Homophobia is not uncommon in Ghana, where gay sex is already against the law and carries a three-year prison sentence, but now the LGBTQ+ community is feeling terrorised.
A new bill, passed by MPs last week, will impose a jail term of up to three years for simply identifying as LGBTQ+ and five years for promoting their activities.
“A relative told me if this bill is passed, any chance he gets, he is going to poison me because I am an abomination to the family,” Mensah, whose name has been changed to protect his identity, tells the BBC.
Dressed in an all-black outfit, the young man in his late teens looks visibly terrified: “I am very worried anyone can snitch on me, even in my neighbourhood. It’s going to be very hard to live here.”
He has been living for some time with sympathetic friends in Ghana’s capital, Accra, since falling out with his family.
It is not clear how large the LGBTQ+ community is in Ghana, a religious and traditionally conservative nation, but they tend to help each other out when one of them faces life as an outcast.
Mensah says when his mother discovered several years ago that he was attracted to boys, she started taking him to churches for prayers with the hope he would change.
“No friends except my church friends were allowed to see me. I had to study the Bible 24/7, pray and I would sit at the back anytime we went for meetings.”
He says he was practically shunned at home – the wider family would not talk to him and he found their stares unbearable.
“They felt I would have an influence on my cousins and the little ones.”
Then in 2020, when the prayers and Bible studies were deemed to have failed, Mensah was excommunicated from his church for being gay.
His family were furious – and essentially outed him to their wider circle in an attempt to shame him.
“My family told a lot of my friends that this is who I am, I lost some good opportunities to further my education,” he says.
“It is very uncomfortable and very sad – these are people I grew up with, and now they don’t see the good in me, but they see me as an abomination.”
Mensah was eventually kicked out of the family home – and struggles to hold down a job.
Now the softly-spoken young man says he spends most of his time indoors to avoid offending people’s sensibilities. He wants to be less visible, less seen, less heard.
Mensah’s experiences are not uncommon.
LGBT people are commonly referred to in the local Akan language as “kojo besia”, literally “man-woman”. They have always co-existed within Ghanaian communities, although there were occasional attacks.
These have become more common in recent years.
Kwame, who also requested his name be changed for his safety, is horrified by the passage of the anti-gay bill, saying it will legitimise homophobic attacks, something he has experienced himself.
“I am known to be gay where I live, so anybody that comes close to me – they feel like that person is also gay,” he tells the BBC about an attack he suffered about 10 years ago.
A male friend had visited and when stepping outside to wave him goodbye, some residents ganged up on them.
“They approached us, saying that we are gay and started attacking us. It wasn’t just one person, and they took our phones,” he says.
Kwame made an official report to the police, however after weeks of no action he had to live with the reality that he would get no justice.
Now his mere existence – if the bill is signed by the president – will be against the law.
In his late twenties, Kwame is studying fashion design – but has also faced discrimination in the workplace when someone told his boss about his sexuality.
His boss asked him to change his ways and then fired him when he refused. “I lost my job because I was gay.”
Both Kwame and Mensah are hoping the bill, which has been backed by both of Ghana’s two main political parties, will be stopped by a legal challenge.
A case has been filed at the Supreme Court and President Nana Akufo-Addo says he will wait for the outcome before taking action on the bill.
He has been at pains to assure the diplomatic community that Ghana is committed to upholding human rights.
The country’s finance ministry is worried about the possible repercussions, saying Ghana could lose a total of $3.8bn (£3bn) in World Bank funding over the next five to six years.
Ghana is suffering a major economic crisis and last year had a bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The US, UK and human rights groups have condemned the bill, with the US in particular indicating that it would have a chilling effect on foreign investment in Ghana.
The West African nation is part of the trade agreement between Africa and the US – the African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa). Uganda was chucked out of the deal by the US after it passed a controversial anti-homosexuality law last year.
Kwame and Mensah are considering leaving Ghana as the situation has been so inflamed by politicians – the country feels like a more dangerous place for them.
“Where I am living is a very crowded area, so when your issue comes up everyone gets to find out, I’m actually scared. I will have to leave and go settle somewhere else,” he says.
Mensah agrees: “I feel like relocating from the country itself to any country which is safe for me to live in.
“I have to count my steps to make sure I don’t offend anyone. I have to live like a refugee in my own country.”
The prices of petroleum products are expected to fall between 2% and 4% for petrol, diesel, and Liquefied Petroleum Gas, beginning tomorrow August 1, 2024.
This follows the slowdown in the depreciation of the Ghana cedi during the second half of July 2024 and the favourable international market dynamics.
According to the Institute for Energy Security (IES), the price of petrol and deisel fell by 2.99% and 4.59% respectively and LPG by 1.10% in the second half of July 2024.
“Precisely, the price of gasoline [petrol] fell by 2.99%, gasoil [diesel] by 4.59%, and LPG by 1.10% in the second half of July 2024. The Ghana cedi also recorded slowed depreciation (0.52%), the lowest since February 2024.
“Following the positive realised on the foreign fuel market coupled with the slowed depreciation of Ghana Cedi recorded on the domestic forex market, the Institute for Energy Security (IES) projects a fall in fuel prices in the coming days”.
World Oil Market
The second pricing window for July 2024 for the first time since the post-OPEC+ meeting saw Brent crude futures dropping below $80 per barrel.
This was driven lower by disappointing global demand as Chinese imports in July 2024 hit the lowest level in two years.
Brent Crude traded at $78.70 per barrel compared to $83.03 per barrel at the start of the pricing window.
Local Fuel Market Performance
The second pricing window for July 2024 saw the price of liquid fuels jump at the pumps on the local fuels market.
Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) increased the price per litre of petrol by GH¢0.30 and Gasoil by GH¢.20 respectively.
The IES computation of the national average price for the three refined petroleum products for the first pricing window for July 2024 showed petrol and diesel selling at GH¢14.23 and GH¢14.70 per litre respectively, whereas (LPG) went for GH¢15.22 per kilogramme.
The Graduate Unemployed Nurse and Midwives Association has welcomed the latest decision by the government to recruit over 15,000 new health professionals.
In a statement released on Friday, July 26, 2024, the Ministry of Health (MoH) announced the recruitment of 15, 200 nurses and midwives, effective Monday, August 5, 2024.
The MoH confirmed that the Ministry of Finance (MoF) has granted the necessary financial clearance for the recruitment process.
Interested and qualified candidates are expected to apply through the MoH’s online application portal, where they can select their preferred agency under the Ministry. The application period will close on Friday, August 23, 2024.
This comes on the back of numerous protests and demonstrations by several health professionals over the government’s inability to clear the backlog of 2020, 2021 and 2022.
National President of The Graduate Unemployed Nurse and Midwives Association Ibrahim Haruna has been reacting to the latest development.
“We’re very grateful in the first place to the Ministry of Health. It’s not bad news, but it’s not completely what we’re expecting.
“That is what we have got for now, so we will take it… Last week Friday, we received a call from the Ministry that they have got clearance for us around 15,000, so we were expecting an official communication and it came in from the ministry, so it’s welcome news,” the National President of the Graduate Unemployed Nurse and Midwives Association said.
The National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the Northern Region has set an ambitious goal to win 14 parliamentary seats in the 2024 general elections.
Mohammed Abdul-Salam, the Northern Regional Secretary of the NDC, stated that the party is determined and prepared to secure victory in the upcoming polls.
On Saturday, July 27, the NDC launched its campaign in Tamale, the capital of the Northern Region, with the aim of increasing their parliamentary seats in the area.
Abdul-Salam expressed confidence that the party would reclaim some of its previously held seats from the New Patriotic Party (NPP).
He also mentioned that the NDC has established adequate structures to ensure the achievement of this target in the forthcoming election.
“We should be able to win 14 seats, and that is clearly doable, but our target is to win all the 18 seats because they are all winnable, we have mopped out strategies to get out there on the field, our men are on the ground every day.”
“That is why if you have observed, every genuine survey that is done regarding the election 2024 in all the regions, put the NDC way ahead of the NPP,” he stated.