Parliament is about to renew consideration of Ghana’s controversial anti-LGBTQ invoice, reviving a legislative course of that has sparked intense nationwide and worldwide debate for practically 5 years.
The invoice, formally named the “First rate Human Sexual Rights and Promotion of Ghanaian Household Values Invoice,” was once more tabled for second studying within the Home of Representatives on Thursday, marking the newest stage in its lengthy and contentious path by means of Parliament.
The invoice, initially launched in June 2021 by a cross-party group of MPs led by Ningo Prampram MP Sam George, goals to criminalize same-sex sexual relations, LGBTQ advocacy, funding and associated actions.
The invoice obtained its first studying in August 2021 and was then referred to Parliament’s Structure, Authorized Affairs and Parliamentary Affairs Committee for scrutiny.
In 2021-2022, the Fee held a variety of public hearings involving spiritual teams, conventional authorities, authorized consultants, civil society organizations, and human rights organizations.
The listening to sparked widespread public debate, with supporters saying the invoice was vital to guard Ghana’s tradition and household values, whereas opponents mentioned it was unconstitutional and discriminatory.
Parliament accepted the invoice on second studying in July 2023, after which it moved to a clause-by-clause evaluation.
On February 28, 2024, Congress handed the invoice after a 3rd studying and obtained suggestions from native advocacy teams, overseas governments, and worldwide organizations. Some provisions initially criticized by rights teams have been amended or eliminated earlier than remaining passage.
Nevertheless, the invoice didn’t obtain presidential approval by the top of the eighth Congress. Then-President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo withheld his consent pending a constitutional problem filed within the Supreme Courtroom.
The invoice subsequently expired with the dissolution of parliament forward of the 2024 basic election.
Within the ninth Congress, the invoice’s sponsors reintroduced it as a personal member’s invoice. Parliament Speaker Alban Bagbin later dominated that the proposed invoice met the constitutional and procedural necessities for reintroduction.
The invoice was formally reintroduced earlier this 12 months and referred to the Structure, Authorized Affairs and Parliamentary Affairs Committee earlier than being returned to the Home of Commons for consideration for an additional second studying.
The invoice’s return to Congress is predicted to reignite debate throughout the nation, with spiritual and conservative teams pushing for its passage, whereas human rights activists and a few civil society teams proceed to oppose it on constitutional and human rights grounds.
