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Dublin: 16 °C Sunday 19 May, 2013

Nigeria Senate votes to ban gay marriage

People found to be breaking the law will face prison sentences of up to 14 years under the new bill, which has been sent to the country’s president for approval.

Image: Stig Andersen via Creative Commons/Flickr

NIGERIA’S SENATE VOTED today to criminalise gay marriage, instituting prison terms of more than a decade for violations in a nation where gays and lesbians already face discrimination and abuse.

The bill heads to Nigeria’s House of Representatives, who have to approve the bill and send it to President Goodluck Jonathan for his signature before it becomes a law. However, public opinion — and lawmakers’ calls for even harsher penalties for being gay — shows wide support for the measure in the deeply religious nation.

“Such elements in society should be killed,” Senator Baba Dati said during the debate.

Under the measure, couples who marry could face up to 14 years in jail, and witnesses or anyone who helps couples marry could be sentenced to 10 years behind bars. That’s an increase over the bill’s initial penalties.

Homosexuals face discrimination, abuse and violence

Homosexuality is already technically illegal in Nigeria, a country evenly divided between Christians and Muslims that is nearly universally opposed to homosexuality. In the areas in Nigeria’s north where Islamic Shariah law has been enforced for about a decade, gays and lesbians can face death by stoning.

Across the African continent, many countries have made homosexuality punishable by jail sentences. Ugandan legislators introduced a bill that would impose the death penalty for some gays and lesbians, though it has not been passed into law two years later. Even in South Africa, the one country where gays can marry, lesbians have been brutally attacked and murdered.

The proposed law also has drawn the interest of European Union countries, some of which already offer Nigeria’s sexual minorities asylum based on gender identity. The British government also recently threatened to cut aid to African countries that violate the rights of gay and lesbian citizens. However, British aid remains quite small in oil-rich Nigeria, one of the top crude suppliers to the US.

International opinion also didn’t seem to trouble lawmakers. During the debate, televised live from National Assembly in Nigeria’s capital Abuja, Senate President David Mark said Nigeria would not bow to international pressure on any legislation.

“Anybody can write to us, but our values are our values,” Mark said. “No country has a right to interfere in the way we make our laws.”

Read: Cameron threatens to cut aid to ‘anti-gay’ countries>

Read: Russia faces protests over ‘gay propaganda’ law>

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Read: Britain to legalise same-sex marriage>


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Comments (35 Comments)

  • Really makes ya think, we might not have full equality here in Ireland but we are a damn sight further along than these guys!!! Thank god we don’t have to fear having a day in court just because of our sexuality or the basic right to fall in love and get married!!!!

    Reply
    • I always say democracy is not for every country…every country have different culture and beliefs…and is time we respect every culture….

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    • I can’t respect a cruel or discriminatory culture. Also, in this instance, Nigeria is not respecting gay culture.

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    • nope, sorry. not respecting a culture who pick and choose who to respect and whos life to make hell. if you accept that it is their culture, than you accept that it is a culture of hate? the irony is we probably send aid to Nigeria even in our own dire situation. a country that disrespects women and brutalises gay men and women. lord can only imagine what would happen if you were effeminate or transgender. suicide would be the only option. im gonna wager they havent put 2 and 2 together in that regard.

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    • No – It’s not time we respect every country. Respect is earned, not given. And anybody who incriminates an act of love and sexuality doesn’t deserve my respect.

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    • Mensah Mensah it’s funny you wrote that we should “respect every culture” when on July 17th on your twitter account you wrote:

      “Y do we have to give into muslim demands when they live in our country…and the koran preaches tolerance but they aint…”

      It seems that you just don’t like the gays (and maybe Muslims) then?

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    • Nigeria is one of the most homophobic countries going, there’s a generalisation for you all.

      It is by no means unique in the region though, as anyone who has watched the Eat Da Poo Poo video on youtube can verify. (It is semi NSFW).

      Reply
  • Hey Nigeria – Here’s an idea. If you don’t like gay marriage, then don’t get gay married! Problem solved. What an archaic, toilet of a country.

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  • Watch this video and see the kind of hatred and propaganda being stirred up in these places

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjnrLt3VuSM&feature=youtube_gdata_player

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  • What are they afraid of.

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  • I don’t know how to communicate just how disturbed, upset and frightened I am after reading this. I know it’s far from a perfect world we live in but I will never understand why two people who love each other and want to live the rest of their lives together upsets some people so much that they would wish these people dead. Dead! By stoning! God almighty… it’s just, I can’t get my head around it.

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  • well lets see, when it comes to “OIL” there will not be any embargoes or sanctions placed on this country. so any angry government letters will be of no use

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  • Waffler 29/11/11 #

    a nigerian once told me how an official in his embassy asked if he was gay because he was an occupational therapist.

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  • Gay people in Nigeria are trapped by one word.. RELIGION. Nigeria is split between mostly christian and muslim with a few native belief systems thrown in along the way but the one thing you do have is a fundamentalist mentality which at time leads to strife between the two in Nigeria so the poor gays don’t stand a chance, their homophobic attitudes are born out of their religious beliefs and their intolerance is only heightened by the male machismo culture that prevails in many African states, Uganda has the death penalty for being gay! Such ‘enlightened’ countries are also in receipt of vast amounts of ‘aid money’ from western govt’s which if the west was really serious about equality for all they could stop tomorrow. Nigeria is a corrupt and backward thinking country and like many other African countries when it comes to development it is more akin to Europe in Victorian times. Nigeria deserves no respect for it’s persecution of gay people only disdain, imagine if Ireland said it was going to lock up all ‘black Africans’ to quote a man in the news recently because we didn’t like the colour of their skin! Could you imagine the outcry from the various African countries! but, it’s perfectly fine for them to lock up people because of their sexuality? As do various muslim countries. Religion has a lot to answer for folks!

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  • Measure like this might *just* only be effective if people chose to be gay – well here’s a newsflash Nigeria!
    People are born this way! Just like they are born with brown eyes or blonde hair – discriminating against a biological trait is pointless and will only serve to marginalize gays and spread fear, distrust and hatred between people.

    Also newsflash #2 – allowing gays to marry will not cause society to crumble nor will it lessen straight marriage in any way.

    Reply
  • They can just come over here and get hitched!!

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  • An awful lot of people clearly support marriage equality based on the reaction of people’s comments on this article, but a lot of Irish TDs don’t see civil marriage as an important issue because people rarely raise the subject with them. If you believe in marriage equality don’t just tell the journal about it, tell your TD!

    http://www.marriagequality.ie/getinvolved/tdcampaign.html

    Reply
  • When politics and religion is mixed, the result is always savagery in the name of god.

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  • Ashling…ur right i said that…i dont like moslem bullying people into what they believe…but when it comes to GAYS….i respect them cos they r not hurting anyone…but try telling that to 50% illitrate 3 world countries….is a no go…..NATO and thier friends force democracy on these 3rd world countries,thinking it will solve the problem but they forget to educate them to learn about democracy…so those people are left with democracy but same believe and mad cultures…etc etc etc….

    Reply
  • They are gay-racist

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  • who are any of us to pass comment on what another country legislates for? particularly when the majority are in favour. which by all accounts they are. and also, were we so different until a short time ago. i believe everyone deserves equality. but if the average nigerian views homosexuality as a religious, moral, or even social wrong then they have the right, and properly so, to legislate for such. much and all as i disagree with the premise.

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    • Sure, Sean, let’s not evn try to address wrong-doing in other nations. It’s not in our back yard yada, yada, yada. How do you feel about accepting refugees of such a cruel regime?

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    • “…particularly when the majority are in favour.”

      Ah yes. If the majority of an arbitrary group of people believe something, it automatically becomes true. If that means that someone gets killed or imprisoned for loving the wrong person, well, that’s their own stupid fault for being different from the majority, isn’t it?

      The mind boggles.

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    • exactly, they may have no choice but to leave their country and seek asylum elsewhere. Will Ireland and the UK be as understanding when some are granted status overhere? I hope they will of course, although they shouldn’t have to leave their country

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    • i think we should accept the refugees. i just think its wrong for us or anyone else to try to push and pressurise from the outside. in much the same way as i object to tge eu imf etc telling us how to operate. why cant we agree its wrong but agree that every nation needs its own system. i dont agree with it but its right for them. and i am in support of any refugees of these legislated descriminations being granted asylum and support here. if they want it. i just think that it shouldnt be a case of the outside world railing against nigeria over this. we have our abortion laws here that most western countries disagree with. but its not up to them. its up to us, the same as homosexuality in nigeria is up to nigeria. surely?

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    • Sean so by that token if Ireland gets to be a majority secular country do I get the right to put all religious bigots in prison?

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    • Multi 29/11/11 #

      I can sympathise with your sentiments Paul but I’m also a little wary about Western liberals looking down at other cultures. Attaining respect for gay rights is a long hard won road and a lot of things have to happen before it can be achieved. I think it this has to been seen within the wider Nigerian context, taking into account issues such as poverty, culture, the role of religion, the position of women, modernity versus traditional values etc etc.

      At the same time Western countries should stick to their guns somewhat, accept asylum seekers on the basis of sexual discrimination and yes if necessary stifle aid. We must respect a country’s right to autonomy but it doesn’t mean we can’t try and do things to change their mind. These are the problems you encounter with liberal democracy.

      Reply
    • Multi 29/11/11 #

      This post written by Adam Curtis is quite a good insight into the murky waters of cultural relativism.

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/2010/05/kabul_city_number_one_part_9.html

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  • i think ur right in relation to that being the problem multi. i think that this will change with education etc. my point exactly. its a matter of time

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  • well said mensah mensah

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  • no cyrill. i dont think we do. but then again, as a nation we are very very different to nigeria. secularisation being the main factor in case. add to that our differing society and economic norms and you have two incomparable examples. after all liberal things like legalising homosexuality and divorce came with and in tandem to secularisation, better education, and more wealth in ireland, perhaps when these things occur in nigeria, they will change too? after all. the things that went on here from church state and discrimination points of view up to 20 years ago were equally hateful and dispicable, but these changed over time. and there was noone saying to us well this has to be done in such a fashion so who are we to look down on nigeria for this? they probably look down on us for the opposite reason? and if everyone is entitled to an equal opinion why are homophobes treated with the disdain they are? i think each to there own and we must all respect an indivdual person or nations feelings? afterall thats what denocracy is about, and that is what real equality is about. just because i and most here wouldnt agree with this legislation does not make it the wrong thing for nigeria? no?

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    • Multi 29/11/11 #

      I think you may have to draw the line somewhere though Sean.

      “i think each to there own and we must all respect an indivdual person or nations feelings”

      The law we’re discussing doesn’t fulfill this criteria since it doesn’t in fact respect a nigerian gay person’s feelings or their right to “each to their own”. Hence the problem.

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    • I agree there are reasons why underdeveloped countries do these things and have to be helped overcome them. Thats entirely different to saying you respect them in some sense of cultural appeasment. There are good reasons why womens evidence in Saudi is only worth half that of a man. The reason being they are hovelled into believing a 7th century man spoke to the creator of the universe and told him to write the koran. But the fact that society is brainwashed doesnt make the belief a legitimate way to treat women. Understanding why people do bad things doesnt mean condoning them. Thats what your original post sounded like.

      Reply

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