Opinion
Why Kenyan constitution must protect gays
Posted Saturday, October 24 2009 at 14:15
In Summary
- People have inherent right to choose how to perform their sexuality
A country’s soul is measured by how poorly – or well – it treats minorities. That’s why it is very alarming for a member of the Committee of Experts to opine that the draft constitution will not protect gay rights because a majority of Kenyans would reject it.
It’s not the job of the committee to add or remove a particular right because of its prejudgment or prediction of how Kenyans might vote. Nor should the committee cave in to hysteria created by any interest group, no matter how powerful.
But it is the work of the committee, which is composed of experts, to give Kenyans the most democratic and modern draft constitution that protects the rights of all Kenyans, especially the most vulnerable.
Constitutions are not meant to protect only the individuals that we like, and to leave unprotected those who are unpopular, or those the majority may find morally objectionable. Nor should a person’s identity be the reason to deny them protection.
Quite the contrary, a person’s identity – especially if it exposes them to ridicule, attack, or discrimination – must be the reason for constitutional protection. Constitutions protect individuals from the tyranny of the state and oppression from their fellow human beings.
These vertical and horizontal protections are the bulwarks against the unfair exploitation of the weak by the strong, and the domination of the minority by the majority.
Absent this architecture and logic, a constitution becomes the instrument of tyranny and the petri dish for dictatorship. This is the reason the modern democratic constitution must be unfailingly secular and not captive to benighted religious beliefs.
Religious faiths must not be allowed to use the constitution to establish archaic religious views, or vanquish the basic rights of those whom they see as sinners.
The Kenyan constitution cannot be grounded on a world view of sin or the moral predicates of religion. If it did, then Kenya would become a theocracy, not a modern secular democracy.
Nor is it the role of the constitution to choose one sexual orientation over another. The constitution must at least be agnostic on sexuality.
I want to appeal to the humanism intrinsic in religion for those who do not buy the argument of legal equality in secularism and liberalism. The Abrahamic faiths – Christianity, Islam, and Judaism – believe that all humans are God’s children, and that everyone deserves to be protected from discrimination.
That protection must be afforded irrespective of sexual orientation. Where better to entrench such protection than in the basic law of a country?
The “nature” versus “nurture” debate aside, most gay people do not choose to be so. They are gay and not heterosexual. Why should their state of “nature” deprive them of rights any more than it does heterosexuals?
But this is even conceding too much ground. Why should it matter whether one is gay by “nature” or “nurture”? It should not matter whether one is “born gay” or one is gay by choice.
Individuals have the inherent right – not given by a government – to choose how to perform their sexuality. That is why the constitution should protect those who are gay, bisexual, transgender, transsexual, and asexual – including those who are heterosexual.
-
Submitted by flexy832003Posted October 25, 2009 06:18 PM
-
Submitted by manmanu
well spoken kenyans are generally homophobic but there are those who are the most outspoken against gays but they themselves lead a double life. There are more gay people in kenya than most people think but because of the stigma associated with it no one is willing to come out. How can they when being gay in kenya is actually a criminal offence? by the way homosexuality is rampant in boarding schools if anyone cares to know.
Posted October 25, 2009 05:17 PM -
Submitted by nickihiu
with due respect Mr. Mutua this sounds a big speak, i suggest that the constitution allow for future amendment rather than giving the so called guys rights right away, one its is an african, i know you leave in NY but rememember that kenya is a developing nation, we have other issues which can benefit us more in the constitution, gay issue not now!!
Posted October 25, 2009 03:32 PM -
Submitted by beejaychester
Jomo Kenyatta said Kenya's biggest domestic enemies are threefold, Ujinga, Umaskini and Maradhi. In my opinion Ujinga is at the top of the list. There so much darkness(Ujinga) in Kenya that the three problems have had babies and now an extended family(more problems). So my take is the Constitutional committee feels Equality has no place in Kenya. Hmmmmmm.... If that's the cas then civilization has no place in Kenya too.
Posted October 25, 2009 07:46 AM -
Submitted by mwanoo1
Excellent! I've never read a more cogent piece from you than this. Keep it up, Mutua! Gays should be protected and heterosexuals hating and thinking everyone is like them are out of touch with the reality that was concealed at the onset of modernity. An encounter with postmodernism will make it clear to the haters that their position of hatred for homosexuality is based on socially controlled beliefs that are a carryover from the Victorian era, yet we're in the 21st Century.
Posted October 24, 2009 10:40 PM




RSS
sasa it seems like people are talking.Mutua, this is a really even edged cut.If u have even been discriminated for exhibiting some minority characteristic, you should understand we gays, we just want amongst others, freedom, security, health services.Its not like all guys will turn gay if u tolerate us, we will have a more open society, where everybody understands everybody coz of now u donno if ur husband wife daughter son bro cousin uncle auntie is gay!