Yahoo – AFP,
10 Sep 2014
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President
Yahya Jammeh of Gambia, seen here at a summit in Yamoussoukro,
Ivory Coast, on
March 28, 2014 (AFP Photo/Issouf Sanogo)
|
DAKAR (AFP)
- Rights campaigners called Wednesday for Gambian President Yahya Jammeh to
reject proposals by lawmakers to introduce a punishment of life in prison for
"aggravated homosexuality".
Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a joint statement that a
bill passed by parliament on August 25 could be used to target "repeat
offenders" and people living with HIV.
"President
Jammeh should not approve this profoundly damaging act that violates
international human rights law," said Stephen Cockburn, Amnesty's deputy
regional director for west and central Africa.
"Gambia's
national assembly and the president should not endorse state-sponsored
homophobia."
Jammeh, a
former military officer who seized power in a 1994 coup, brooks no dissent in a
country often blasted by rights bodies for abuses and homophobia.
He has
repeatedly denounced homosexuality and once vowed to behead gays, although he
later retracted the threat.
Last year,
Jammeh told the United Nations General Assembly that "those who promote
homosexuality want to put an end to human existence".
"It is
becoming an epidemic and we Muslims and Africans will fight to end this
behaviour," he said.
Under
current law, same-sex relationships are already punishable by up to 14 years in
jail in Gambia.
In 2012, 15
men were arrested in a popular bar and charged with "indecent practices in
a public place" -- a euphemism for homosexual acts.
The
president has two weeks to sign the proposals into law or return them for
further review.

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