Nigerian Ambassador Usman Sarki told a meeting of national representatives, “We
wish to remind the UN to limit itself strictly to activities mandated
by member states and especially to promote issues that are beneficial to
mankind rather than lend itself as tool to promote aberrant behaviour
under the guise of promoting human rights.”
Sarki
was responding to the UN’s issuance last week of six postage stamps
tied to the UN human rights office’s Free and Equal campaign advancing
the status of homosexual, transgender and bisexual people.
In Nigeria,
with a population of 182 million people, homosexual relations can bring
the death penalty in the Muslim north and 14 years in jail in the
Christian south.
Sarki said the UN secretariat should not be promoting causes when many and even a majority of states oppose it. “What
is clear to many is that the UN has now decided without any reservation
or hesitation to side with a minority of member states and
practitioners of this lifestyle, in complete disregard of the wishes and
concerns of the majority of its member States and the populations that
they represent,” he declared.
In fact, reported an amicus brief
by a team of 54 lawyers filed with the U.S. Supreme Court, 176
countries “retain the understanding of marriage as the union of a man
and a woman.” In other words, explained the brief, “Over ten times as
many countries disallow same-sex marriage as allow it.”
Sarki
concluded, “The UN should not take unilateral decisions on such
sensitive matters that offend the sensibilities of the majority of its
member states, and contradict their religious beliefs, cultures,
traditions and laws.”
Sarki
came under immediate attack from Nigerian humanist Loe Igme, who took
to the website of News Ghana to claim the ambassador was “peddling falsehood” and was not speaking for “most Nigerians” at all.
“Sarki
is not representing the position of millions of Nigerians that support
without reservation and hesitation the efforts of the UN to protect the
rights of religious, ethnic or sexual minorities,” said the story, which
was bylined “admin” but gave Igwe as its sole “source.” “In fact
millions of Nigerians want the UN not to cave to pressure and blackmail
from homophobic member states.”
However, according to the worldwide survey
of attitudes towards homosexuality conducted in 2013 by the Pew
Foundation, Sarki’s views are very close to those of most Nigerians, who
turns out to be the least accepting of all 40 countries surveyed: with
98 percent answering “No” to the question: “Should society accept
homosexuality” and only 1 percent answering “yes.”
Christian
leaders in Africa and America have accused the U.S. and European
countries of blackmailing African states into advancing homosexual
claims by threatening the withdrawal of military or economic aid.
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