Audio By Carbonatix
An executive member of the Coalition for Proper Human Sexual Rights and Family Values, Dr. Justice Appiah Kubi is contending that the Ghana LGBTQI+ Bill is not as harsh as the anti-LGBTQ law of Uganda.
In May, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni assented to what the media describes as the world’s harshest anti-LGBT bill because it allows the death penalty for homosexual acts.
Although the president asked that certain parts of the provisions from the original legislation be toned down, it retained some harsh measures such as the death penalty for certain same-sex acts and a 20-year sentence for “promoting” homosexuality.
Comparing this to Ghana’s LGBTQI+ bill, Dr. Appiah-Kubi maintained that although proponents of the bill are meant to prevent some of the "absurd" things that are being championed by the queer community, it has no intentions to harm people of the LGBT community.
“For the Ugandan one, as far as I know, there's death sentence. I mean, I can't speak for them. Nevertheless, what I believe strongly is that when it comes to our laws, in some way, somehow, as I said, it's very much to protect those strange cisgender and non-binary and pansexual.”
He further stated that the bill is tolerant enough to ensure that no harm befalls individuals in the queer community, although Ghanaians might not condone LGBT and its activities.
This level of tolerance, Dr. Appiah-Kubi emphasised, is reflective of the Ghanaian culture.
Additionally, he described the bill as a good one, explaining that, “the spirit of the bill wasn't necessarily to really hurt people who are into homosexuality, but really to prevent these absurd, LGBT things that are coming to nations and using political strategies, using UN, using the other CSOs” to champion their agenda.
Dr. Appiah-Kubi further assuaged some of the concerns that the passage of the legislation would give way to the abuse of people who identify as queer or people suspected to be queer.
He disclosed that the bill actually protects such persons against acts of violence in the community
“If you read the bill, the bill will tell you that anyone who take the law into his or her own hands and try to hurt somebody, that person, the law is also going to deal with him or her,” Dr. Appiah-Kubi stressed.
Latest Stories
-
Alumni support essential to educational progress – Former GES Director
4 minutes -
Mahama pushes for joint ventures with China to boost Ghana’s economy
15 minutes -
Sekyere Rural Bank PLC increases profit by 246%, sets strategies to attain more
20 minutes -
Policy fragmentation slows EV growth -Koranteng advocates comprehensive national plan
21 minutes -
Utility tariff hikes too sensitive to ignore – Labour consultant demands stakeholder dialogue
23 minutes -
‘We will be ready’ – Mohammed Kudus welcomes England clash at 2026 World Cup
27 minutes -
4 Garrison Patrons Day Junior National Squash tournament ends in Obuasi
28 minutes -
The Paradox of power: Why military coups in Africa perpetuate rather than solve governance crises
36 minutes -
Minerals Development Fund implements environmentally sustainable, profitable initiative for small-scale mining
41 minutes -
Elon Musk’s X bans European Commission from making ads after €120m fine
43 minutes -
Road crashes aren’t linked with wizardry, but driver errors – Bono Region DVLA
46 minutes -
Fire ravages shop at Kukurantumi
47 minutes -
GTA responds to viral videos alleging kidnapping of tourists
50 minutes -
European leaders walk tightrope between backing Ukraine and keeping US on board
52 minutes -
Otumfuo–Newmont AI for youth center launched in Sankore, Ahafo Region
1 hour
