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Kenya Court Upholds Law Criminalizing Same-Sex Unions: Report

Kenya Court Upholds Law Criminalizing Same-Sex Unions, Report Says

(Bloomberg) -- The Kenyan High Court upheld a law that criminalizes same-sex relations in the East African nation, with a three-judge bench ruling the colonial-era legislation didn’t contradict the constitution.

Lesbian and homosexual relationships, “private or not, formal or not, would be in violation of the tenor and spirit of the constitution,” according to the ruling read by Justice Roselyn Aburili. The Kenyan constitution defines both marriage and cohabitation as the voluntary union of a man and woman, she said.

“It is difficult to agree with the petitioners’ arguments that we can safely nullify the impugned provisions, whose effect would be to open the door for same-sex unions” without further violating the Kenyan constitution, Aburili said.

Kenya is one of 36 African countries that has criminalized homosexuality, according to Open For Business, a coalition of global companies, which argued that inclusive and diverse societies are better for business and essential for economic growth.

“It doesn’t affect just the LGBT community in Kenya, it affects all Kenyans,” Drew Keller, global program director at Open For Business, said by phone. “It is documented that the LGBT community are kept out of the informal and informal work force, which diminishes Kenya’s national productivity.”

During a visit to Kenya in July 2015, former U.S. President Barack Obama, whose father was born there, urged African nations to abandon laws criminalizing homosexuality, clashing with his host President Uhuru Kenyatta, who called gay rights a “non-issue” for Kenyans.

--With assistance from David Herbling.

To contact the reporter on this story: Eric Ombok in Nairobi at eombok@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Malingha at dmalingha@bloomberg.net, Helen Nyambura, Hilton Shone

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