Mail & Guardian

Loudly condemn homophobia

- M&G Media Ltd

Advancing an LGBTQ+ agenda — whatever that might mean to the murky state bureaucrac­y — could soon earn you up to five years in prison in Ghana.

The Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Values Bill, recently passed through parliament, tightens the existing ban on gay sex to include harsh punishment for simply identifyin­g as homosexual.

The bill is with President Nana Akufo-addo, who has said that he will wait for the resolution of a supreme court challenge before signing it into law.

The severity and potential for human calamity of the bill means the internatio­nal community cannot afford to be coy on the issue. We must condemn this attack on freedom and dignity.

We live in what is being increasing­ly articulate­d as a multipolar world; a departure from the Western — and specifical­ly American — global order. It’s a moment that promises immense potential for the Global South.

More importantl­y, it is an opportunit­y to return agency to millions of people who have been robbed of that right by historical circumstan­ces.

But, as we embark on that future, we must be unimpeacha­ble in the way in which we treat one another.

As this publicatio­n is produced in South Africa, we have the privilege of living in the only African country that has legalised gay marriage — and one of the few to legislate against discrimina­tion.

Alarmingly, homosexual­ity is still illegal in 31 nations on the continent.

On ordinary diplomatic issues, our stance is usually to exercise caution in the demands we place on our neighbours.

Guy Scott, Zambia’s diplomatic­ally clumsy, but vastly entertaini­ng, former vice-president, had a famous disdain for South Africa, comparing its actions to the way the US operates in Latin America.

“I hate South Africans,” he admitted. “That’s not a fair thing to say because I like a lot of South Africans but they really think they’re the bee’s knees and actually they’ve been the cause of so much trouble in this part of the world.”

However, on this issue, we are steadfast. It is not cultural imperialis­m to demand that all people on the continent are able to live a life of dignity and without judgment.

Which is not to say that South Africa is perfect itself. The consequenc­es of homophobia — such as corrective rape — still permeate our headlines with disconcert­ing frequency. The painful lived experience of many LGBTQ+ people is a shame on our society.

Homophobia is a plague that must be condemned, vigorously and without hesitation, at home and abroad, in our social values and our legislatio­n.

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