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Ghanaian Parliament speaker: Anti-LGBTQ bill will pass before Christmas

Measure, among other things, would ban allyship

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Ghanaian Parliament Speaker Alban Bagbin (Screen capture via CitiTube YouTube)

Ghanaian Parliament Speaker Alban Bagbin earlier this month promised MPs would pass a bill that would further crackdown on the country’s LGBTQ community before Christmas.

Bagbin said there is no MP who is opposing the Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Values Bill, and this lack of opposition is why he said it will pass before Parliament adjourns for the year on Friday.

President Nana Akufo-Addo is expected to sign the measure within a few weeks of passage.

The bill would prohibit same-sex sexual activities, same-sex marriages, the use of sex toys, identifying as LGBTQ, advocating for LGBTQ rights on social media platforms and other fora and gender affirming surgeries, among other things.

LGBTQ Ghanaians and advocacy organizations have sounded the alarm over the bill since its introduction in Parliament in 2021. They have urged MPs to oppose it, arguing it is draconian and infringes on their constitutional rights.

ā€œThis is so ridiculous, go to jail for consensual sex?” said Ivy Enyonam, an LGBTQ activist.

Enyonam noted the bill would ban “owning a sex toy or getting surgeries, even being an ally (while) rapists are walking free!”

Papa Kojo Ampofo, another LGBTQ activist, said a hidden agenda behind the bill far outweighs restricting the rights of the LGBTQ community. He said rich corporations and billionaires are funding the measure.

ā€œThe people behind the anti-LGBTIQ Bill are not foolish. They are highly organized and rich, funded by extremely rich corporations and billionaires,” noted Ampofo. “They are a part of well organized groups who mostly believe humans are born to labor for capitalism, and the LGBTIQ community is in direct violation of that. They are the same network or similar networks introducing the same versions of anti-LGBTIQ bills around the world.ā€

Activists have particularly blamed MP Sam George, who represents the Ningo-Prampram Constituency and is the bill’s lead champion.

George is believed to be among the handful of MPs who proposed the idea of initiating what is now the Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Values Bill. He has urged Parliament and Ghanaians to rally behind the measure since its 2021 introduction.

George in recent social media posts has stated there is no need to accommodate any member of the LGBTQ community in Ghana.

ā€œI am hearing some alphabet group claims my comments that some of them marry inanimate objects is a lie and fabrication (sic). They cannot throw dust in all our eyes,” said George in one post. “Allow me to raise my kids and stop pushing your insanity and perversion down our throats. When you stop calling what should be your private business a public right, I would not give a toss what you do (sic).ā€ 

We Are All Ghana, a group that opposes the bill, said Georgeā€™s remarks were sowing hate and division in the country.

ā€œSam George understands that he is wasting precious Ghanaian resources and media airtime to sow hate and division at this crucial time in Ghanaian history when unity has never been more warranted,” said We Are All Ghana. “Sam George and other proponents of the bill really lack basic understanding of what human sexuality entails especially in relation to the LGBTQIA+ community.ā€

Angel Maxine, a transgender woman, activist and musician from Ghana, has already cautioned those who identify as LGBTQ to not travel to the country.

ā€œAs a caution to all LGBTQI+ diasporas coming to Ghana this Christmas, Ghana is a red zone for LGBTQI+ people and you stand a chance of going to prison if you are identified as queer,” said Maxine. “You can be arrested for holding hands on the streets.ā€

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Africa

Lesbian South African MP named to country’s new Cabinet

Steve Letsike won a seat in the National Assembly on May 29

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Steve Letsike (Photo courtesy of Steve Letsike)

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday appointed lesbian MP Steve Letsike to his Cabinet.

Letsike, founder of Access Chapter 2, a South African advocacy group who is a member of the African National Congress that Ramaphosa leads, will be the country’s deputy minister of women, youth, and people with disabilities.

Letsike won a seat in the South African National Assembly in national and provincial elections that took place on May 29.

The ANC lost its parliamentary majority that it had had since Nelson Mandela in 1994 won the South African presidency in the countryā€™s first post-apartheid elections. Ramaphosa on Sunday announced Letsike and other new Cabinet members after the ANC and nine other parties agreed to form a National Unity Government.

The Washington Blade has reached out to Letsike for comment.

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Congolese justice minister orders prosecutor general to arrest LGBTQ allies

Constant Mutamba issued directive on June 15, implementation unclear

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Congolese Justice Minister Constant Mutamba (Photo courtesy of Mutamba's X account)

Congolese Justice Minister Constant Mutamba has instructed his country’s prosecutor general to arrest LGBTQ allies.

The newly appointed justice minister in a June 15 communique said the prosecutor general should initiate legal proceedings against people who advocate for the LGBTQ community in Congo.

Although same-sex marriages are constitutionally prohibited, there is currently no law that criminalizes consensual same-sex sexual relations. The communique has raised a lot of eyebrows from social and LGBTQ activists who are asking on what grounds Mutamba issued the communique.

“He could have started by initiating a bill in this direction, but in the current Congolese legislation he is missing the point,” said Jean Claude Katende, a Congolese human rights activist who is the president of the African Association of Human Rights. “If he wants to repress homosexuals, he must initiate a law which must make this behavior an offense and have it punished. He will be arrested for complicity in arbitrary arrests. The constitution is clear, no one can be prosecuted for an act which does not constitute an offense.” 

Khelver Hermano, a Congolese social commentator, said the law should not be interpreted based on one person’s emotions. 

“LGBT marriage is already not applied in the DRC but the minister wants to incarcerate those who do it informally without a legal basis,” said Hermano. “The law is not interpreted according to our will.” 

“Does the penal code in the DRC recognize polygamy? Why don’t we arrest all these known polygamists?” asked Hermano. “Just as polygamists are not prosecuted, we cannot do so against LGBT people.”Ā 

Many Congolese people, however, have welcomed the communique, arguing same-sex relations are un-African and unorthodox.

Article 172 of the country’s penal code states a person “who commits a moral crime by exciting, facilitating or promoting to satisfy the passions of others, debauchery or the corruption of persons of either sex under or apparently under the age of 21 years shall be punishable by a prison term of three months to five years or a fine.” Article 176 says a person “who engages in activities against public decency shall be punishable by a prison term of eight days to three years and/or a fine.”

Although not entirely applicable, the prosecutor general can use these two penal code articles to initiate the arrests ā€” the country in recent years has seen some arrests of LGBTQ people.

The June 15 communique is not the first time Mutamba has come out against the LGBTQ community. 

Mutamba earlier this year introduced a bill that would criminalize acts of homosexuality. The proposal received widespread support, particularly on social media where many Congolese people described it as a turning point for the country and for the continent at large.

Although parliament has not formally debated the bill, activists are concerned it will pass without many major objections because most MPs have previously said they do not support the LGBTQ community. It remains unclear how the prosecutor general will executive Mutamba’s communique.

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Prominent South African activist elected to country’s parliament

Steve Letsike founded Access Chapter 2

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Steve Letsike (Photo courtesy of Steve Letsike)

A prominent South African LGBTQ activist has won a seat in the country’s parliament.

Steve Letsike, a lesbian woman who founded Access Chapter 2, a South African advocacy group, is a member of the African National Congress. She is also part of the ANC’s National Executive Committee that determines the party’s direction.

Letsike won a seat in the South African National Assembly in national and provincial elections that took place on May 29.

The ANC lost its parliamentary majority that it had had since Nelson Mandela in 1994 won the South African presidency in the country’s first post-apartheid elections. MPs earlier this month re-elected President Cyril Ramaphosa after the ANC invited the Democratic Alliance and other parties to form a Government of National Unity.

Letsike in a statement to the Washington Blade described her election as “a milestone for the people of South Africa, and also affirmative of our party’s posture that is inclusive and intention to transformation agenda.”

“I am not in parliament for myself but the people that trusted the ANC to send individuals that will put people first,” said Letsike. “In that cohort that includes the LGBTI people like myself. Rooted in the teaching of a just society, that seeks equality and believes in the rule of law. That demand on developmental agenda from a queer lens and clear priorities of the people is important.” 

“I am delighted by this task, trust and hope for our people,” she added.

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