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Ghana lawmakers approve bill criminalizing LGBTQIA+ ‘promotion’

In Ghana, lawmakers approved a bill to criminalize the so-called promotion of LGBTQIA+ activity. It penalizes same-sex sexual acts with up to three ‌years ⁠of jail time, and introduces a “duty to report” prohibited LGBTQIA+ acts to a police officer or other authorities, ​with violators facing ​up to three ⁠years behind bars.

Photo by The Artboard from Unsplash.com

Be gay, go to jail?

In Ghana, lawmakers approved a bill to criminalize the so-called promotion of LGBTQIA+ activity. The Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, ​2025 was passed by a voice vote after the Constitutional and Legal Affairs ​Committee recommended its adoption.

The ⁠bill, which was introduced last year after Ghana’s president John Dramani Mahama took office:

  • penalizes same-sex sexual acts with up to three ‌years ⁠of jail time.
  • bans “funding, sponsorship or promotion” of LGBTQIA+ acts, with prison terms ranging from three to five years
  • introduces a “duty to report” prohibited LGBTQIA+ acts to a police officer or other authorities, ​with violators facing ​up to three ⁠years behind bars

The bill also amends Ghana’s Extradition Act of 1960 to make offenses under the new law extraditable offenses.

This is actually a rehashed version of an earlier bill, submitted in 2024 under former Ghanaian president Nana Akufo-Addo, who never ​signed it into law.

All over West ​Africa, a handful of anti-LGBTQIA+ legislations have been passed – e.g. in Senegal this March, the country’s president ⁠Bassirou Diomaye Faye signed a bill doubling the maximum prison term for same-sex sexual acts to 10 years, and criminalizing any efforts to promote homosexuality; and in Burkina Faso in September last ⁠year, lawmakers ​criminalized same-sex sexual ​acts, and criminalized “behavior likely to promote homosexual practices and similar practices”.

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