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| Botswana's 1965 penal code makes homosexuality punishable by up to seven years in jail (AFP Photo/GREGOR FISCHER) |
Gaborone (Botswana) (AFP) - Botswana's High Court, in a highly-anticipated verdict, on Tuesday ruled in favour of decriminalising homosexuality, which is outlawed under the country's 1965 penal code.
Judge
Michael Elburu "set aside" the "provisions of a Victorian
era" and ordered the laws be amended.
In a
courtroom packed with activists, the judge emphasised that the current laws
oppressed a minority of the population.
"There’s
nothing reasonable in discriminating," he said.
"We
say the time has come that private, same sexuality must be
decriminalized."
"It is
a variety of human sexuality," he said.
The High
Court had been petitioned by an anonymous person, identified only by initials
LM for security reasons.
The
individual challenged two sections of the penal code under which offenders face
a jail sentence of up to seven years.
In March,
the court postponed a ruling on the issue, sparking fears that the much-awaited
decision could be delayed indefinitely.
But on
Tuesday, Judge Elburu stressed that the country's highest judicial body took
the matter deeply seriously.
"Sexual
orientation is human, it's not a question of fashion," he said. "The
question of private morality should not be the concerns of the law."
Last month,
Kenya's High Court upheld laws against same-sex relations, dealing a blow to
activists campaigning to roll back anti-gay laws and stigma in Africa.
Before
Tuesday's ruling, 28 out of 49 countries in sub-Saharan Africa had laws
penalising same-sex relationships, according to Neela Ghoshal, a Human Rights
Watch (HRW) specialist in lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights.
The death
penalty is on the books, under sharia, in Mauritania, Sudan and northern
Nigeria, although there have been no known executions in recent times.
In southern
Somalia, gay men are believed to have been put to death in territory ruled by
the Al Shabaab jihadist group.
However,
Angola, Mozambique and Seychelles have scrapped anti-gay laws in recent years.
Rights
groups say many laws punishing homosexuality date from the colonial area.
They
represent a peril even in countries where they are not implemented, according
to campaigners, as their existence on the statute books entrenches
discrimination and encourages harassment.

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