The
US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Linda
Thomas-Greenfield, said this during a live-web chat with journalists in
Washington. Our correspondent monitored the web chat in Abuja.
Thomas-Greenfield
also said that America was not bothered that Chinese companies were
fast taking over the African market from their US counterparts.
President Goodluck Jonathan had on January 7, 2014 assented to the Same Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Bill 2013 which criminalises homosexuality in the country.
On
January 14 when it became public that the President had signed the bill
into law, the US, Canada and the European Union openly expressed
reservations over the law.
Thomas-Greenfield, who said the US had
adopted the protection of the rights of same-sex people as part of its
foreign policies, vowed that Washington would continue to mount and
sustain pressure on Nigeria and other countries to reverse their laws
against the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender community.
She said, “As
a government, it is one of the highest priorities and strongest values
that discrimination against anyone based on their sexual orientation and
gender identity is wrong. We believe human rights should be available
to everybody.
“As a policy, we will continue to press the
government of Nigeria as well as other governments who have provided
legislation that discriminate against the LGBT community.”
Thomas-Greenfiled,
who did not agree that pressuring Nigeria to reverse the anti-gay law
amounted to interference, said the country and Uganda had the hardest
legislation on the gay community.
She said, “This is very
much a work in progress, but I think you will agree with me that the law
in Nigeria really went far in discriminating against this community but
also people who associate with them.
“So we will
continue to press the government, to press the legislature to change
these laws and provide human rights for all Nigerian people regardless
of their sexual orientation.”
She, however, did not disclose if the US would impose sanctions on the countries with anti-gay laws to achieve its objectives.
Thomas-Greenfield was optimistic that the U.S would win the fight to protect the LGBT community.
She said,
“With what is happening in the US, you can determine how far we are
willing to go. We strongly believe human rights for all people and we
are particularly opposed to legislation that actually targets the gay
community for discrimination. So we are prepared to push this as a
policy not just in Africa but across the world.”
Source: Punch Nigeria
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/59055.html
Source: Punch Nigeria
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/59055.html

Make una live naija alone we nor won fu.k yanch oh aba
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