>accused Is banging troons like being a rapist now?
>>43348824
>>43348882so a man having sex with a woman is about to be criminalized in Ghana because the government doesn't like what she was born with?
Daily reminder the British govt funded anti lgbt laws in west African nations, then denied asylum on the grounds of lgbt persecution
>>43350384Total Britoid Death
>>43350384Nonsense they've been completely independent for 60+ years.
>>43350384You're a good person anon.
>>43350632>Research indicates that the UK government has provided aid funding to organizations that have actively supported and promoted anti-LGBTQ+ legislation in Uganda (East Africa) and Ghana (West Africa), creating a contradiction with its stated commitment to human rights. Funding Controversies in Ghana and Uganda>Ghana: Investigative reports have identified international donor funding, including from the UK, flowing toward churches and associated groups that propelled the Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Family Values Bill. Critics argue this funding inflames societal hatred against queer communities while donors claim to support democratic values. >Uganda: The UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) provided over £134,900 to the Inter-Religious Council of Uganda (IRCU) between 2021 and early 2023 under the "Uganda – Open Society" program. The IRCU is a homophobic religious body that helped push for Uganda’s draconian 2023 Anti-Homosexuality Act, which includes life sentences and the death penalty for "aggravated homosexuality."
>>43351057When we start our own country, passing laws will be easy. We do the total opposite of what Britian does, it will be heaven>>43350422Trump refuses to nuke London
>>43351262>Policy Debates: In 2023, Home Secretary Suella Braverman stated that fearing discrimination for being gay or a woman is not automatically sufficient for refugee protection, arguing that the asylum system must be sustained by stricter criteria. >Systemic Barriers: The Nationality and Borders Act 2022 raised the standard of proof to "on the balance of probabilities," making it significantly harder for LGBTQ+ individuals to prove their identity, with nearly half of refusals being challenged on appeal>High Refusal Rates: Approximately 4 out of 5 (80%) of claims based on sexual orientation are rejected, with many refusals occurring because applicants cannot produce objective evidence like photographs or witness statements
>>43351283>Suella BravermanLets dig deeper. Btw Suella is her chosen name>Suella Braverman, serving as the UK Home Secretary at the time, played a pivotal role in the reimprisonment of trans activist Sarah Jane Baker in July 2023. Although the Metropolitan Police and the probation service initially determined that Baker’s speech at London Trans Pride did not constitute a crime or a breach of her parole conditions, Braverman publicly intervened by tweeting that the police should "consider the evidence carefully." >This political pressure led to the reopening of the case, Baker’s arrest at her home, and her recall to prison to serve the remainder of a previous life sentence. Supporters and the "Free Sarah Jane Baker" campaign characterized this intervention as a politically motivated act that turned Baker into a political prisoner, arguing that the decision to imprison her was driven by Braverman’s desire for favorable optics rather than legal justification. Despite Baker being found not guilty of inciting violence in court later that year, she remained incarcerated due to the parole breach ruling facilitated by this intervention.
>NGOs, charities, and international bodies criticizing the UK's domestic policies. These groups argue that the UK's Nationality and Borders Act 2022 and the proposed Illegal Migration Bill create unfair burdens and barriers that lead to the wrongful rejection of LGBTQ asylum claims>Illegal Migration Bill Threats: The proposed legislation would mandate the removal of asylum seekers to third countries (such as Rwanda or nations where homosexuality is criminalized), effectively denying protection to those fleeing persecution based on sexual orientation>UNHCR Warnings: The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) cautioned that the UK's raised standard of proof would make it significantly more difficult for people to be recognized as refugees. >Charity Advocacy: Organizations like Rainbow Migration and UKLGIG have documented cases where claims were refused due to humiliating questioning, dismissal of supporting evidence, and a culture of disbelief within the Home Office. >Legal Challenges: Legal experts and human rights advocates argue that these policies violate the 1951 Refugee Convention and international human rights obligations by failing to provide a fair and dignified assessment of LGBTQ asylum claims.
>Before the anti-homosexuality laws, same-sex relationships existed in both Ghana and Uganda, though colonial-era laws already criminalized them. In Ghana, consensual same-sex sexual activity was criminalized under the Criminal Offences Act 29 of 1960, a legacy of British colonial rule, specifically the 1892 Criminal Ordinance that introduced penalties for "unnatural carnal knowledge." Despite this, pre-colonial Ghanaian societies did not impose penal sanctions on consensual same-sex relationships, and historical evidence suggests such relationships were part of Ghanaian culture before colonialism.
>In Uganda, British colonial authorities also imposed anti-sodomy laws, derived from the Indian Penal Code’s Section 377, which criminalized homosexual acts. These laws remained in force after independence. However, there is evidence of same-sex practices in pre-colonial Ugandan society, including accounts of a reigning gay king before the British protectorate. While colonial laws laid the foundation for criminalization, neither country had the extreme penalties—such as the death penalty or criminalizing LGBTQ+ advocacy—introduced by recent legislation. Social attitudes were conservative, but organized state-led persecution intensified only with modern legislative efforts in the 21st century
You dont hate Britian enough. The vast majority of anti lgbt laws and beliefs are a result of the colonial empire.You dont hate Britian enough. Nuke london, wipe the memory of this evil entity from human history
>bongs forced niggers to lynch trannies
>>43350632>Nonsense they've been completely independent for 60+ years.anon, even discounting the idea of colonial social norms and classes lasting long past decolonization, the process has been less than complete in many African countries, for the same reasons that they were colonized in the first place: Christian evangelicals trying to make sure that African cultures continue to follow their ideas of morality, and excessive meddling from Western governments and/or corporations, who have no desire to lose access to the resources there. and I'm not even saying Western societies are the source of all of it, or that individual religious leaders and government officials aren't ultimately responsible for their own actions. But to act like there's not significant impact is ridiculous. Wealthy American evangelical Christians throw MASSIVE amounts of money into African countries to influence legislation and religious leadership there.https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/africa-us-christian-right-50m/(The US government has also intentionally socially and politically destabilized formerly European-colonized African countries with natural wealth through secret funding and assassinations, but I don't know enough about Ghana specifically to comment on that.)