Namibian MPs back anti-gay law despite Supreme Court ruling
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Namibian lawmakers on
Wednesday approved legislation to ban same-sex marriage and punish its
supporters, in what critics said was an unconstitutional attack on the LGBTQ
community.
The bill seeks to
reverse a Supreme Court ruling that allowed for the recognition of some unions
contracted abroad.
The legislation sailed
through the upper house of parliament, encountering no opposition.
"The family union
is between man and woman and that must be respected," Elder Filipe, a
lawmaker with the ruling SWAPO party, told parliament.
"God created man
with an anus for exit only, and transforming it into an exit-entry is extremely
(immoral)," he said.
The law redefines
"marriage" as the union "between persons of the opposite
sex" and "spouse" as "one half of a legal union between a
genetically born man and genetically born woman".
It states that
same-sex marriages contracted abroad are not to be recognized in the country.
It also makes
celebrating, witnessing, promoting, or propagating such wedlock a criminal
offense punishable with up to six years in jail and fines of up to 100,000 Namibian
dollars ($5,500).
"This feels like
a direct attack on the LGBTQ community," LGBTQ rights activist Zindri
Swartz told AFP. "It is a gross violation of our dignity and
humanity."
Gay sex is banned in
Namibia under a rarely-enforced 1927 sodomy law.
But the southern
African country has seen a flurry of court cases on the rights of same-sex
couples to marry, become parents and immigrate in recent years.
In May, the Supreme
Court said that same-sex marriages contracted abroad between Namibian citizens
and foreign spouses should be recognized.
The ruling enraged
social conservatives in the sparsely populated, largely Christian country, a
popular tourist destination rich in wildlife and natural attractions.
But legal experts and
opposition politicians have cautioned that by directly contradicting a Supreme
Court ruling the new law might be unconstitutional -- and challenge the
democratic foundations of the country.
"I have not seen
bills written deliberately contradict judgments," said opposition leader
McHenry Venaani. "I am not sure it would pass the test of
constitutionality."
Inna Hengari, a
lawmaker with Venaani's Popular Democratic Movement (PDM) party said in earlier
parliamentary debates that the broadly worded legislation needed to be better
defined or it risked leading to "unfair and unwarranted
prosecutions".
Other opposition
lawmakers have expressed support for the law, which has to travel back to the
lower house of parliament and be signed by President Hage Geingob before
entering into force.


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