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Discrimination, Violence Against LGBT Community In Ghana

Feature Article Discrimination, Violence Against LGBT Community In Ghana
DEC 22, 2021 LISTEN

Ghana often prides herself to be a democratic state and the black stars of democracy within sub-Saharan African on whom most African use as benchmark to measure their democratic strength or level.

To be measured as democratic nation stands on several parameters and just not transition. Ghana has done quite well since the inception of her fourth Republic, the country has been able to transit power smoothly from one political power to different political power but fail on some of the parameters, especially area of human rights which is the main anchor of democracy.

The question l ask is, if we claim to be front runners when it comes to the tenets of democracy simple because we were able to transit power and cannot practice the main tanet of democracy which is the human right, then the country has to re assess herself as being black stars of democracy in Africa.

LGBT which stands for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Community have been discriminated and violently brutalized for quite long now within Ghana and Africa at large and the phenomenon seems not to end any moment from soon. For instance, in August 2015 in Nima, Accra, a young man was allegedly brutally and assaulted by members of vigilante group call “safe empire" and several young men and women were blackmail for economic gains and such victims had to flew from their Community to a safer hidden place to avoid the wrath of people or the community. The discrimination against LGBT is not limited to Ghana alone but across Sub-Saharan African and example is what has been captured in research carried by Dorah P Amorey which was originally confirmed by IGLHRC which stands for International Gay Lesbian Human Right Campaign which has its content as three Lesbian who were raped on gun point as they were seeking refuge in feminist camp in Calaba in Nigeria.

In sum, LGBT Community has right and their right must be upheld or respected within the country. I took the pains to comb through 1992 constitution and had not come across any iota of evidence that penalizes the right of people to choose their partners or choice of sex, though this evidence of mine stands to be corrected since l am not a legal practitioner and can also attest there are ongoing debates on the need to criminalize such practice in Ghana.

As a country, we should rather be thinking for ways to reformed such Community to be accepted by the larger society and also look forward to adopt best practices with regards to LGBT.

It is important to emphasize that l am not a practitioner of LGBT but as concern Ghanaian and human right advocate there should that frantic effort to appreciate and understand the preference of this community. As long as they have not committed any crime but rather a choice made, then we have to respect and protect them.

MICHAEL YIRAN

ACCRA , GHANA

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