Gambia's President Refuses to 'Offend God for Foreign Aid' Amid Homosexual  
Rights Push

 
 
By _Stoyan Zaimov_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/stoyan-zaimov/)   , 
Christian Post Reporter
April 23, 2012|1:15 pm
Gambia's president, apparently responding to demands  from the U.K. and 
U.S. for acceptance of gay and lesbian rights, has stated that  no amount of 
foreign-aid "bribing" was going to lead him to "insult God by doing  something 
in the name of human rights."
"If you are to give us aid for men and men or for women and women to marry, 
 leave it; we don't need your aid because, as long as I am the President of 
The  Gambia, you will never see that happen in this country," His 
Excellency Sheikh  Professor Alhaji Dr. Yahya Jammeh declared at the 2012 State 
Opening of the  National Assembly on Friday. 
The comments come only weeks after 19 people including Gambians, a 
Senegalese  and a Nigerian _were arrested_ 
(http://thepoint.gm/africa/gambia/article/jammeh-condemns-homosexual-practices-as-he-opens-2012-legislative-year)
  in 
Gambia on suspicion of homosexual acts,  and charged with two counts of 
attempts to commit unnatural offense and  conspiracy to commit felony. 
Homosexuality is illegal not only in Gambia, a largely Muslim nation, but a 
 host of other countries in Africa hold similar laws. The international 
community  in recent years has cracked down on what it sees as the suppression 
of gay and  human rights on the continent. 
In 2011, a number of Western countries declared that they would cut foreign 
 aid for nations that did not improve their records on gay rights. In 
October of  2011, British Prime Minister David Cameron pledged that he would 
cut 
foreign Aid  to Malawi by $30.6 million after it sentenced two gay men to 14 
years of hard  labor. He also threatened to reduce aid to Uganda, Ghana, 
and other nations that  supported the traditional definition of marriage, _The 
Daily Mail_ 
(http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2047254/David-Cameron-Foreign-aid-cut-anti-gay-countries.html)
  reported. 
In a memorandum issued by President Barack Obama in Geneva, Switzerland 
last  December, the U.S. administration declared that it will combat efforts by 
other  nations that criminalize homosexual conduct, or abuse homosexual or  
transgendered people, _The New York Times_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/07/world/united-states-to-use-aid-to-promote-gay-rights-abroad.html?pagewante
d=all)  reported.  
"Some have suggested that gay rights and human rights are separate and  
distinct, but in fact they are one and the same," said Secretary of State  
Hillary Rodham Clinton at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva. 
While presiding over the National Assembly, however, the Gambia president  
clarified in his statement: 
"If you want us to be ungodly for you to give us aid, take your aid away, 
we  will survive. We will rather eat grass than accept this ungodly evil 
attitude  that is anti-God, anti-human and anti-creation. What is interesting 
is 
that  Muslim veils have been banned [in some Western countries], and they 
want us to  accept gays and lesbians in Africa, hell no! It will not happen 
in this  country," the president stated. 
"We will not allow anything that is ungodly to take place on this soil. If  
you are caught and sent to jail, we will make sure that you are separated 
and  put you in one jail where you will not see a man. We will not lock 
homosexuals  in one jail," he continued, _The Daily  Observer_ 
(http://allafrica.com/stories/201204230896.html)  shared. 
Gambia's leader reportedly claimed that the country will not mistreat 
people  based on their race or religion, but every nation has its own natural 
"dos and  don'ts," and defending the traditional definition of marriage was one 
aspect  that the African nation would not be comprised on. 
"We will preserve our Africaness and our religious belief to the letter and 
 laws will be made to make sure that our cultural values are upheld to the  
letter. Sometimes you hear a lot of noise about my pronouncements. Let me 
make  it very clear that if you want me to offend God for you to give me aid, 
you are  making a great mistake. You will not bribe me to do what is evil 
and ungodly,"  the firm statement declared, and continued: 
"You can call me any names, but we will not compromise our dignity, we will 
 not insult our religion, and we will not insult God by doing something in 
the  name of human rights." 
According to a _state government report_ 
(http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/irf/2007/90099.htm) , Gambia has no official 
religion and  its citizens are 
free to practice whichever faith system they choose. Sunni  Muslims, however, 
make up 90 percent of the  population.

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