Reverend Matthew Kwasi Gyamfi, the President of the Ghana Catholic Bishops’ Conference, has said that imprisoning homosexuals won’t get rid of homosexuality, however quite, it may enhance such actions.
Parliament on Wednesday, February 28, 2024, handed the Proper Human Sexual Rights and Family Values invoice, also called the anti-LGBTQ invoice. This invoice criminalizes LGBTQ actions, their promotion, advocacy, and funding.
Individuals discovered responsible may face a jail time period starting from six months to 3 years, whereas promoters and sponsors of those actions may face a three-to-five-year jail time period.
Although Rev Gyamfi reiterated the church’s help for the passage of the invoice, he instructed Umaru Sanda Amadu in an Eyewitness News interview on Citi FM on Thursday, February 29, that there was a necessity for a overview of the sanctions.
He emphasised the necessity for extra reformative and corrective sanctions.
“We assume that within the case of this specific legislation and the way in which it’s being applied, being positioned in jail because the punishment that they’ve chosen, it’s not going to resolve the issue. Because you see should you spherical up same-sex folks and you realize our prisons, they’re going to find yourself in the identical room and what will forestall them from going by way of these actions within the jail?
“And you aren’t going to place them there eternally as a result of they’re going to be there for 3 months to 6 months. And then they observe this and are available out as extra consultants at it than once you despatched them there. Then you launch them again into society. So, what will occur?
“That is why we were concerned about a punishment that will correct them, that will reform them. So if the government is going this way or if the parliament is going this way that is why we are suggesting that in the prison there, they should add more of the corrective and reformative measures,” he said.
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