In their December 11 statement, GCBC members expressed their awareness of the silence on the part of the Ghanaian government to condemn homosexual acts in clear terms.
They said, “The Church recognizes that the State has a duty to carry out in this matter of homosexuality. With regard to homosexual acts, while the Church speaks of them as sins, the State does not use such language.”
“The draft bill on Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Values 2021 currently in Parliament is in the right direction, as it seeks to enact laws against criminal homosexual acts,” Catholic Bishops in Ghana said.
The Bill, they explained, “aims to provide for proper human sexual rights and Ghanaian family values, proscribe LGBTQ+ and related activities, and provide for the protection of children, persons who are victims or accused of LGBTTQQIAAP+ and related activities, and other persons.”
Ghana is among the reported 31 African countries where homosexual activities are criminal.
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In a January 9 report, Amnesty International’s Regional Director for East and Southern Africa laments that “across Africa, LGBTI persons find themselves contending with a disturbing regression of progress, facing relentless protests against their identities, and confronting formidable obstacles to their legal and social rights.”
Last December, the Catholic Church permitted members of the Clergy to impart “spontaneous” and non-liturgical blessings upon “same-sex couples” and couples in other “irregular situations” in the Vatican Declaration, Fiducia Supplicans (FS).
The December 18 Declaration of the Vatican Dicastery for the Doctrine of Faith (DDF) elicited mixed reactions and deep division among Catholic Bishops around the globe.
In a January 11 statement, the leadership of the Symposium of Episcopal Conference of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM) announced that the Vatican DDF proposal will not be implemented on the continent.
Titled, “NO BLESSING FOR HOMOSEXUAL COUPLES IN THE AFRICAN CHURCHES: Synthesis of the responses from the African Episcopal Conferences to the Declaration Fiducia supplicans”, the statement by SECAM President, Fridolin Cardinal Ambongo, cited a previous DDF Declaration on homosexuality, the Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC), the Sacred Scriptures, and the “cultural context in Africa” as the basis of the Catholic Bishops' decision against the implementation of FS in Africa.
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