Accra, Jan. 10, - Imam Ishmael Okotah
Badoo, the Chief Imam of Okaikwei South, has appealed to the President and
Parliament not to succumb to external pressures in the legalisation of gay and
lesbian rights.
He said this is a serious issue
which needs to be condemned by all as the legalisation of such rights could
lead to a curse on the country.
Imam Badoo made the appeal in an
interview with the Ghana News Agency
following a new Human Rights Watch report titled “No Choice but to Deny
Who I Am’: Violence and Discrimination against LGBT People in Ghana”.
Imam Badoo said Almighty Allah
through His Holy Scriptures (Quran and Bible) and even traditional norms frowns
on the practice of homosexuality and God had demonstrated His displeasures on
those who practiced it in the past.
He said homosexuality was not
accepted in Islam and the practice of it makes one a non-Muslim, adding that if
a country allows such a practice to occur then the mercy of God is taken away
from that state.
However, Imam Badoo said, much as
Islam frowns on the practice of homosexuality it does not give people the right
to abuse such individuals hence the need to hand them over to law enforcers.
He called on the President Nana
Addo Dankwa Akuffo Addo to be resolute on the issue to avoid further
challenges.
Abdel-Mannan Abdel-Rahman, the
General Secretary, Coalition of Muslim Organisations, Ghana (COMOG), also
speaking with the GNA, said this was an opportunity for Ghanaians to place
pressure on political authorities to defend the cultural values of the people.
He said government must be
categorical in representing and defending the values of the people of Ghana on
the subject of homosexuality.
Abdel Rahman said Ghanaians
deserve the commitment of political leaders to defend their unequivocal
position against homosexuality and same sex marriage.
He said the position of Muslims
in Ghana, as firmly rooted in the teachings of Islam, was that homosexuality
was not only demonic but also an abominable act that should never be considered
a legitimate alternative.
Abdel-Rahman urged all political
parties to demonstrate their commitment to fight against any attempt to change
the laws of the country to accommodate this decadence.
The General Secretary said COMOG
would collaborate with like-minded individuals, groups and Civil Society
Organisations to resist any attempt to legalise the practice in the country.
“If the laws of Ghana on
homosexuality need change, such changes must reflect the strong resolve of
Ghanaians in uprooting the practice from the Ghanaian society,” he added.
GNA

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