Times Live-Sapa-AFP,
13 januari, 2014
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| Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan. File photo. Image by: Luc Gnago/Reuters. |
"I can
confirm that the president has signed the bill into law," Goodluck
Jonathan's spokesman Reuben Abati told AFP, without specifying a date but
adding that it happened earlier this month.
Abati said
Jonathan signed off on the Same Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Bill 2013 because it
was consistent with the attitudes of most people towards homosexuality in the
west African nation.
"More
than 90 percent of Nigerians are opposed to same sex marriage. So, the law is
in line with our cultural and religious beliefs as a people," he added.
"And I
think that this law is made for a people and what (the) government has done is
consistent with the preference of its environment."
Amnesty
International urged Jonathan to reject the bill, calling it
"discriminatory" and warning of "catastrophic" consequences
for Nigeria's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.
Under the
terms of the law, anyone who enters into a same-sex marriage or civil union can
be sentenced to 14 years in prison while any such partnerships entered into
abroad are deemed "void".
It also
warns that anyone who registers, operates or participates in gay clubs,
societies and organisations or who directly or indirectly makes a public show
of a same-sex relationship will break the law.
Punishment
is up to 10 years in prison, it adds.
"Only
a marriage contract between a man and a woman shall be recognised as valid in
Nigeria," the law states.
Nigeria is
a highly religious society, with its 170 million people roughly divided in half
between Christians and Muslims, though a significant number are also believed
to follow traditional religions.
The
anti-gay law follows similar legislation in Uganda that was condemned by US
President Barack Obama as "odious" and compared to apartheid by South
African peace icon Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

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