Opinions of Sunday, 10 September 2006
Columnist: Nuviadenu, Kobla
Barely about a week ago, Ghanaians awoke to find to their consternation that a controversial international gay and lesbians confab was about to be held in Accra on September 4, 2006.
In a swift and robust reaction to the news, the government, through the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Hon. Kwamena Bartels issued a statement condemning and even banning the hosting of the conference in the country. It stated in part, that “the government does not condone any such activity which violently offends the culture, morality and heritage of the entire people of Ghana. Supporting such a Conference, or even allowing it, will encourage that tendency which the law forbids.” He continued “The government will like to make it absolutely clear that it shall not permit the proposed conference anywhere in Ghana….. Unnatural carnal knowledge is illegal under our criminal code. Homosexuality, lesbianism and bestiality are therefore offences under the laws in Ghana”. “.....it is not illegal for them to meet and talk, but we in Ghana don’t want to encourage it. They can go and do it elsewhere” he added. Since then, there have been mixed reactions to government’s position. Panelists on radio and television talk shows, callers to phone-in-programmes, and even the Christians Council of Ghana, among others, have either sided with or against government’s position. Suffice it to state here that the vast majority of the comments I have heard have been in support of government’s position. Gladly too, for once, debates and discussions over the issue have remained significantly non-partisan. Was government right in the position it took viewed against the fundamental human rights of people as enshrined in the constitution? Proponents of gay rights contend that government’s stance is an infringement on the rights of such people to associate. They argue further that the issue is a moral one and that the highest judge of morality is one’s conscience. To them people can congregate to advocate against the status quo. They stress that the law in Ghana debars people with a common interest from meeting over an issue even though the issue itself might be unconstitutional. After all, to them, meeting over an issue does not amount to “engaging” in it. Who says one cannot meet to advance arguments to question and test the existing law? Gay rights activists like Hon. Twumasi Appiah, (MP) for Sene, opine that the position of government is “the highest form of dictatorship”. To the MP, government is only being hypocritical and that if it has any justification, it should go ahead and arrest the perpetrators, instead of banning the conference. Despite all the above arguments, what is the position of the law, culture, practices and conventions of the country on the subject? Under Ghanaian laws, male homosexuality is officially illegal. The Criminal Code of 1960, Chapter six: sexual offences, Article 105 reads: