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VisitOutcome of President Akufo-Addo's decision on anti-LGBTQ bill by January 7, 2025
Signs into law • 33%
Vetoes the bill • 33%
No decision made • 34%
Official announcements from the Ghanaian government or credible news outlets
Ghana Supreme Court Dismisses Challenges by Dela-Sky and Odoi, Clears Path for Anti-LGBTQ Bill
Dec 18, 2024, 02:38 PM
Ghana's Supreme Court has dismissed two legal challenges filed by Richard Dela-Sky and Amanda Odoi against a controversial anti-LGBTQ bill, paving the way for its potential enactment into law. The bill, passed by the country's parliament in February, imposes prison sentences of up to three years for individuals engaging in LGBTQ activities and up to five years for those involved in the promotion, sponsorship, or intentional support of such activities. The legislation has drawn criticism from international human rights groups and the United Nations, while facing potential financial repercussions, with warnings from Ghana's finance ministry of a possible loss of $3.8 billion in World Bank funding if enacted. The bill awaits presidential assent from President Nana Akufo-Addo, who has yet to make a decision as his term ends on January 7. The court's decision was unanimous, with Justice Avril Lovelace-Johnson stating that there is no act for the court to overturn until the president signs the bill into law. Opposition leader John Mahama, who won the recent presidential election, has expressed support for the bill.
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Ratification • 33%
Veto • 33%
No decision by deadline • 34%
Majority Condemnation • 33%
Mixed Reactions • 33%
Majority Support • 34%
Majority Support • 33%
Majority Oppose • 33%
Evenly Split • 34%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Signs the law • 33%
Vetoes the law • 33%
Takes no action • 34%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
New anti-LGBT law • 25%
Repeal of existing anti-LGBT law • 25%
New pro-LGBT law • 25%
No significant action • 25%
Further restrictions • 25%
Status quo • 25%
Partial repeal • 25%
Complete repeal • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Increased aid or support • 25%
Condemnations only • 25%
No significant response • 25%
Sanctions imposed • 25%