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#21
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http://www.fwepiscopal.org/downloads...etterFeb07.pdf
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#22
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http://www.anglican-nig.org/PH2006message2nation.htm
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#23
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http://www.anglican-nig.org/canabackground.htm
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#24
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http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2006/60241.htm
Nigerian Legislation Threatens to Limit Rights of Sexual Minorities The United States is concerned by reports of legislation in Nigeria that would restrict or prohibit citizens from assembling, organizing, holding events or rallies, and participating in ceremonies of religious union, based upon sexual orientation and gender identity. This proposed legislation has not been adopted. The freedoms of speech, association, expression, assembly, and religion are long-standing international commitments and are universally recognized. Nigeria, as a State Party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, has assumed important obligations on these matters. We expect the Government of Nigeria to act in a manner consistent with those obligations. |
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#25
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http://politicalspaghetti.blogspot.c...er-debate.html
A BILL FOR AN ACT TO MAKE PROVISIONS FOR THE PROHIBITION OF SEXUAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PERSONS OF THE SAME SEX, CELEBRATION OF MARRIAGE BY THEM AND FOR OTHER MATTERS CONNECTED THEREWITH BE IT ENACTED by the National Assembly of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as follows- 1. Short Title This Act may be cited as Same Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act 2006. 2. Interpretation In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires- “Marriage” means a legally binding union between a man and a woman be it performed under the authority of the State, Islamic Law or Customary Law; “Minister” means the Minister responsible for Internal Affairs” “Same Sex Marriage” means the coming together of two persons of the same gender or sex in a civil union, marriage, domestic partnership or other form of same sex relationship for the purposes of cohabitation as husband and wife. 3. Validity and Recognition of Marriage. For the avoidance of doubt only marriage entered into between a man and a woman under the marriage Act or under the Islamic and Customary Laws are valid and recognized in Nigeria. 4. Prohibition of Same Sex Marriage, etc.
The High Court in the States and the Federal Capital Territory shall have jurisdiction to entertain all matters, causes and proceedings arising from same sex marriages and relationships. EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM This Act shall prohibit in the Federal Republic of Nigeria the relationship between persons of the same sex, celebration of marriage by them and other matters connected therewith. |
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#26
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Thanks for posting that Nathan.
This proposed legislation is evil! According to that, if my husband and I were Nigerian, we could be imprisoned under that law (and so would about 80 or 90% of all the people we know.) Horrifying. Doubly horrifying that anyone would support such an evil undertaking.
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*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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#27
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Strangely enough, this just popped up as a news story on my browser. Thought it seemed pertinent here.
_____________________ ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigerian police routinely torture suspects, shooting them in the legs, beating them and hanging them from the ceiling for long periods, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture said on Friday. Manfred Nowak said he had also seen cases of medical neglect of injuries caused by torture that were worse than any he had come across in other countries. "As far as the police is concerned, I have come to the conclusion that torture is systemic," Nowak told a news conference at the end of a one-week visit to Nigeria. "It is a routine practice. Detainees are beaten up. They are suspended from the ceiling for prolonged periods and beaten in that position as a way for the police to extract confessions or other information," he said. At a criminal investigation department center he visited in Lagos, Nowak found a room that police openly referred to as the "torture room." The filthy room was packed with 125 suspects, many of whom had been tortured. The detainees were not being given enough food or water. The youngest person there was 12 years old. Some detainees had been shot in the lower legs and their wounds were badly infected. They had seen no doctor. "There were several detainees there who had very serious infections and were in imminent danger of dying because they were being denied medical assistance," Nowak said. IMPUNITY The main reason for this state of affairs is total impunity, he said. Not one police officer has been convicted of torture and it is impossible for victims to seek redress. Poor policing and a dysfunctional judiciary are among the legacies of decades of corruption in Africa's most populous country, which was ruled by the army for most of its history since independence in 1960. Nowak said the government had started some reforms in the administration of justice since Nigeria returned to civilian rule in 1999 but there were few tangible results. He said the system discriminated against the poor because those who could afford it could pay lawyers and meet bail conditions, while those who couldn't were left at the mercy of police who would detain them for months in appalling conditions. Nowak also visited prisons, where he found there was little evidence of torture but overcrowding as detainees await trial. Nigeria says more than 25,000 inmates, or 65 percent of its total prison population, have never been convicted of a crime but remain jailed because of delays in the justice system, missing police files, absent witnesses and prison mismanagement. It is common for prisoners to wait five to 10 years for their trials. Thousands have spent longer in jail than they would have served if convicted.
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www.thewheelinsidethewheel.blogspot.com Some men see things as they are and ask why. Others dream things that never were and ask why not. -- George Bernard Shaw |
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#28
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I am beyond horrified.
Can't dwell on it - screws with my mind. I wish there was something to be done about it. Please keep us updated Suze - I'll be praying meanwhile. And will contact the congress members who have actually tried to do something about this and thank them.
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*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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#29
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Here's another article on the situation in Nigeria. Also, Jim Naughton over at the blog Daily Episcopalian has posted that Davis Mac-Iyalla, the leader of the gay rights group Changing Attitudes Nigeria has fled Nigeria and has safely made it to Togo.
More voices keep speaking out in opposition to the pending Nigerian legislation. Pax, scott
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The demand for equal rights in every vocation of life is just and fair; but, after all, the most vital right is the right to love and be loved. Emma Goldman (1869-1940) |
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