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Ghana parliament approves ‘anti-LGBTQ’ law, awaiting president’s signature

Ghana’s parliament on Friday approved one of the most repressive anti-LGBTQ laws in Africa, which is now awaiting ratification by President John Mahama.

The law on sexual rights and family values imposes a penalty of up to three years’ imprisonment for people who engage in homosexual relations, and between three and five years for the promotion, sponsorship or intentional support of LGBTQ activities.

“I believe in the principles and values that only two genders exist – man and woman. And that marriage is between a man and a woman,” Mahama said in February 2025.

Read moreSenegal signs law doubling penalty for same-sex relations to 10 years in jail

The bill was already passed unanimously by parliament in 2024 but former president Nana Akufo-Addo did not sign it.

Under Ghana’s constitution, draft legislation not signed by the president before the end of a parliamentary term automatically lapses and requires re-examination by the new parliament.

The law approved on Friday retains the previous bill’s core provisions but includes exemptions for legal, media and healthcare professionals.

Same-sex relationships are prohibited in Ghana – a conservative, deeply religious country with a Christian majority – by a law dating from the British colonial era, but there have been no prosecutions on these grounds to date.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

Crédito: Link de origem

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