When the news broke that the UK had expressed support for Ghana’s careful examination of its controversial anti-LGBTQ+ bill, it felt less like a diplomatic manoeuvre and more like a moment of profound cultural collision. The bill, which would criminalise same-sex relationships and even advocacy for LGBTQ+ rights, has been sitting on President Nana Akufo-Addo’s desk, awaiting his signature or veto. The UK’s backing of scrutiny, not the bill itself, is a carefully hedged bet, but one that carries the weight of a post-colonial power dynamic that Ghana knows all too well.
On the streets of Accra, the mood is mixed. I spoke with a young man named Kwame, a student at the University of Ghana, who told me: “This is about our sovereignty. We don’t need London telling us how to order our society.” His friend, Ama, a teacher, disagreed, saying: “But what about the people this bill will hurt? They are Ghanaians too.” This is the human cost of such legislation: families torn apart, communities forced into silence, individuals living in fear. The bill, if passed, would impose prison sentences of up to five years for same-sex relations and up to ten years for promoting LGBTQ+ rights. It’s a chilling prospect for the estimated 800,000 LGBTQ+ people in Ghana.
President Akufo-Addo’s delay is being read by some as a sign of reluctance. He has a reputation as a moderate, and his government has faced international pressure from Western donors and human rights groups. But he also faces a deeply conservative parliament, where the bill passed unanimously. The UK’s statement, which urged Ghana to “respect human rights and international obligations”, is a diplomatic tightrope. It’s not a condemnation, but a nudge. However, in the febrile atmosphere of Ghanaian politics, any foreign intervention is seen as meddling.
The cultural shift here is palpable. Ghana has long prided itself on its religious and traditional values, but younger, urban Ghanaians are increasingly exposed to global conversations about identity and rights. The divide is generational: older Ghanaians see the bill as a bulwark against moral decay, while younger ones see it as a relic. Yet even among the young, there is a reluctance to openly support LGBTQ+ rights. As one university lecturer told me: “We are a communal society. Individual rights are often seen as selfish. This is a conflict between the collective and the personal.”
The UK’s position is a reflection of its own domestic battles over LGBTQ+ rights, but it also highlights the awkwardness of a former colonial power lecturing its former colony. For many Ghanaians, the bill is a matter of national pride: they want to chart their own course, free from Western influence. For others, it’s a matter of life and death. As the president deliberates, the tension rises. The human cost of this bill is not just about legal consequences but the everyday erosion of trust and love. In a country where family is everything, the prospect of turning in a sibling or a child for something they cannot change is a tragedy unfolding in slow motion.










