Ghana lawmakers approve bill criminalizing LGBTQ 'promotion', official says


ACCRA, May 29 (Reuters) - ⁠Ghana’s parliament on Friday approved a new bill ⁠that criminalizes the so-called promotion of LGBTQ activity, ‌part of a broader crackdown on sexual minorities in West Africa.

The Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, 2025, passed by ​a voice voteafter the Constitutional and ⁠Legal Affairs Committee unanimously ⁠recommended its adoption, first deputy speaker Bernard Ahiafor said.

The ⁠bill was ‌introduced last year shortly after President John Dramani Mahama took office. Lawmakers from Mahama's ⁠political party, the National Democratic Congress, had ​been urged by ‌religious leaders and other supporters of the bill ⁠to vote ​on it, and Mahama will now face pressure to sign it.

Lawmakers passed an earlier version of the bill ⁠in 2024, under Mahama's predecessor, President ​Nana Akufo-Addo, but it faced legal challenges and Akufo-Addo never signed it into law.

The bill approved on Friday maintains ⁠the existing penalty of up to three years in prison for same-sex sexual acts. It also bans "funding, sponsorship or promotion" of LGBTQ acts, with prison terms ​ranging from three to five years. ⁠And it introduces a "duty to report" prohibited LGBTQ acts ​to a police officer or ‌other authorities, with violators facing up ​to three years behind bars.

(Reporting by Emmanuel Bruce and Christian Akorlie; Writing by Robbie Corey-Boulet)

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