Audio By Carbonatix
Former Attorney General under the Kufuor administration, Nii Ayikoi Otoo believes that Ghanaians who are opposing the controversial anti-LGBTQ bill will have a change of mind when they fully understand its objective.
The lawyer believes the Bill, sponsored by some Members of Parliament, is necessary for increasing advocacy for LGBT rights in the country.
He says that an in-depth understanding of LGBTQ+ activities will bring to the fore more critical issues that need to be addressed within Ghana's cultural setup.
The former Ambassador to Canada insists that Ghana is not ready to accept LGBT+ activities.
"The issue for me is what does the memorandum say? What is this law targeted at? It seems to me that after studying the memorandum closely that one begins to understand where the sponsors are coming from. Some people are looking at this bill as something against homosexuality or gayism but if you look at the term used, these, to me, go beyond goes beyond having sex," he said in an interview on GTV.
"When you go into the LGBTQ things, you begin to see that the problem is more serious than this whole idea of sexual orientation. Haven't we gone beyond the ordinary homosexual things and now talking about transgender? Are we ready for it? Is that our Ghanaian culture? That is where we should start," he added.
Mr. Ayikoi Otoo also described as problematic, arguments that LGBT+ activities were an expression of their fundamental human rights.
Whilst saying that human rights provisions were not absolute, he warned that people could be practising lawlessness in the name of exercising their fundamental human rights.
"Those rights are quite problematic...in all these things, there must be some limitations that is why they keep telling you that those rights are not absolute," he said.
The Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Values Bill 2021 will see people of the same sex who engage in sexual activity risk being fined or serving a jail term between three to five years.
The Bill is also proposing punishment for LGBT+ advocacy.
Latest Stories
-
Explosion reported outside US embassy in Oslo, police say
3 hours -
Trump accuses UK PM of seeking to ‘join wars after we’ve already won’
3 hours -
See the areas that will be affected by ECG’s planned maintenance today, March 8
3 hours -
First Lady champions ‘Give to Gain’ spirit for International Women’s Day
4 hours -
Ghana@69: Ghana mission in Canada promotes investments and partnerships
4 hours -
Lebanon condemns ‘grave breach’ as missiles strike Ghanaian UN base
4 hours -
Franklin Cudjoe demands urgent TOR overhaul as Middle East crisis threatens fuel security
4 hours -
10 injured in three-vehicle crash on Konongo–Kumasi road
5 hours -
UK aircraft carrier given five days to be ready to deploy
5 hours -
Ghana to replicate digital innovation success in Malawi
5 hours -
Iranian ambassador warns UK to be ‘very careful’ about further involvement in war
6 hours -
She Gives: The ripple effect of women who choose to give
6 hours -
Nadowli-Kaleo District observes 69th Independence Day with cultural exhibition and academic awards
6 hours -
Chambas Team of Red Alert, Narcotics Commission join forces to combat drug abuse
6 hours -
Tano North MCE launches 75 km road project under DRIP initiative
6 hours
