LONDON: The Commonwealth, that glorified book club for former colonies, is currently experiencing a bout of moral indigestion. The cause? Ghana’s Parliament, in a fit of sanctimonious pique, has passed the ‘Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill’, a legislative cudgel designed to beat the LGBTQ+ community back into the shadows. And now, as the bill awaits President Nana Akufo-Addo’s signature, the UK government is wringing its hands like a vicar caught shoplifting communion wine.
Let’s get one thing straight: this bill is a masterpiece of hypocrisy. It’s titled ‘Family Values’, which is a bit like naming a torture chamber ‘The Comfort Inn’. It criminalises not just same-sex relations but also any advocacy for LGBTQ+ rights, with prison sentences that would make a pirate blush. The bill’s supporters claim it’s about ‘protecting Ghanaian culture’, which is a phrase that usually translates to ‘we’re terrified of anything that might make us think differently about our own prejudices’.
Now, enter the Commonwealth. This august body, which counts among its members both the UK (whose Queen was once the head of it) and Ghana (a former Gold Coast trading post) is supposed to be a ‘family of nations’. But like any family, it has its embarrassing uncles. The UK, under Rishi Sunak’s ever-shifting moral compass, has expressed ‘deep concern’. Foreign Secretary David Cameron, a man whose own human rights credentials include the invasion of Iraq and claiming he’d ‘roll back’ on gay marriage in Africa, has said the bill ‘would undermine human rights’. Well, David, it’s a bit like the pot calling the kettle black, but at least the kettle is trying to boil some tea.
The problem is that the Commonwealth has about as much enforcement power as a knitted pacifier. It can ‘express concern’, ‘urge reflection’, and ‘call for dialogue’, but when push comes to shove, it’s all just words. Meanwhile, Ghanaian LGBTQ+ activists are facing real threats: violence, blackmail, and the chilling prospect of being turned into a test case for mob justice. One activist, speaking to the press under a pseudonym because their life is literally at risk, said: ‘The UK can afford to be principled from a distance. We have to live in the aftermath.’
And what of the UK’s own house? Let’s not forget that the British government, in its infinite wisdom, recently paused its own conversion therapy ban and allowed trans people to be banned from NHS wards. It’s a bit like lecturing someone on road safety while you’re busy driving your car into a parade. The Commonwealth’s values are ‘democracy, development, and diversity’. But when those values clash with the stroppy sovereignty of a member state, they become optional extras, like heated seats in a used car.
So what happens next? Either President Akufo-Addo signs the bill into law, and Ghana joins the ranks of Uganda and Nigeria in the Commonwealth’s Phobia Hall of Shame, or he bows to international pressure and vetoes it. But let’s be honest: international pressure is about as effective as a chocolate teapot. The bill’s supporters have already framed it as a battle against Western imperialism, a narrative that plays beautifully to local populism. The more the UK tut-tuts, the more Ghanaian politicians will dig their heels in.
In the end, the Commonwealth faces a choice that is as stark as it is old: does it stand for the universal human rights it claims to champion, or does it become a cosy club for authoritarians who pay lip service to democracy while locking up minorities? The answer, I suspect, will be the same as it ever was: another statement, another press release, and a quiet hope that everyone forgets about it in time for the next tea and crumpets session at Marlborough House.
Meanwhile, in the real world, Ghana’s LGBTQ+ community continues to live in fear, their futures hanging in the balance of a pen stroke. And the Commonwealth? It will continue its grand tradition of looking away, humming ‘God Save the King’ while the vulnerable are left to fend for themselves. After all, as any good satirist knows, the best way to test a value is to see what happens when it’s inconvenient.








