Photo credit: American Psychological Association
A CNN interview of Ghanaian MP, Sam George, on or about
October 8, 2021, over a proposed bill—the Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and
Ghanaian Family Values Bill, 2021 ('anti-gay bill')—appears
to have won the lead sponsor of the bill praise in some quarters in Ghana for
defense of the bill.
The anti-gay bill seeks, in a nutshell, to criminalise LGBTQ+ sexual relationships and associations. The bill also criminalises directly or indirectly a wide range of other perceived non-heterosexual conduct, vestimentary habits and any advocacy for or in support of LGBTQ+ rights or persons. Some of the bill’s proscriptions also apply to non-LGBTQ+ persons.
In the said CNN interview, Sam George, the lead sponsor of the private members’ bill makes a number of claims and deductions which are false. The facts he alluded to are as false as his reasoning. Despite the apparent falsity of George’s claims, the CNN interviewer, Kenyan journalist Larry Madawo, failed to point out these factually inaccurate statements and completely false deductions to him, perhaps due to his own lack of adequate preparation. I shall catalogue these issues and deal with them for the purposes of public education.
1.
The Afrobarometer survey finding that Ghanaians are
generally intolerant of LGBTQ+ persons
The MP Sam George cites an Afrobarometer survey
finding that 93% of Ghanaians would not wish to have LGBTQ+ persons as their
neighbours. i.e. Ghanaians are generally less tolerant of LGBTQ+ persons. Therefore, there is justification for the bill which
criminalises LGBTQ+ and related activities. Indeed, the proponents of the bill
make similar arguments in the memorandum to the bill.
The MP conveniently forgets that the same Afrobarometer survey he refers to found a high tolerance for wife beating among
Ghanaians. Going by his logic, Ghana should have
legislation de-criminalising domestic violence too, No?!
In a democratic society, that Afrobarometer finding
means that LGBTQ+ persons are more vulnerable to discrimination and harm and
the response of the State should be to fulfil its obligations under Ghana’s Constitution by ensuring that it adopts extraordinary
measures to protect such persons. The appropriate State response is NOT to
formally license (by way of an anti-gay bill) majority intolerance and
discrimination and deprive those minorities (in this case LGBTQ+ persons) of
their basic human rights.
2.
The case for conversion therapy
The MP and his fellow sponsors of the private
member's bill, profess knowledge on a subject (homosexuality) about which
knowledge and understanding continues to evolve
and propose a so-called ’conversion therapy' as a supposed 'cure' for
homosexuality (See p.9 of memorandum to the bill). He makes the same argument
in this CNN interview. Conversion therapy is a pseudoscientific practice (a
collection of beliefs/practices mistakenly regarded as being based on
scientific method) of attempting to change an individual's sexual orientation
from homosexuality or bisexual using psychological, physical, or spiritual
interventions. The point has to be made that there is no reliable evidence
anywhere that sexual orientation can be changed. Medical experts around the world
question the scientific legitimacy of this therapy. In an August 8, 2019 ‘New England Journal of Medicine’ report,
medical experts observed that so-called "conversion therapy" can
trigger depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and suicidal thoughts and
attempts, and it should be banished in the United States. ‘As a result of the lack of regulation on these 'therapies,' many
adults and children continue to be defrauded, harmed and traumatised in the
U.S. every day,’ said the report’s lead author Dr. Carl Streed, Jr. The
assumption that one can change his/her sexuality through some therapy is as
laughable as it is silly. It's even more laughable when you seek to justify a bill criminalising LBGTQ+ using it as a basis. On page 9 of the Memorandum to the anti-gay bill, Sam George and his co-sponsors
of the bill argue that, ‘…we also
recognise that groups of vulnerable persons in the [LGBTQ+] discussion ought to
receive support to address underlying biological, social and economic issues
that make them prone to the rapacious activities of persons involved in
[LGBTQ+] activities. Social support systems must be established to help the
vulnerable persons understand their sexuality and to access psychological or
physiological support where necessary’.!
The distinguished Ghanaian-British
philosopher, Kwame Anthony Appiah, is one of the most sought-after philosophers
in the world today. He's an Asante royal (son of the great lawyer and statesman
Joe Appiah) and also comes from an aristocratic British family (son of Peggy
Cripps whose father was Chancellor of the Exchequer in Britain; a man who was
instrumental in negotiating India's independence from Britain). For his
unparalleled brilliance, Anthony Appiah is sought after by elite universities
around the world: Oxford, Cambridge, Yale, Harvard and now NYU. He’s gay. He's obviously a person of unlimited means.
Question: If being gay was/is a choice for such a person, why would Anthony
Appiah not change his sexuality through the so called 'conversion therapy'?
3.
False claim over the 19th amendment to the
US Constitution
George also justified the bill saying ‘laws are a reflection of society.
Until 1960 American society did not find women fit to vote and so women did not
vote there…’ This claim is also completely false. The 19th Amendment
to the US Constitution granting women the right to vote was passed by Congress on
June 4, 1919 and ratified on August 18, 1920.
4. The culture justification
George also claimed in this interview that ‘the bill is supported by the
National house of chiefs… Ghanaian culture forbids homosexuality…’. This
argument is also made in the memorandum to the bill in which proponents argue
that the proposed restrictions on the rights of LGBTQ+ persons are justified
because LGBTQ+ persons and their activities do not conform to ‘traditional
Ghanaian customs, beliefs and values’. Sam George and his co-sponsors also
justify the bill and its restrictions on the basis that no right is absolute. Of
course, no right is absolute but. But so is the State’s power to curtail a
right not absolute. Rights would be meaningless if all it took to destroy them
was the passage or implementation of any law aimed at destroying them. In order to ensure the maximum possible
protection for a right guaranteed under the Constitution, the Constitution sets
a high bar for any law that seeks or purports to restrict a guaranteed right.
Among other things, the policy grounds for restricting the personal liberties
of persons irrespective of their gender, ethnicity, faith or sexual orientation
must align with grounds provided by and permissible under Ghana’s Constitution.
Under the Constitution, culture is not used to determine whether rights are
allowable; rather custom is assessed on the basis of whether it infringes
rights. Chapter 5 of Ghana’s Constitution sets forth grounds and the
circumstances under which personal liberties may be restricted. The
circumstances include where a person’s liberties are restricted (i) in execution
of a sentence or order of a court in respect of a criminal offence of which a
person has been convicted [Article 14(1) (a)]; (ii) in execution of an order of
a court punishing a person for contempt of court [Article 14(1)(b)]; (iii) for
the purpose of bringing a person before a court in execution of an order of a
court [Article 14(1)(c)]; (iv) in the case of a person suffering from an
infectious or contagious disease, a person of unsound mind, a person addicted
to drugs or alcohol or a vagrant, for the purpose of his care or treatment or
the protection of the community [Article 14(1)(d)]; and (v) for the purpose of
the education or welfare of a person who has not attained the age of eighteen
years [Article 14(1) (e)]. In addition, a person’s right may be restricted ‘for
the purpose of preventing the unlawful entry of that person into Ghana, or of
effecting the expulsion, extradition or other lawful removal of that person
from Ghana or for the purpose of restricting that person while he is being lawfully
conveyed through Ghana in the course of his extradition or removal from one
country to another [Article 14(1)(h)]; or upon reasonable suspicion of his
having committed or being about to commit a criminal offence under the laws of
Ghana’ [Article 14(1)(g)].
Evidently, Chapter 5 of the Constitution makes no provision for the
restriction of personal liberties on the ground of ‘traditional Ghanaian
customs, beliefs and values.’
“Culture”—as important as it is in other realms—cannot be invoked or
used to override constitutional rights.
I have had the opportunity to review a number of draft legislations in
my line of work as a legal policy person. In reviewing draft legislations, one
has to consider the object of the bill or the legislative gap the proposed bill
seeks to fill. In other words, the ‘mischief’ the bill seeks to cure, as the
lawyers would put it. One also has to pit the proposed clauses against
constitutional provisions and court decisions to check if the proposed clauses
are compatible with same. International law and best practice(s) in other
jurisdictions are also an important yardstick.
I point out these considerations to highlight the fact that this is the
first time I have come across a draft bill which is so incurably deficient. The
proposed anti-gay bill is so constitutionally flawed to the extent that no
amount of amendment, tweaking or redrafting could possibly save it!
Your arguments are empty. Making reference to research findings policy formulation is key for every country's development. If you think the same aferobarometer shows that Ghanaians are intolerant to wife beating and you think it should be decriminalised, push for it. Don't sit somewhere and being clueless make unnecessary false statements. How false was Sam George 's claim that Ghanaians are intolerant to LGBQT +? I am equally disappointed in the publishers of this article. You could have done better by interrogating this 'empty' writeup!
ReplyDeleteThank you, 'Unknown' :)
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