Cocoa farmer hails Anti-gay bill; Says LGBTQ+ is a threat to Ghanaian society

A cocoa farmer, Mr. Fred Owusu, has expressed unflinching support for the Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and Ghanaian Values Bill 2021 and warned that activities of LGBTQ+ and their advocates are inimical to Ghanaian society.

He stated that any bill to regulate and even curtail the activities of LGBTQ+ in the country is a step in the right direction and urged Ghanaians to support the Bill to become law.

Mr. Fred Owusu who described himself as a concerned citizen made the call when he presented a memorandum to the Committee on Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs during the 4th public hearing on Thursday.

Explaining his memorandum to the Committee members, the Cocoa farmer indicated the need to establish the basis for the revulsion of LGBTQ+ confronting the present generation and stressed the necessity to trace the trajectory of the concept from its very inception to its current practice.

According to him, the sanctity of human life is enforced by law and warned if the temp of the current LGBTQ+ crusade continues unhindered in Africa to the extent that all the present and subsequent eligible spinsters and bachelors decide to marry same-sex, there will be total annihilation of the human race in Africa.

He argued that the objective of the continued existence of the human race is to uphold and appropriately manage the eternal mandate of the original parents of the human race to into the world and multiply.

“In Ghana, our population has increased from 5 million people in 1960 to 30 million in 2021 by way of compliance of this mandate.”

“This state of affairs is at variance with the projected LGBTQ+ marriages hence the need to enact the necessary instrument to carry our mandate through without fear or favour.”

He disclosed that in the early 90s a church named ‘Church of Jesus Christ of Dzorwulu; was proscribed and banned because its practice promoted improper human values and was not consistent with the normal Ghanaian way of life.

Adherents of the faith, he said were made to enter the church stark naked, both males, females and children.

He stated that the church was razed down and banned leading to the enactment of the ‘Registration of Religious Bodies Acts.

According to him, the church and its members had their rights but since it did not conform with the Ghanaian values it was banned.

That, he said, should guide the current debate on the LGBTQ+ advocates and their claims of rights and stressed these rights should be in tandem with the Ghanaian way of life, which the anti-gay bill will address.

Source: Mypublisher24.com

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