Nigeria: Amnesty Raises Concern Over Same-Sex Relationships Bill
 By  Staff Writer
Nigeria’s Senate passed the “Same-Gender Marriage” bill Tuesday which  incriminates an individual in a same-sex relationship with penalties of up to  14 years’ imprisonment, an increase compared to the earlier draft.
The bill also seeks to impose up to  10 years’ imprisonment and a stiff fine on anyone who “witnesses”, “aids” or  “abets” same-sex relationships.
The statute in draft will now go  before the House of Representatives for approval, after which it will be sent  to the President.
Amnesty International has come out  opposing the move and calls upon Nigerian authorities to scrap the harsh bill  that if passed into law would attack basic rights and criminalize relationships  between people of the same gender.
  By broadly defining “same-sex marriage” as including all same-sex relationships,  and targeting people who “witness”, “aid” or “abet” such relationships, the  bill threatens the human rights of a large number of people.
  “Nigeria’s House of Representatives should show leadership and uphold the  rights of all in Nigeria by rejecting this reprehensible bill,” said Erwin van  der Borght, director of the Africa Programme.
  “If passed, this measure would target people on the basis of their identity,  not merely their behaviour, and put a wide range of people at risk of criminal  sanctions for exercising basic rights and opposing discrimination based purely  on a person’s actual or presumed sexual orientation or gender identity.”
  Amnesty International and other human rights organizations previously outlined  a range of concerns over the bill’s potential human rights impact.
  It would place a wide range of people at risk of criminal sanctions, including  human rights defenders and anyone else – including friends, families and  colleagues – who stands up for the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual or  transgender people in Nigeria.
  Individuals could face imprisonment based on nothing more than their actual or  assumed sexual orientation or gender identity, or stemming from allegations  about their relationship status or consensual sexual conduct.
  Amnesty International also raised concerns that the bill would contravene  Nigeria’s efforts to prevent HIV transmission by driving people already  suffering stigma for their identity or consensual sexual behaviour still  further underground.
  “This bill would have a chilling effect on a range of civil society  organizations and events while inciting hatred and violence against anyone  suspected of practicing same-sex relationships, including lesbian, gay,  bisexual, and transgender people,” said Erwin van der Borght.
  “By aiming to single out and deprive the rights of one group of people, this  bill threatens all Nigerians by violating the country’s Constitution and  international human rights obligations.” 



