Tuesday, 21 January 2014
Delta state governor surports ban on same sex marriage in Nigeria. Says its a Taboo
Vanguard news
By Victor Efeizomor
Delta State Governor, Dr. Emmanuel
Uduaghan, has said the marriage
between same-sex is not only a
taboo but against the African
culture
Uduaghan, who stated this in
Dublin, Ireland, while receiving an
international leadership award,
stoutly defended the bill forbidding
gay marriage in Nigeria and signed
into law by President Jonathan.
The governor added that gay
marriage was pedophilia, a
psychiatric disorder, in which an
adult had sexual interest in children
and hence a taboo.
Uduaghan during the award
ceremony given by Metro Eireann,
Ireland’s major multicultural
newspaper, told the international
community, which had Ireland’s
Minister of Trade and Foreign
Investment, Mr. Joe Costello, in
attendance, that gay marriage
offended the cultural norms of
Nigerians and that it could be
likened pedophilia.
The governor, while reacting to
comments during the ceremony,
maintained that the law was popular
and that Nigerians accept it.
“I am sure no one here in this
country would accept a condition in
which an adult can sleep with a 10-
year-old girl. If that situation is not
acceptable, we in Nigeria view gay
marriage as such,” he said.
Uduaghan, who received
thunderous applause for his strong
position on this issue by a large
Nigerian audience, explained that
marriage in Nigeria was viewed as
union between families.
“In Nigeria, marriage between two
people is usually between a man
and a woman and not just between
them but between their families
too,” he said.
“Whenever a couple come together,
they are not coming together by
themselves, it almost involves their
different families and if it is known
that in that family there are married
gays, the danger is that the taboo
emanating from that might even
affect others who are straight and
that is not right,” the governor
emphasised.
Giving a personal example, he said:
“In marrying my wife, it was the
coming together of her family and
my family and the blessings of the
two families that made it happen.“
Accusing the international
community of double standards,
Uduaghan said he was surprised by
their reactions, saying: “There was a
public hearing by the National
Assembly and we are not aware of
their opposition to this bill. What
happened was that a lot of Nigerians
appeared and made submission in
favour of it. So, it is a surprise that
after the bill has been passed, we
are now facing this opposition by
the international community.”
Concluding his remark, governor
insisted that anyone who wishes to
be married to a gay is free to
migrate to the country, where it is
acceptable.
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