Ghana's anti-LGBTQ law is a sovereign choice — Western outrage is another chapter in a very old story

Ghana's parliament has passed legislation that criminalises the advocacy of LGBTQ+ identities and same-sex relations, with penalties including prison sentences. The response from Western capitals was swift and predictable: condemnations, calls for reversal, and the familiar vocabulary of rights violations. None of this is surprising. What is surprising is how little the commentary has interrogated its own premises.
The bill — which passed with cross-party support — reflects a genuine, broadly held view among the Ghanaian public that同性恋爱 relationships and gender identity advocacy are incompatible with national values. Polling across sub-Saharan Africa consistently shows that attitudes toward LGBTQ+ issues in countries like Ghana diverge sharply from those in Western Europe or North America. That divergence is treated by Western commentators as a deficit — a sign of intolerance that must be corrected through diplomatic pressure and conditional aid. But it could equally be read as a difference in moral and cultural frameworks, one that deserves the same respect Ghana's government would expect on other questions of national self-determination.
The sovereignty question that never gets asked
When a European parliament passes a law on marriage or gender recognition, it is described as a domestic matter — the expression of a sovereign legislature responding to its own electorate. When an African parliament does the same, the description shifts. The same act of democratic self-determination is reframed as a human rights crisis requiring international intervention. This asymmetry is rarely made explicit in the editorial coverage, but it structures almost all of it.
The pattern runs deeper than the current bill. Ghana has been subject to sustained diplomatic pressure from the United States, European Union, and United Kingdom on LGBTQ+ issues for years. American aid programmes have tied development funding to compliance with LGBTQ+ acceptance benchmarks. European trade preferences have been discussed in similar terms. The message, however diplomatically worded, is clear: the price of preferential access to Western markets and development assistance is the abandonment of domestic moral consensus in favour of a specific progressive position on sexuality and gender.
That is not human rights advocacy. It is conditionality — the practice of using economic leverage to coerce policy changes that the coerced electorate has not chosen through its own democratic process. The moral framing is applied after the fact to make the coercion feel principled.
The colonial residue beneath the rights language
There is a structural dimension to this that the condemnation editorials tend to skip over. Ghana, like most states in sub-Saharan Africa, was shaped by a colonial system that systematically suppressed indigenous governance, imposed criminal codes reflecting Victorian morality, and used law as an instrument of cultural subjugation. The specific provisions around same-sex relations that now exist in Ghana's penal code were in many cases introduced by British colonial administrations and retained after independence — not because they reflected indigenous consensus, but because independence came with compromises that left many colonial-era structures intact.
That history does not determine the current political choice. Ghana's parliament is not acting under colonial instruction when it passes this bill; it is exercising the sovereign authority that independence was supposed to confer. But it does complicate the moral position of Western governments that are, in effect, demanding that former colonies abandon cultural positions their former rulers spent a century imposing — at the point of economic leverage.
The irony is that the same Western governments that pushed colonial criminalisation of same-sex acts now condemn African governments for maintaining versions of those laws. The moral consistency of that position depends on ignoring the causal chain.
The cost of compliance and the logic of resistance
For Ghana's government, accepting Western demands on LGBTQ+ policy would carry specific costs. Diplomatic relationships would improve. Development funding would flow more freely. Trade preferences might be solidified. These are real benefits.
But the political cost of capitulation is equally real. A government that appears to have reversed domestic policy under foreign pressure — particularly on an issue where public opinion runs strongly in the opposite direction — delegitimises its own authority in the eyes of its electorate. It confirms the perception, common across much of the Global South, that Western human rights advocacy is selective, conditional, and deployed as an instrument of influence rather than a genuine principle.
Ghana's parliament chose the domestic political cost over the diplomatic one. That is a rational choice for a government that must maintain legitimacy with its own citizens. It is also, more fundamentally, an exercise of the sovereignty that the post-colonial international order is nominally built on.
The West can disagree with that choice. It can continue to apply pressure. But it should be honest about what it is doing: using economic leverage to reshape the moral consensus of a sovereign state whose electorate holds different views from its own. That may be effective. It is not obviously consistent with the principles of self-determination that Western governments profess to champion in other contexts.
The condemnation of Ghana's law should come with more intellectual honesty about the mechanism of change being proposed. Conditionality is not rights advocacy. It is leverage. And the countries on the receiving end of it are increasingly aware of the difference.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/BBCWorldoffl/33961