Audio By Carbonatix
The Center for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana) has affirmed its commitment to advocating for the repeal of the Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Value Bill, popularly known as the Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill, should President Akufo-Addo sign it into law.
Professor Henry Kwasi Prempeh stressed that CDD-Ghana will persist in its efforts to ensure that the bill does not become a permanent feature in the country's legal framework.
In an interview on JoyNews' Newsfile programme on Saturday, March 9, he urged Ghanaians to thoroughly review the bill and refrain from making decisions based solely on emotions.
Professor Prempeh assured that CDD-Ghana will continue to work towards upholding the rights of all individuals in the country without discrimination.
"Assuming that this bill passes, we will continue to advocate for it to be repealed. So, we will continue to advocate against," he assured.
Professor Henry Kwasi Prempeh further defended the organization's stance against the bill.
He asserted that the bill goes against the tenets of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana and should not be accepted.
Professor Prempeh highlighted that the proposed law poses a threat to the fundamental human rights of minority groups in the country.
"When you take the bill as a whole, we believe it offends the constitution because it violates one of the constitutional provisions designed to safeguard some separation of powers between what kind of bill the executive may propose and what can of bill parliament through a private members bill propose."
"So article 108 states that unless a bill is introduced by or on behalf of the President, Parliament shall not proceed on it if it has some fiscal effects," he added.
On February 28, 2024, Parliament endorsed a bill criminalizing LGBTQ activities and prohibiting their promotion, advocacy, and financial support.
According to the legislation, individuals found guilty of engaging in such acts could be imprisoned for 6 months to 3 years, while those involved in promoting or financing such activities could face imprisonment ranging from 3 to 5 years.
The approval of the bill has triggered a backlash from numerous stakeholders, including Virginia Evelyn Palmer, the Ambassador of the United States to Ghana.
Nevertheless, CDD-Ghana has vehemently opposed the bill's enactment into law.
Latest Stories
-
Vehicle pollution, a leading risk factor for death in Ghana both the children and working class
2 minutes -
Presidency cuts political appointees by 124, but compensation bill jumps 148% and staff classifications raise questions
11 minutes -
Suaman MP urges NPP members to rally behind Dr Bawumia for victory 2028
54 minutes -
Auditors’ Court to be established to prosecute audit offences – Ato Forson
57 minutes -
Ato Forson raises concern over public sector waste, calls for stronger internal audits
1 hour -
Ho: Two killed, several injured in road crash
1 hour -
Finance Ministry inaugurates new Internal Audit Agency board to drive reforms
1 hour -
Isak and Gyokeres star as Sweden thrash Tunisia
1 hour -
Congo says 782 Ebola cases confirmed, two new health zones affected
1 hour -
US deports Iranian pro-democracy activist to Central African Republic, lawyer says
1 hour -
China’s regulator summons Walmart over food safety issues
2 hours -
ECOWAS mourns former Commission President James Victor Gbeho
2 hours -
FIFA releases statement over Uruguay travel chaos before World Cup 2026 match
2 hours -
Mother returning from South Africa detained at airport, bail denied – Barker-Vormawor alleges
2 hours -
Global leaders react to announcement of US-Iran peace agreement
2 hours