Gaborone — Hundreds of people took to the streets in Botswana’s capital of Gaborone on Saturday to protest against legislation seeking to make same-sex relations legal.
Backed by religious groups, the demonstrators marched across the city to voice their opposition to a bill that aims to comply with a 2019 court ruling in favour of LGBTQ rights.
Some held signs reading “we say no homosexuality” and “protect our children”.
The bill “would open floodgates of immorality and abomination”, said Pastor Pulafela Mabiletswane Siele of the Evangelical Fellowships of Botswana, a Christian group, delivering a petition to the parliament.
“We urge our parliament to opt for a referendum regarding this matter,” Siele said.
The protest comes amid a wider pushback against LGBTQ rights in southern Africa.
Last week, thousands of people took to the streets in Malawi ahead of a constitutional court case challenging the country’s ban on same-sex relationships.
Lawmakers in Namibia have backed legislation to ban same-sex marriage and punish its supporters, following a Supreme Court ruling that allowed for the recognition of some unions contracted abroad.
🇧🇼 Anti-LGBTQ Protest in Botswana as Government Seeks To Legalise Same-Sex Relationship
Residents of Gaborone, the capital of Botswana, have protested a proposed measure that would legalise same-sex relationships.
Pastor Pulafela Mabiletswane Siele of the Evangelical… pic.twitter.com/queOLTd8tl
— BantuPage (@BantuPage) July 22, 2023
Last week, thousands of people took to the streets in Malawi ahead of a constitutional court case challenging the country’s ban on same-sex relationships.
Lawmakers in Namibia have backed legislation to ban same-sex marriage and punish its supporters, following a Supreme Court ruling that allowed for the recognition of some unions contracted abroad.
Botswana’s High Court in 2019 ruled in favour of campaigners seeking to strike down jail sentences for same-sex relationships, declaring the punishment to be unconstitutional.
The government sought to revoke the ruling but lost in appeal in 2021.
Gay sex had been banned since 1965 in the socially conservative African nation, where offenders could face up to seven years in prison.
The bill that is expected to be discussed in the coming weeks removes the related provisions from the penal code.
Receiving the petition on behalf of parliament, opposition lawmaker Wynter Mmolotsi said MPs would take into consideration the views of the church.
“We worry that religion and faith are being weaponised to distort the message of the church which is to encourage love and restoration,” Botswana’s LGBTQ rights group LEGABIBO said in a statement earlier this month.
LEGABIBO – “We take these laws as permission to target lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, organizations and events as we have seen over the past weekend the church taking to the streets unfounded allegations full of hate and marginalization and using innocent children pic.twitter.com/JqbmCIK5lc
— Lesbians, Gays and Bisexuals of Botswana -LEGABIBO (@legabiboadvo) July 11, 2023
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Source: AFP
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