Sam George insists anti-LGBTQI bill will reach Mahama's desk "expeditiously"
Sam George says the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill will be processed "expeditiously" by Parliament and forwarded to President John Mahama for assent. He made the remarks during a stakeholder engagement organised by Parliament's Constitutional and Legal Affairs Committee. The committee has begun clause-by-clause consideration of the proposed law following its referral by the Speaker of Parliament.
Sam George said, "There is no bill before President Mahama today." He also said, "The calls from very respectable groups like the Catholic Bishops Conference are very well placed because of how sensitive and important this is." The bill, commonly referred to as the anti-LGBTQI bill, seeks to impose criminal sanctions on same-sex relations and related advocacy activities. Sam George dismissed suggestions that his elevation to a ministerial role under the Mahama administration had caused sponsors of the bill to distance themselves from its progress. He said, "I have heard people who have said Sam George and his colleague sponsors have abandoned - we've run away because I've been appointed minister," and "The process is the process." Co-sponsor Ntim Fordjour has denied claims that sponsors had abandoned the legislation, saying the bill remains actively before Parliament.
Sam George told the committee that lawmakers have already worked through the clauses of the bill and expect limited changes at this stage. He said, "As for the clauses, we have gone through them, we've masticated them, and we will go through them expeditiously. The body of the law remains the same." He added, "I believe that Parliament has a responsibility to grant the Chief Imam his wish and grant the Catholic Bishops their wish." Sam George expressed confidence that President Mahama would assent to the bill once it is passed. The bill was passed in a previous Parliament but was not assented to by the President at the time, leading to its lapse.
Quick Summary
Sam George insists the anti-LGBTQI bill will reach President Mahama's desk. Religious bodies have expressed concerns over delays in processing the controversial bill - but what will happen next?
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