 lawmakers in total. Reports said.

The bill intensifies a crackdown on the rights of LGBTQ people and those accused of “promotion” of sexual and gender minority rights.

Va-Bene Elikem Fiatsi, a Ghanaian trans woman and LGBTQ activist, said that the bill’s reintroduction was “disheartening and hard to process” but that pro-LGBTQ activism would continue.

The fate of the legislation is unclear. Mahama has said he’d prefer a government-sponsored law rather than one sponsored by parliamentarians.

Last year, Ghana’s finance ministry warned that the bill, if signed into law, could jeopardise $3.8 billion in World Bank financing and derail a $3 billion loan package from the International Monetary Fund.

Past polling has shown a lack of tolerance for LGBTQ people in Ghana, and Fordjour said the country no longer needed to fear economic sanctions.

The global political climate is favourable for conservative values as demonstrated in the bold conservative pronouncements of (U.S.) President Donald Trump,” he said.

 

 

 

Reuters/Shakirat Sadiq

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