Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Amnesty International, has requested Parliament and the federal government to cease contemplating the anti-gay invoice.
According to the organisation, the invoice will trample on human rights if handed.
The anti-gay invoice, formally generally known as the Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Values Bill, is a proposed regulation that has sparked vital controversy inside the nation and on the worldwide stage.
The invoice seeks to criminalise same-sex sexual relationships, together with oral intercourse and anal intercourse, with penalties starting from 5 to 10 years in jail.
It will even criminalise the advocacy for LGBTQ+ rights, the promotion of same-sex marriage or cohabitation, and the availability of help companies to LGBTQ+ people.
Additionally, the invoice proposes the punishment of people or organisations that arrange or take part in LGBTQ+ occasions, present assets to help LGBTQ+ folks, or produce or distribute supplies that promote LGBTQ+ rights.
In an announcement issued on Wednesday, Amnesty International mentioned, “The Ghanaian Parliament and the government should immediately withdraw the proposed Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Values Bill 2021 from consideration.”
“This Bill gravely contravenes the principles of equality and non-discrimination, the rights to freedom of expression, association and privacy, and the prohibition of torture enshrined in the 1992 Constitution of Ghana and international human rights treaties ratified by the country. More specifically, it denies LGBTI persons their inviolable human dignity, guaranteed to all persons under section 15 of the country’s Constitution.”
Amnesty International additional indicated that the invoice inspired hatred and intolerance and promoted persecution in opposition to folks based mostly on their actual or perceived sexual orientation and gender id
just because they don’t or can not conform to dominant social and gender norms.
“If passed into law, it intends to impose restrictions and criminal penalties against a range of people, including LGBTI people and anyone who expresses support or sympathy towards LGBTI people. It also places a positive obligation on everyone in Ghana to report any conduct perceived to be of an ‘LGBTI nature’ to the police, or to a list of people in the community in the absence of the police,” it added.
Again, the NGO mentioned the proposed regulation would impose a penalty of as much as 5 years imprisonment for being LGBTI and a penalty of as much as ten years imprisonment for anybody who engages or participates “in an activity that promotes, supports sympathy for, or a change of public opinion towards an act prohibited under the Bill.”
“This vague and overbroad provision potentially places anyone in Ghana at risk of being accused under the Bill, and creates an environment of hostility, discrimination, and active stigmatizing of people who are LGBTI or perceived to be such; or anyone linked to them socially, through family, professionally, or otherwise,” it added.