XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.democrats.d   
   XPost: rec.arts.disney.parks   
   From: elvis.brodie@hsi.org   
      
   In article    
   Wayne "Rudy" LaPierre <"Reckless Dumb Loon"@.us> wrote:   
   >   
   > There is a need for education to eliminate homosexual pedophiles.   
   >   
      
   Where is homosexuality still outlawed?   
   There are 69 countries that have laws that criminalise   
   homosexuality, and nearly half of these are in Africa.   
      
   However, in some countries there have been moves to   
   decriminalise same-sex unions.   
      
   In February this year, Angola's President Joao Lourenco signed   
   into law a revised penal code to allow same-sex relationships   
   and bans discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.   
      
   In June last year, Gabon reversed a law that had criminalised   
   homosexuality and made gay sex punishable with six months in   
   prison and a large fine.   
      
   Botswana's High Court also ruled in favour of decriminalising   
   homosexuality in 2019.   
      
   Mozambique and the Seychelles have also scrapped anti-   
   homosexuality laws in recent years.   
      
   In Trinidad and Tobago, a court in 2018 ruled that laws banning   
   gay sex were unconstitutional.   
      
   But there are countries where existing laws outlawing   
   homosexuality have been tightened, including Nigeria and Uganda.   
      
   And in others, efforts to get the laws removed have failed.   
      
   A court in Singapore dismissed a bid to overturn a law that   
   prohibits gay sex early last year.   
      
   In May 2019, the high court in Kenya upheld laws criminalising   
   homosexual acts.   
      
   Colonial legacy   
   Many of the laws criminalising homosexual relations originate   
   from colonial times.   
      
   And in many places, breaking these laws could be punishable by   
   long prison sentences.   
      
   Out of the 53 countries in the Commonwealth - a loose   
   association of countries most of them former British colonies -   
   36 have laws that criminalise homosexuality.   
      
   Countries that criminalise homosexuality today also have   
   criminal penalties against women who have sex with women,   
   although the original British laws applied only to men.   
      
   The International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex   
   Association (Ilga) monitors the progress of laws relating to   
   homosexuality around the world.   
      
   It says the death penalty is the legally prescribed punishment   
   for same-sex sexual acts in Brunei, Iran, Mauritania, Saudi   
   Arabia, Yemen and in the northern states in Nigeria.   
      
   Sudan repealed the death penalty for consensual same-sex sexual   
   acts last year.   
      
   Some observers note that the risk of prosecution in some places   
   is minimal.   
      
   For example, a 2017 report on Jamaica by the UK Home Office said   
   that Jamaica was regarded as a homophobic society, but that the   
   "authorities do not actively seek to prosecute LGBT persons".   
      
   Activist groups say the ability of lesbian, gay, bisexual and   
   trans (LGBT) organisations to carry out advocacy work is being   
   restricted.   
      
   Changing trend   
   There is a global trend toward decriminalising same-sex acts.   
      
   So far, 28 countries in the world recognise same-sex marriages,   
   and 34 others provide for some partnership recognition for same-   
   sex couples, Ilga says.   
      
   As of December 2020, 81 countries had laws against   
   discrimination in the workplace on the basis of sexual   
   orientation. Twenty years ago, there were only 15.   
      
   Short presentational grey line   
   Full list of countries where homosexuality is outlawed:   
   Afghanistan   
      
   Algeria   
      
   Antigua & Barbuda   
      
   Bangladesh   
      
   Barbados   
      
   Bhutan   
      
   Brunei   
      
   Burundi   
      
   Cameroon   
      
   Chad   
      
   Comoros   
      
   Cook Islands   
      
   Dominica   
      
   Egypt   
      
   Eritrea   
      
   Eswatini   
      
   Ethiopia   
      
   Gambia   
      
   Ghana   
      
   Grenada   
      
   Guinea   
      
   Guyana   
      
   Iran   
      
   Jamaica   
      
   Kenya   
      
   Kiribati   
      
   Kuwait   
      
   Lebanon   
      
   Liberia   
      
   Libya   
      
   Malawi   
      
   Malaysia   
      
   Maldives   
      
   Mauritania   
      
   Mauritius   
      
   Morocco   
      
   Myanmar   
      
   Namibia   
      
   Nigeria   
      
   Occupied Palestinian Territory (Gaza Strip)   
      
   Oman   
      
   Pakistan   
      
   Papua New Guinea   
      
   Qatar   
      
   Saint Kitts and Nevis   
      
   Saint Lucia   
      
   Saint Vincent and The Grenadines   
      
   Samoa   
      
   Saudi Arabia   
      
   Senegal   
      
   Sierra Leone   
      
   Singapore   
      
   Solomon Islands   
      
   Somalia   
      
   South Sudan   
      
   Sri Lanka   
      
   Sudan   
      
   Syria   
      
   Tanzania   
      
   Togo   
      
   Tonga   
      
   Tunisia   
      
   Turkmenistan   
      
   Tuvalu   
      
   Uganda   
      
   Uzbekistan   
      
   Yemen   
      
   Zambia   
      
   Zimbabwe   
      
   "gay" is a personal choice.   
      
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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