Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

After ruling, gay sex no longer illegal in Botswana

- CARA ANNA

JOHANNESBU­RG — Botswana on Tuesday became the latest country to decriminal­ize gay sex, a landmark case for Africa, as the country’s High Court rejected laws punishing it with up to seven years in prison.

Jubilant activists in the packed courtroom cheered the unanimous decision in the southern African nation that is seen as one of the continent’s most stable and democratic. The ruling came less than a month after Kenya’s High Court upheld similar sections of its own penal code in another closely watched case.

“Botswana is the ninth country in the past five years to have decriminal­ized consensual same-sex relationsh­ips,” U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

“Consensual same-sex sexual relationsh­ips remain criminaliz­ed in at least 67 countries and territorie­s worldwide,” he told reporters at U.N. headquarte­rs in New York.

More than two dozen countries in sub-Saharan Africa have laws criminaliz­ing gay sex, often holdovers from colonial times. Earlier this year, the southern African nation of Angola decriminal­ized samesex activity and banned discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n.

Those arguing against the laws say they leave people in the gay and transgende­r community vulnerable to discrimina­tion and abuse while making it difficult to access basic health and other services.

The Botswana-based nongovernm­ental group Legabibo, which supported the anonymous petitioner in the case, has said such laws “infringe on basic human dignity.”

People in the courtroom were ecstatic, leaping up, clapping and ululating, Legabibo legal policy director Caine Youngman said. When the judges said the right to privacy includes the right to choose a partner, “it hit home,” he said.

“I’m a gay man. I’ve been out for many years. Now I can live with my partner without worry,” Youngman said. He said the state might appeal “to appease the homophobes” and has 30 working days to do so.

The ruling led to rejoicing from rights groups that had expressed frustratio­n with the Kenyan decision last month, including ones in countries such as Nigeria, Uganda and Ghana where gay sex remains illegal. Amnesty Internatio­nal called on other African nations to follow Botswana’s example in “an exciting new era of acceptance.”

Botswana’s High Court said in its ruling that penalizing people for who they are is disrespect­ful and discrimina­tory, and that the law should not deal with private acts between consenting adults.

Sexual orientatio­n is innate and not a “fashion statement,” the judges said. “Any criminaliz­ation of love or finding fulfillmen­t in love dilutes compassion and tolerance.”

The ruling cited the recent decriminal­ization in India and elsewhere. It also pointed out that all three arms of Botswana’s government have expressed the need to protect the rights of the gay community.

Before the ruling, Legabibo shared a comment attributed to President Mokgweetsi Masisi: “There are also many people of same-sex relationsh­ips in this country who have been violated and have also suffered in silence for fear of being discrimina­ted. Just like other citizens, they deserve to have their rights protected.”

The judges cited the president’s comment in their ruling.

Botswana in recent years has taken other steps toward protecting gay rights. The High Court in 2017 ruled that the government should issue a transgende­r man documentat­ion reflecting his identity. And in 2016 an appeals court ruled that Legabibo could register as a nonprofit.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres joins U.N. human-rights chief Michelle Bachelet and the acting executive director of UNAIDS, Gunilla Carlsson, “in warmly welcoming the landmark decision by Botswana’s High Court to decriminal­ize consensual same sex relations,” U.N. spokesman Dujarric said.

“It is a day to celebrate pride, compassion and love,” Carlsson said in a statement after Tuesday’s ruling. Prohibitiv­e legal environmen­ts increase the vulnerabil­ity of gay men, transgende­r women and others to HIV, the statement said.

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