
The Senator representing Edo state at the
National Assembly, Domingo Obende has said that gay culture has no value and as
such should not be allowed to spread in Africa. He made the declaration during
an interview with SaharaTV on Saturday. Obende, who sponsored the Same-Sex
Marriage Prohibition Act recently signed by President Goodluck Jonathan
expressed his elation at the signing of the bill.
“We do not think they [gays] are a minority that
will bring purpose to any nation,” Obende said to SaharaTV's Rudolf Okonkwo,
adding “There is no value in that culture.”
Senator Obende’s primary reasoning behind this
claim stemmed from the fact that he believes homosexuality brings no advantage
to Nigerian society, both culturally and pro-creatively.
Enmeshed in this cultural argument, Obende also
furthered that gay culture was religiously unacceptable, a clear contradiction
to Islamic and Christian teaching and ideology. “Marriages for both men or for
both women cannot be accepted,” he said. “In the creation of the world God
created man and woman to come together to become one.”
Obende implored critics of the bill, especially
those who cite that the act attempts to cast homosexuality as an un-African
behavior, should be cognizant that Nigeria is an independent nation, which
should be able to make laws to curb “foreign” and “devilish” behaviors although
they are more embraced in the Western world. “I created this bill because I
thought that there is need to control this immoral behavior that is been passed
to us from foreign countries,” he claimed.
“The culture of Africa is what makes Africa
unique. Why is the Western world crying?” Obende pressed. “We are not giving
judgment to gay practitioners. We are saying here in Africa we don’t want
this.”
Addressing concerns about vigilante violence like
that taking place in Northern regions since the bill’s officiating, Obende
hopes that proper decorum will be followed in the upholding of the act. “These
are cases you must not judge in a hurry,” he urges law enforcement, “there must
be proof, there will be civility in the course of justice in this law,” he
stated, though with some uncertainty.
Obende also was uncertain regarding the timing of
the measure, whether the signing was a political power-play put in place by
President Jonathan to garner the public’s regard as 2015 looms in the
not-so-distant future. Recall that Nigeria has already had stiff laws in place
against sodomy, and that no gay Nigerians have come forward to pursue same-sex
marriages.
“It could possibly be a political thing,” Obende,
who is a member of the APC party, disclosed.
Ultimately, Obende encourages Nigerians (and the
West) to accept the decision, and embrace it as a facet of African
tradition.
“We are Africans, that’s what makes us unique,”
he said.
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