The Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Galactic, Richard Branson, has expressed concern in regards to the passage of the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill by Ghana’s Parliament.
The British Virgin Islands-based billionaire described the invoice as a backslide on human rights and an financial catastrophe.
He posted on his X deal with that “to be thrown in jail just for being who you are and who you love seems too cruel to believe.”
Ghana’s Parliament handed the controversial invoice on February 27, 2024, which is but to be transmitted to the President for his assent.
The 73-year-old Richard Branson disclosed that he had shared his ideas on why the invoice should not be assented into legislation and indicated that “the only way to stop the bill coming into effect is for President Addo to veto it.”
“Today, I join many other human rights advocates in Africa and around the world in calling on the President to veto this draconian and hateful piece of legislation,” the open letter added.
Below is the total letter.
In late February, I watched with deep concern as Ghana’s parliament handed a merciless and terrifying new anti-LGBTQ+ invoice, that criminalises individuals merely for popping out, giving courts the facility to impose a jail sentence of as much as three years. To be thrown in jail only for being who you’re and who you like defies perception. To make issues worse, individuals who help LGBTQ+ rights might additionally face jail phrases of as much as 5 years underneath the brand new laws.
With the backing of Ghana’s two main political events, the invoice is now ready to be signed by President Nana Akufo-Addo. The President has mentioned he received’t act on the invoice till the supreme courtroom guidelines on challenges towards it. Today, I be part of many different human rights advocates in Africa and all over the world in calling on the President to veto this draconian and hateful piece of laws. Not solely is the invoice a transparent violation of basic human rights, it additionally carries the chance of disastrous financial penalties for Ghana (because the finance minister careworn in a memo). For this glorious nation, which has been rising from its worst financial disaster in many years and is reliant on worldwide funding, the fallout may very well be devastating.
It’s been alarming to see aggressive LGBTQ+ discrimination sweep throughout the African continent. Last 12 months, I wrote about Uganda’s horrific Anti-Homosexuality Act, some of the draconian items of anti-LGBTQ+ laws on the planet. The Act that might result in the persecution of hundreds of individuals; some in Uganda’s LGBTQ+ group have been compelled into hiding, others have chosen exile. Some of the ‘offences’ outlined within the Act even carry the dying penalty. Earlier this 12 months, Amnesty International printed a evaluation of the escalating anti LGBTQ+ sentiment and the ensuing weaponisation of laws throughout 12 African nations. As Tigere Chagutah, Amnesty International’s Regional Director for East and Southern Africa, put it: “We face what can only be described as a deepening crisis of homophobic lawfare.”
At the guts of this, we should keep in mind that individuals don’t select to be homosexual and that completely anybody may very well be – thousands and thousands of individuals all around the world, in each nation, are homosexual. As a dad or mum and grandparent, I would like my family members to develop up free from discrimination and worry. Supporters of anti-LGBTQ+ measures ought to ask themselves: What if my little one was homosexual? Would I throw them in jail?
Criminalising an individual’s identification legitimises discrimination and corrodes dignity. Families, companies, societies, and nations prosper when individuals have the liberty to be themselves. Why would we ever deny this?
Love is love, straight or homosexual, and we should always at all times get up in order that the LGBTQ+ group can stay and love in peace. The group has made lasting contributions to social, political and cultural life all all through historical past. We ought to be happy with our homosexual mates, kids, colleagues, and others throughout us.
I’m additionally proud that Virgin is a co-founder of Open For Business, a coalition of companies combating homophobia on a world scale and making the enterprise case for LGBTQ+ inclusion. If you’re a enterprise chief – in Ghana, Uganda, and elsewhere – be part of us, and be a part of collective motion on LGBTQ+ rights. Whoever you’re, be part of us in talking out towards Ghana’s horrific legislation. Ghana and its great individuals can achieve this a lot better.
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