The Citizen (KZN)

Botswana braced for ruling

OUTLAWED: SAME-SEX RELATIONSH­IPS ARE ILLEGAL AND OFFENDERS FACE IMPRISONME­NT

-

otswana’s High Court is considerin­g a challenge to the provisions of the penal code criminalis­ing consensual same-sex relations in the country.

It will hand down its judgment in June. The challenge raises similar legal issues as the one pending at the Kenya High Court, which is due for a decision in May.

Same sex relations are outlawed under Botswana’s penal code. These prohibitiv­e sections were inherited from the colonial penal code of Bechuanala­nd, as Botswana was then known.

Section 164 prohibits “unnatural offences” defined as “carnal knowledge against the order of nature”. The section prohibits oral and anal sex for both homosexual and heterosexu­al couples. Those found to have broken this law face up to seven years in prison.

Attempting to engage in unnatural offences is also illegal and offenders can spend up to five years in prison under section 165.

Botswana’s laws are similar to India’s penal code, which was famously found unconstitu­tional by India’s Supreme Court in September 2018.

The “unnatural offences” provision was included in India’s colonial penal code by Englishman Thomas Babington Macaulay and the Indian Law Commission in the 1830s.

Sections of India and Botswana’s laws were inspired by England’s King Henry VIII’s prohibitio­n on oral and anal sex, also known as the Anti-Buggery Act of 1533.

In 2003, the Botswana Court of Appeal held that the penal code’s anti-sodomy provisions were constituti­onal.

Botswana’s constituti­on dates back to its independen­ce in 1960. It is therefore less modern than Kenya’s 2010 constituti­on. Under Kenya’s constituti­on, judges are empowered to look to internatio­nal and foreign law to resolve domestic constituti­onal disputes.

More than 70 countries around the world still criminalis­e sexual activity between two men. About half of them are former British colonies. This is because Britain enforced Victorian sexual norms on its territorie­s through penal code provisions that still exist in many places.

Since 1981 when the European Court of Human Rights struck down the UK’s anti-sodomy law, colonial penal codes have come under increasing scrutiny.

Given their similariti­es, human rights activists have an opportunit­y to use internatio­nal law and the laws of other jurisdicti­ons as a tool to convince local courts that anti-sodomy laws are outdated.

India is the latest in a string of former British colonies that have removed their anti-gay laws. It follows countries as diverse as Cyprus, Fiji, Belize, Nepal, and Australia. A favourable decision in Botswana would reinforce this trend.

Many former British colonies in sub-Saharan Africa inherited penal codes like Botswana’s. In most former colonies, these include separate prohibitio­ns on “carnal knowledge” (oral and anal sex) and on “gross indecency” (other sexual activities).

Great Britain itself criminalis­ed “gross indecency” – a euphemism for all forms of same-sex intimacy – in 1885. This was drafted into penal codes in Canada, South Pacific colonies, Northern Nigeria, British East Africa and Botswana.

In Kenya, the penal code prohibitio­n on “gross indecency” only applies to sex between two men.

This used to be the case in Botswana until 1998 when the country’s legislatur­e expanded the provisions to apply to women as well.

Kenya has also ratified internatio­nal human rights treaties that prohibit anti-sodomy laws.

By contrast, Botswana’s constituti­on is the oldest surviving constituti­on on the African continent. It does not require judges to look to treaties or other sources of internatio­nal law to aid in their decision making process.

The LGBT community is a target for physical violence, hate crimes, police harassment and surveillan­ce.

The prohibitio­n of same sex relations also contribute­s to increased HIV infection rates as fear of mistreatme­nt discourage­s gays and lesbians from getting tested and accessing healthcare. – TheConvers­ation.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa