President Muhammadu Buhari has clearly informed United States
lawmakers that Nigeria cannot shift its anti-gay stance, the presidency
said Wednesday.
Speaking at the joint session of U.S. Senate and House Committees on
Foreign Affairs Wednesday, Mr. Buhari said sodomy is against Nigeria’s
law and abhorrent to its culture.
The president’s special adviser on media and publicity, Femi Adesina,
said the president was “point blank” in declaring Nigeria’s position on
the issue of gay marriage and rights.
Mr. Adesina said the matter was not pushed at the session after the president made his point.
“The issue of gay marriage came up here yesterday,” Mr. Adeisna
tweeted Wednesday. “PMB was point blank. Sodomy is against the law in
Nigeria, and abhorrent to our culture. Talks shifted to another matter
once PMB emphatically stated Nigeria’s stand on same sex marriage. The
issue was not pushed,” Mr. Adesina said.
Besides Nigeria’s criminal laws which outlaw gay acts and union, the
country in 2014 approved an anti-gay law with stringent penalties for
homosexual relationships.
Under the law, gay persons face up to 14 years in prison of convicted.
It is also a crime to have a meeting of homosexuals, or to operate or
attend a gay club, society or organization. Public show of same-sex
intimate affection is also outlawed. Offenders may be jailed for up to
10 years.
Nigeria has since come under intense pressure from the United States government which opposes the laws.
It is unclear whether the subject also came up in Mr. Buhari’s discussion with President Barack Obama on Monday.
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