Harman Patil (Editor)

LGBT rights in South Sudan

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Discrimination protections
  
None

LGBT rights in South Sudan

Same-sex sexual activity legal?
  
Illegal since 1899 (as Anglo-Egyptian Sudan)

Penalty:
  
Up to ten years imprisonment.

Recognition of relationships
  
No recognition of same-sex relationships

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) persons in South Sudan face legal challenges not experienced by non-LGBT residents. Male same-sex sexual activity is illegal and carries a penalty of up to ten years' imprisonment.

Contents

Law

South Sudan was formerly part of Sudan, and subject to its interpretation of Sharia law, under which homosexual activity was illegal, with punishments ranging from lashes to the death penalty. In 2008 the autonomous Government of Southern Sudan adopted its own penal code, which prohibits "carnal intercourse against the order of nature" and prescribes a sentence of ten years' imprisonment.

Same-sex marriage

As of today, same-sex marriage is illegal and not mentioned by any political party.

Social attitudes

In July 2010 Salva Kiir Mayardit, now President of South Sudan, told Radio Netherlands Worldwide that homosexuality is not in the "character" of Southern Sudanese people. "It is not even something that anybody can talk about here in southern Sudan in particular. It is not there and if anybody wants to import or to export it to Sudan, it will not get the support and it will always be condemned by everybody," he said.

In 2006, Abraham Mayom Athiaan, a bishop in South Sudan, led a split from the Episcopal Church of Sudan for what he regarded as a failure by the church leadership to condemn homosexuality sufficiently strongly.

The U.S. Department of State's 2011 Human Rights Report found "widespread" societal discrimination against gay men and lesbians, and stated that there were no known LGBT organisations.

References

LGBT rights in South Sudan Wikipedia