Senegalโs government has defended its tougher anti-LGBTQ legislation amid growing criticism from international rights groups and activists, with Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko accusing Western countries of trying to “impose” foreign social values on the country.Addressing lawmakers on Friday, Sonko condemned what he described as Western pressure on Senegal over homosexuality. โThere is a kind of tyranny. There are perhaps eight billion human beings in the world. Eighty percent or more don’t want (homosexuality),โ he told parliament.โNo Arab country will criticise us, nor will any African country, but there is a nucleus called the West… which wants to impose it (homosexuality) on the rest of the world,โ Sonko said. โBecause they have the means (and) control the media, (they) want to impose their diktat. The sovereign Senegalese people do not want these practices here in Senegal.โThe prime minister said Senegal had faced criticism abroad, particularly from France, since the law was approved. โIf they have opted for these practices, it’s their problem, but we don’t have any lessons to take from them, absolutely none,โ he added.The remarks came weeks after President Bassirou Diomaye Faye enacted a controversial new law that significantly increases penalties for same-sex relations in the Muslim-majority West African nation. The legislation, overwhelmingly approved by parliament in March, has already led to dozens of arrests and triggered fierce debate both inside Senegal and abroad.The revised law increases prison sentences for what it describes as โacts against natureโ โ a term used to refer to same-sex relations โ from the previous one-to-five-year term to five-to-10 years in prison. It also introduces sentences of three to seven years for anyone found guilty of promoting or financing same-sex relationships.The law has prompted concern internationally. UN rights chief Volker Turk described the legislation as โdeeply worryingโ and said it โflies in the face of the sacrosanct human rightsโ. A collective of around 30 African-origin personalities, writing in French newspaper Liberation earlier this month, warned of a growing โclimate of fear, hatred and violenceโ in Senegal since the law was passed.
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