
Audio By Carbonatix
Dean at the University of Ghana School of Information and Communication Studies has pleaded with advocates of the Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill not to criminalise the rights of such persons.
Joining discussions on JoyNews Newsfile Saturday, Prof. Audrey Gadzekpo said regardless of the sexual preferences of an individual, that individual deserves to be respected.
Highlighting some concerns with the anti-LGBTQ+ Bill, she said that unnatural carnal knowledge could not be associated only with same-sex partners involved sexually.
She said if heterosexual partners engage in the act of unnatural carnal knowledge, they have also fallen foul of the law.
"He [Ningo-Prampram MP, Samuel Nartey George] understands, and I know that he knows that the law includes, inner lateral carnal knowledge, things that perhaps heterosexuals even in the privacy of their bedroom, may do. Those are some of the problems.
"So for example, If you engage in oral sex, in a blow job, it is unnatural carnal knowledge. According to the law as it stands now, it's not permitted".
Although the Bill criminalises the advocacy for LGBTQ+ activities and persons, Mrs Gadzekpo said that the definition of promoting such practices should be spelt out.
Citing an example, she said that if lecturers limit their teachings to the history of homosexuality, that would not promote LGBTQ.
"But what if I tell a student, that because we have because I disagree with him [Samuel Nartey George], because we have a strong charter on human rights, or constitutionally in Ghana, also on the continental level and on the international level, and if I tell students that it’s because we are signatory to all of those conventions, I have a problem with criminalising homosexuality," Audrey Gadzekpo told host Evans Mensah.
She noted that defending the rights of persons on the LGBTQ spectrum could be interpreted as promoting such persons, which the Bill strongly frowns upon.
"It is true that the majority of people in the country do not like certain people. However, we need to educate people about rights in this country. I’m beginning to think that people don't have as clear an understanding of rights that we thought they would".
Latest Stories
-
GIS to unveil comprehensive plans to enhance officers’ welfare and infrastructure
6 minutes -
Right move, wrong timing? – COMAC CEO questions govt’s delay on fuel price relief
8 minutes -
IMF urges Central Banks to keep inflation in check
31 minutes -
NRSA stands firm on Toyota Voxy ban despite transport operators’ opposition
33 minutes -
H. Kwasi Prempeh raises concerns over Supreme Court’s handling of OSP constitutionality case
41 minutes -
Global childhood cancer cases soar
41 minutes -
Airline pilots fear retribution over refusing to fly in Middle East, aviators’ group says
42 minutes -
Police intensify security in Bosomtwe communities after deadly clash
50 minutes -
Corporate Income Tax contributes highest to 2025 petroleum revenue
52 minutes -
Ghana less exposed to global oil disruptions — Fitch
55 minutes -
Property rates: Stakeholders advocate digitisation, transparency, …
57 minutes -
Police officer killed in road crash at Atortorkorpe in Ada
57 minutes -
EKMA begins dredging major storm drains ahead of peak rainy season
1 hour -
US has let in 4,499 refugees since October – all but three were South African
1 hour -
Child Protection Units to be part of MMDA Performance Assessment
1 hour