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LGBT rights in Kenya

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people in Kenya face significant challenges not experienced by non-LGBT residents.[4][5] Sodomy is a felony per Section 162 of the Kenyan Penal Code, punishable by 21 years' imprisonment, and any sexual practices (termed "gross indecency") are a felony under section 165 of the same statute, punishable by 5 years' imprisonment. On 24 May 2019, the High Court of Kenya refused an order to declare sections 162 and 165 unconstitutional.[6] The state does not recognise any relationships between persons of the same sex; same-sex marriage is banned under the Kenyan Constitution since 2010. There are no explicit protections against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. Adoption is restricted to heterosexual couples only.

LGBT rights in Kenya
StatusIllegal since 1897 (as East Africa Protectorate)[1]
PenaltyUp to 14 to 21 years prison with fines.
Gender identityNo
MilitaryNo
Discrimination protectionsLimited protection following a legal process[2]
Family rights
Recognition of relationshipsNo recognition of same-sex unions
RestrictionsSame-sex marriage constitutionally banned since 2010[3]
AdoptionLGBT individuals and same-sex couples are not allowed to adopt

Transgender people have historically suffered discrimination, and there are no statutory provisions relating to transgender rights. However, there have been a series of court rulings in favour of transgender rights, such as the right to change the names appearing on legal documents. It is currently unclear as to whether these rulings constitute substantive law on the issue of changing legal gender.

Kenyan society is highly conservative, and a large majority of people hold negative views of LGBT people.[5] In 2023, Pew Research Center estimated that over 90% of Kenyans oppose same-sex marriage.[7] Nevertheless, public support has slowly been growing and various organisations are working to protect and improve LGBT rights.[8]

Laws about same-sex sexual activity

Statutes

Expressions of homosexuality are illegal under Kenyan statutes and carry a maximum penalty of 14 years' imprisonment to 21 years in certain aggravating circumstances. Sex acts between women are mentioned under the gender-neutral term "person" in Section 162 of the Penal Code and are enforced equally. Indeed, Prime Minister Raila Odinga on 28 November 2010 called for them to be arrested along with gay men.[9][10]

The Kenyan Penal Code of 1930, as revised in 2006, provides as follows:[11]

  • Section 162. Unnatural offenses.
Any person who –
(a) has carnal knowledge of any person against the order of nature; or
(c) permits a male person to have carnal knowledge of him or her against the order of nature, is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen years:
Provided that, in the case of an offence under paragraph (a), the offender shall be liable to imprisonment for twenty-one years if –
(i) the offence was committed without the consent of the person who was carnally known; or
(ii) the offence was committed with that person's consent but the consent was obtained by force or by means of threats or intimidation of some kind, or by fear of bodily harm, or by means of false representations as to the nature of the act.
  • Section 163. Attempt to commit unnatural offenses.

Any person who attempts to commit any of the offences specified in section 162 is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for seven years.

  • Section 165. Indecent practices between males.

Any male person who, whether in public or private, commits any act of gross indecency with another male person, or procures another male person to commit any act of gross indecency with him, or attempts to procure the commission of any such act by any male person with himself or with another male person, whether in public or private, is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for five years.

The Kenya Human Rights Commission reported in 2011 about how these statutes have indirect but very adverse effects on LGBTI persons, saying,[12]: pages: 21–23 

Same sex sexual practices remain criminalized ... and even though there are few convictions based on sections 162 to 165 of the Penal Code ..., LGBTI persons are routinely harassed by the police, held in remand houses beyond the constitutional period without charges being preferred against them, and presented in court on trumped-up charges. Closely related to this, is a cartel of corrupt police officials who routinely extort and blackmail LGBTI persons with the threat of arrest and imprisonment if they do not give those bribes. ... LGBTI sex workers, mostly MSMs [men who have sex with men] are often asked for bribes and sexual favours by male police officers in exchange for their freedom and security. ... Those who fail to give bribes or sexual favours are charged with tramped up charges and sometimes raped by state security officers.

In a 2020–2021 report, the Nairobi-based National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission reported incidents of police demanding bribes.[13][14]

Constitutional provisions

The Constitution of Kenya,[3] which took effect 27 August 2010, does not expressly protect the rights of LGBTI persons because, according to the experts who drafted the constitution, a majority of Kenyans would have rejected the constitution in the referendum to adopt it.[15]

Nevertheless, few argue that Kenya's statutes discriminating against LGBTI persons are unconstitutional and void because of the constitution's broad protection of civil and human rights. Peter Anaminyi, the national director of Feba Radio Kenya, predicted in June 2011 that within 18 months there would be a challenge to the constitutionality of the Kenya Penal Code.[16]

Article 2

Article 2 of the Constitution of Kenya provides, in paragraph (5) that "the general rules of international law shall form part of the law of Kenya" and, in paragraph (6), that "[a]ny treaty or convention ratified by Kenya shall form part of the law of Kenya under this Constitution". In paragraph (4), the constitution states, "[a]ny law, including customary law, that is inconsistent with [the] Constitution is void to the extent of the inconsistency, and any act or omission in contravention of [the] Constitution is invalid." A subsequent section of this article lists Kenya's obligations under international law and treaties concerning LGBTI rights.[17] To the extent that any Kenyan law violates Kenya's voluntary or involuntary obligations under international law, the law is arguably void under Article 2.[18]: pages: 448–9 

Article 10

Article 10(2)(b) of the Constitution of Kenya provides that, "The national values and principles of governance include ... human dignity, equity, social justice, inclusiveness, equality, human rights, non-discrimination and protection of the marginalised...." Concerning this provision, "Right there, there is a firm basis [for] one to argue against the violation of their [LGBTI persons'] dignity ... on the basis of their gender or sexual orientation. There is firm ground to contest for inclusion, non-discrimination and equality too".[17]

Article 19

Article 19 of the Constitution of Kenya provides that,

(1) The Bill of Rights [Articles 19-59] is an integral part of Kenya's democratic state and is the framework for social, economic and cultural policies.

(2) The purpose of recognizing and protecting human rights and fundamental freedoms is to preserve the dignity of individuals and communities and to promote social justice and the realization of the potential of all human beings.

Article 20

Article 20(3)(b) of the Constitution of Kenya requires courts, when applying a provision of the Bill of Rights, to "adopt the legal interpretation that most favours the enforcement of a right or fundamental freedom". Concerning this article, Makau Mutua, the chair of the Kenya Human Rights Commission and the dean at the University at Buffalo Law School, The State University of New York, says that "where a right is contested, the courts must take the most liberal interpretation of the law to avoid denying the right".[19]

Article 24

Article 24(1) of the Constitution of Kenya provides that, "A right or fundamental freedom in the Bill of Rights shall not be limited except by law, and then only to the extent that the limitation is reasonable and justifiable in an open and democratic society based on human dignity, equality and freedom, taking into account all relevant factors...."

Article 27

Article 27 of the Constitution of Kenya provides that,

  1. Every person is equal before the law and has the right to equal protection and equal benefit of the law.
  2. Equality includes the full and equal enjoyment of all rights and fundamental freedoms.
  3. Women and men have the right to equal treatment, including the right to equal opportunities in political, economic, cultural and social spheres.
  4. The State shall not discriminate directly or indirectly against any person on any ground, including race, sex, pregnancy, marital status, health status, ethnic or social origin, colour, age, disability, religion, conscience, belief, culture, dress, language or birth.
  5. A person shall not discriminate directly or indirectly against another person on any of the grounds specified or contemplated in clause (4).

Concerning this article, The Equal Rights Trust and the non-governmental Kenya Human Rights Commission said in 2012,[20]

While the Constitution does not explicitly provide for non-discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity, there is scope for this to be rectified through the courts or subsequent legislation. Article 27(4) of the Constitution of Kenya 2010 provides that the "state shall not discriminate directly or indirectly on any ground, including [listed characteristics]", while Article 27(5) states that persons shall not discriminate on any of the grounds "specified or contemplated in clause (4)". Thus defined, the prohibition on discrimination by both the state and non-state actors should be read as inclusive of sexual orientation and gender identity.

In a May 2012 submission to the United Nations Human Rights Committee, the government of Kenya agreed with this interpretation of Article 27(4).[21]

Makau Mutua argues that the Kenya Penal Code is unconstitutional under this article. He said,[19]

Article 27, which is the Equal Protection of the Constitution, provides "every person" is "equal before the law" and has the "right to equal protection" before the law. That's an unequivocal, categorical, and blanket protection against discrimination. The article doesn't exclude homosexuals from the ambit of constitutional protection. Further, Article 27(4) prohibits discrimination on the grounds of "sex". The prohibition of discrimination on the grounds of sex has been understood to include sexual orientation. The Constitution eliminates all wiggle room by prohibiting both direct and indirect discrimination.

Article 28

Article 28 of the Constitution of Kenya provides that, "Every person has inherent dignity and the right to have that dignity respected and protected." This article offers "fresh impetus to the rights of the LGBTI community".[17]

Article 31

Article 31 of the Constitution of Kenya provides that, "Every person has the right to privacy...." Privacy is a fundamental human right, enshrined in numerous international human rights instruments.

Failed decriminalisation efforts

In 2013, the Cosmopolitan Affirming Church (CAC) opened in Nairobi, becoming the first openly LGBT church in the country.[22] The church is considered to be a rare space where Kenya's LGBT community can escape hostility from society.[22] In 2016, The Employment and Relations Court in the Kenyan town of Nyeri ordered the Anglican Church of Kenya to reinstate three priests who were suspended in 2015 after allegations surfaced that they were gay.[23] The priests later sued Bishop Joseph Kagunda of the Mount Kenya West Diocese, and it was later agreed that they would settle the lawsuit through mediation.[24] In December 2018, it was announced that the Anglican Church in Kenya had given each of the three priests individual compensations of KSh.6.8 million/=.[25]

The High Court of Kenya heard a legal challenge against on 22 and 23 February 2018, filed by the Kenyan National Gay and Lesbian Rights Commission (NGLHRC) will argue that sections of the Kenyan Penal Code are in breach of the Constitution and deny basic rights to Kenyan citizens. The case, Eric Gitari v Attorney General & another (Petition no. 150 of 2016) filed in 2016, seeks to strike down sections Section 162 (a) and (c) and section 165 of the Penal Code (Cap 63) that criminalise consensual same sex relations between adults. Eric Gitari, executive director of NGLHRC—and the main petitioner—states that sections of the Penal Code are used to justify violence against LGBT persons in Kenya.[26][27][28] The constitutional division of Kenya's High Court will hear submissions from both parties on 25 October on the relevance of the decision by the Supreme Court of India to legalise gay sex by overturning Section 377 to Kenya, given that both countries have shared the law—dating back to the days of British colonial rule—that criminalises "sexual acts against the order of nature".[29][30][31] The High Court was expected to announce its ruling on 22 February 2019.[32] On the scheduled date, however, it was announced that the ruling would be delayed until 24 May 2019.[33] On 24 May 2019, the High Court of Kenya refused an order to declare sections 162 and 165 unconstitutional.[6] LGBT activists vowed to file an appeal in the Court of Appeal.[34][35]

In a separate case, a Court of Appeal in Mombasa, Kenya, ruled on 22 March 2018, that conducting forced anal examinations on people who are accused of same-sex relations is unconstitutional. The ruling reversed a 2016 High Court decision that had upheld the Kenyan authorities' use of forced anal exams to attempt to provide evidence of homosexual conduct. The National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (NGLHRC), a nongovernmental organisation based in Nairobi, filed a constitutional challenge after police arrested two men in Kwale County in February 2015 on charges of homosexuality, and subjected them to forced anal exams, HIV tests, and hepatitis B tests at Mombasa's Madaraka Hospital.[36][37][38] Following this decision, Empowering Marginalized Communities (EMAC), a non governmental organization based in Machakos county prosecuted a case that involved two members of the LGBT community who were allegedly caught having sex in Kakuyuni area of Kangundo sub-county. The two men were taken for anal examination at the Kangundo Level 4 hospital. This was contested at the magistrate court of Kangundo and thus the anal examination was halted.[39]

Pending bill to punish homosexuality with death

Copying the Anti-Homosexuality Act of Uganda, a carbon copy bill called the Family Protection Act has been introduced. This law allows "aggravated homosexuality" to be punished with death and would ban all promotion of LGBT activity.[40] The bill was ruled against on 12th September 2023, according to the Gay and Lesbian Coalition of Kenya website.[citation needed]

Recognition of same-sex unions

Article 45(2) of the Constitution of Kenya specifically authorises heterosexual marriage but makes no reference to same-sex marriage; "Every adult has the right to marry a person of the opposite sex, based on the free consent of the parties".[41]

In October 2009, two Kenyan men, Charles Ngengi and Daniel Chege, became civil partners at a ceremony in London, United Kingdom. The ceremony received widespread attention in Kenya, most of it critical. Chege's relatives were harassed severely by people living in his home village of Gathiru in Murang'a District.[42]

False rumor about impending same-sex marriage in Mtwapa

In February 2010, a rumor spread in the coastal town of Mtwapa that two Kenyan men were going to marry in a local hotel. The rumor unleashed a "house-to-house witch hunt by anti-gay vigilantes, street attacks targeting gay men, the sacking of an AIDS-fighting medical center, and a widening wave of ultra-homophobic national media coverage".[43] A local radio station, Kaya FM, picked up the story and started a series of programs on gays, which "included phone-in talk shows filled with homophobic discourse and incitements to violence".[43] Baraka FM, Rahma FM, and ultimately national radio stations including Kiss and Classic FM also ran the story. Five days before the date of the non-existent wedding, "many of the muftis and imams discussed the impending wedding during Friday prayers and asked the community to be vigilant against homosexuals. They told their congregants to demonstrate and to flush out homosexuals from the midst of Mtwapa and to ensure that no gay wedding took place".[43]

The day before the non-existent wedding, a press conference condemning the wedding was held by Sheikh Ali Hussein, regional coordinator of the Council of Imams and Preachers of Kenya, together with Bishop Lawrence Chai, regional representative of the National Council of Churches of Kenya. They warned that "God is about to punish the fastest-growing town in the Coast region. Come night, come day, we shall not allow that marriage to be conducted in this town tomorrow. We shall stand firm to flush out gays who throng this town every weekend from all corners of this country".[43]

They also warned the owner of a building in the town, who was allegedly renting rooms only to homosexuals, to evict them within seven days or face their wrath. The two denounced the Mtwapa clinic run by the Kenya Medical Research Institute, which has an AIDS program for counseling and treating men who have sex with men. "We ask that the government shut it down with immediate effect or we will descend on its officials".[43] A former member of Kenya's parliament, Omar Masumbuko, addressed the mob gathered outside the police station. He said that "homosexuality must be stopped and every means used to make that happen".[43] He told the crowd "they should not even bother to bring the homosexuals they find to the police station but should take care of the issue themselves".[43]

Traditional female same-sex marriage

Female same-sex marriage is practiced among the Gikuyu, Nandi, Kamba, Kipsigis, and to a lesser extent neighboring peoples. Approximately 5–10% of women in these nations are in such marriages. However, this is not seen as homosexual, but is instead a way for families without sons to keep their inheritance within the family. The couples are considered married, though the terms used for them are mother-in-law and daughter-in-law. The female "husband" (the "mother-in-law") carries on the family name and property, while the female "wife" (the "daughter-in-law") bears children, with the intention of having a son. The female "husband" may be widowed, but may also have a living male husband, but he will not be the father of the female "wife's" children, and the identity of the biological father, though often kin, is kept secret. Such marriages may be polygamous; in 2010 a woman was interviewed who had taken five wives.[44]

Adoption and family planning

The Children Act, 2001 makes homosexuals and unmarried couples ineligible to adopt children.[45] Even if that ineligibility does not apply specifically, "a court may refuse to make an adoption order in respect of any person or persons if it is satisfied for any reason that it would not be in the best interests of the welfare of the child to do so".[46]

Gender identity and expression

With respect to transgender persons, there is no legal means to change your gender in Kenya. The governmental Kenya National Commission on Human Rights reported in April 2012 that the transgender community face much discrimination in the country:[47]

[T]ransgender people in Kenya suffer stigma and discrimination and are not able to access gender re-assignment therapy. A witness who testified at the Inquiry indicated that she had undergone all the processes of re-assignment but Kenyatta National Hospital declined the surgery and did not offer any reasons for declining. Her attempts to appeal to the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentist's Board have not been successful. Without being allowed to complete the therapy, transgender people suffer identity problems since they are biologically either male or female, yet they present themselves in one of the gender by mode of dressing, personality expressions or through other socially defined roles. When arrested, police often face difficulties regarding what cells (male or female) to detain transgender individuals. When at entertainment areas, they are afraid of using bathrooms designated for either sex for fear of being caught by other people and accused or mistaken to be using bathrooms for sexual crimes. The witness testified that sometimes they meet opposite sex partners who demand to have sexual relationships with them. When they discover that they are not female or male (depending on the gender of the sex partner), they scream and attract members of public to the hotel room causing public nuisance, stigma and embarrassment to the transgender person.

Transgender people face stigma, discrimination, and violence in Kenya. Discrimination in particular is prevalent, as is sexual violence. This is in the areas of recognition of a third sex by the government, access to justice, employment and other spheres of public life.

Transgender Education and Advocacy (TEA) is "a human rights organisation working towards ending human rights violations against transgender / transsexual people. Established in December 2008, the TEA aims to change the public mentality towards transgender / transsexual people through awareness raising campaigns, advocating for legal and policy reforms[,] and empowering transgender / transsexual people".[48]

Intersex rights

Intersex people face stigma, discrimination, and violence in Kenya, including mutilation and non-consensual medical interventions, and difficulties in obtaining documentation.

International pressure on Kenya to legalise same-sex sexual activities

 
LGBT activists at Cologne Pride carrying a banner with the flags of 72 countries where homosexuality is illegal

Reports and recommendations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

Kenya became a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights on 1 May 1972.[49] Under Article 40 of the Covenant,[50] the United Nations Human Rights Committee (UNHRC) reviewed and made recommendations on 24 March 2005 concerning Kenya's 18-years-late second periodic report. The UNHRC urged Kenya to repeal Section 162, Penal Code, which criminalises homosexuality.[51]: page: 6  On 19 August 2010 in its third periodic report, Kenya responded formally to this recommendation:[52][53]

Kenya may not decriminalize same sex unions at this stage as such acts are considered as taboo and offences against the order of nature which are repugnant to cultural values and morality. Indeed the public gave overwhelming presentations to the Committee of Experts [on Constitutional Review] against the inclusion of same sex rights under the new constitution. It must however be reiterated that the government does not discriminate against anyone in the provision of services. No one is ever required under the law to declare their sexual orientation under any circumstances.

Kenya further addressed these issues in May 2012:[21]

Kenya is currently not undertaking any measures to decriminalize same sex unions. Public opinion is strongly against the legalization of same sex unions. The Constitution provides under article 45 (2) that a person has the right to marry a person of the opposite sex, based on the free consent of both parties. However, under article 27 (4), the Constitution, the grounds prohibited for non-discrimination are not limited and therefore this allows room for individuals to claim the violation of their rights on the grounds of their sexual orientation, in the event that they are discriminated against either directly or indirectly by the State or other individuals. ... Until such time that public opinion will change, the Government has tried to accord certain protections to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender ... persons.

Universal Periodic Reviews

The United Nations Human Rights Committee (UNHRC) in May 2010 completed a Universal Periodic Review of the human rights situation in Kenya. During the review, Kenya stated:[54]: page: 8 ¶ 50 

With regard to same-sex relationships, there had been serious intolerance because of cultural beliefs and overwhelming opposition to the decriminalization of such relationships, as observed during the constitutional review process. However, the Government did not support discrimination in terms of access to services.

The following recommendations were made to Kenya (the country that initiated the recommendation is listed in parentheses):[54]: page: 22 ¶ 103.5 

Take concrete steps to provide for the protection and equal treatment of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons (Netherlands); decriminalize same-sex activity between consenting adults (Czech Republic); repeal all legislative provisions which criminalize sexual activity between consenting adults (United States of America); decriminalize homosexuality by abrogating the legal provisions currently punishing sexual relations between consenting individuals of the same sex, and subscribe to the December 2008 General Assembly Declaration on sexual orientation and human rights (France)

In response, Kenya indicated on 6 May 2010 that same-sex unions were culturally unacceptable in Kenya.[54]: page: 23 ¶ 108  More specifically, Geoffrey Kibara, Secretary, Justice and Constitutional Affairs, Ministry of Justice, National Cohesion and Constitutional Affairs, said on behalf of the Kenyan delegation:[55]

We wish to state as follows. One, there has been a serious intolerance to homosexual relationships in the country because of cultural beliefs. In fact, these relationships are considered taboo in Kenya. The only way we see these being accepted would be over the long term if there are cultural changes. But currently there is serious opposition to decriminalizing same-sex relationships. In fact, during the constitution-making process, public views were received on this and they were overwhelmingly towards continuing the current criminalization of same-sex relationships. But we also want to state that as a government, we do not support discrimination on people who practice same-sex relationships. Discrimination whether in terms of access to services is expressly outlawed, particularly with regard to access to HIV/AIDS prevention and support facilities. The law that is HIV and AIDS Prevention and Control Act of 2006 expressly prohibits any discrimination towards same-sex relationships or people on the basis of their sexual orientation.

Pressure from the U.S. Department of State

The U.S. Department of State's 2011 human rights report found that "societal discrimination based on sexual orientation was widespread [in 2011] and resulted in loss of employment and educational opportunities. Violence against the LGBT community also occurred, particularly in rural areas and among refugees. [Nongovernmental organisation] groups reported that police intervened to stop attacks but were not generally sympathetic to LGBT individuals or concerns".[56]

On 26 June 2012, the United States embassy in Nairobi held what was believed to be the first ever LGBT pride event in Kenya. A public affairs officer at the embassy said, "The U.S. government for its part has made it clear that the advancement of human rights for LGBT people is central to our human rights policies around the world and to the realisation of our foreign policy goals". Similar events were held at other U.S. embassies around the world.[57]

Public opinion and living conditions

 
Guest house rules in the predominantly Islamic[58] East Coast

Public opinion on same-sex marriage (2023) based on Pew Research Center[59]

  Strongly favor (3%)
  Somewhat favor (6%)
  Not sure (1%)
  Somewhat oppose (8%)
  Strongly oppose (82%)

According to the 2020 Pew Global Attitudes Project, 14% of Kenyans said homosexuality should be accepted by society up from 1% in 2002. However, a majority (83%) responded that homosexuality should not be accepted by society.[60][61]

The non-governmental Kenya Human Rights Commission published, in 2011, the first research paper on the legal and social status of LGBTI people in Kenya. Among those who came out or were outed to their family members, 89 percent reported that they were disowned.[12]: pages: 24–25  Employees were reported to have been terminated or subjected to hostility, ridicule, humiliation, and discrimination when their sexual orientation or gender identity became known in the workplace.[12]: page: 26 

Traditional religious and cultural values play a substantial role in this figures. Leaders within the three dominate religions in Kenya, Catholic, Anglican and Islamic, condemn homosexuality and transgender identity as signs of decadence, disease, and immorality.

In June 2011, Kisauni Islamic College principal Sheikh Majid Obeid blamed inflation and drought on people who engage in same-sex acts. Council of Imams and Preachers of Kenya Organizing secretary Sheikh Mohammed Khalifa said, "We are asking Kenyans to shun businesses owned by such people and further show them open discrimination as a way of stopping the beastly act. They grossly abuse rights of others and should not be accepted among the society".[62]

A mob of 100 people led by religious leaders and village elders on 23 February 2012 stormed a meeting of homosexuals at the Likoni CDF Youth Empowerment and Library Centre. Likoni police boss Abagarro Guyo and district officer Moses Ouma then ordered the meeting closed. Sheikh Amir Zani of the Muzadhalfa mosque described the seminar as "illegal, ungodly and unacceptable". He threatened to "mobilise the community to cane the gays if they organised such a meeting again". But the Ministry of Youth and Sports district officer, David Ogal, defended the organisers of the seminar and accused residents of misunderstanding their aims:[63]

Here we are dealing with very vital education to vulnerable groups, including ... gays.... We are offering peer and HIV/AIDS education to the youth because they are at the highest risk of infection. ... The gay community, like other groups, approached us and requested to be educated on safe sex. They have a right to safe sex. By doing this, we are not promoting homosexuality but imparting knowledge. There is a lot of social discrimination and stigma about the issue and we as a society must fight it.

The governmental Kenya National Commission on Human Rights reported in April 2012 that,[64]

LGBIs are discriminated, stigmatised and subjected to violence because of their sexual orientation. In cases where they need medical care, they suffer stigma perpetuated by health care providers who breach their privacy and confidentiality by exposing their sexual orientation to other colleagues at the facilities. The health care providers are not friendly and hardly understand their sexual and reproductive health needs. ... LGBIs face physical harassment by members of public who mock and assault them for practicing "unnatural" sexual relations. In cases of assault by mob justice, the police often fail to come to their rescue. Upon arrest, police subject them to unnecessary body and house searches allegedly looking for evidence that could link them to other crimes. They are profiled as drug users, past prison convicts or individuals with track records of crimes. They often face arbitrary arrest, are often detained at the police stations, subjected to torture and unnecessary harassment by the police who extort money from them and are only released after bribing their way out. They also suffer sexual abuse from the arresting officers. ... When their identities are discovered, LGBIs cannot seek employment or undertake other forms of business—for example, running a kiosk. Sometimes, they have to keep relocating to different residential areas to hide their identity. ... Further they are often evicted from their rental houses by neighbours and condemned for their orientation which is termed evil. In cases where they are not evicted ..., they are not allowed to use common utilities in the residential compounds such as swimming pools. LGBIs are also unable to access spiritual nourishment from the society because they are labelled as evil and the teachings in places of worship interpret LGBI activities as unnatural and unacceptable.

In response, Peter Karanja, the general secretary of the National Council of Churches of Kenya, said on 11 May 2012,[65]

We are concerned that the direction the debate has taken is that of the recognition of homosexuality and prostitution which are against African beliefs and more so our Christian principles. This is a matter that deserves reflective discussion by our society in recognition of our values and beliefs. This is a view shared by our Muslim brothers and sisters. We do not however imply that those who practice them should be locked up, we believe they need assistance to change from these.

Julius Kalu, a bishop of the Anglican Church of Kenya in Mombasa, was reported to have said in July 2012 that the movement to allow same-sex marriages is a bigger threat to the Christian church than terrorism, even though Christians in Kenya have endured several terror attacks in 2012.[66] However, on 11 August 2012 during a meeting with LGBT Christians, Kalu denied having made that statement: "It was not me who said that gays are worse than terrorists. Never. However, all things work together for good to those who love God and I confess to you that, that article, however disparaging and infamous, has helped me know a lot about LGBT people. Because of it, I have been contacted by my fellow bishops in the listening group in the UK, Canada[,] and individual LGBTI people in Kenya. Therefore, let me clear the air on this issue, I never said anything of that sort! This is my very first time to ever see or even meet with LGBTI people and especially from Kenya. It is indeed a shame to me that I've been shepherding to LGBTI people in the Anglican Church when I even don't know!" The July 2012 murder of Tanzanian LGBT rights campaigner Maurice Mjomba was raised during the meeting and Kalu was reported to have "appeared visibly disturbed, saddened[,] and struck with grief" by the news. According to the report, "he stated that there was a need for human societies to live in love, care[,] and harmony with one another without assigning indifferences." He condemned the murder of Mjomba as a "heinous and cowardly" act and expressed the wish that someday soon LGBTI people will live in a free world without "violence and discrimination".[67]

In 2014, the Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB) banned the LGBT-themed film Stories of Our Lives, made by a Nairobi-based arts collective, from distribution or screening in Kenya, on the grounds that it "promotes" homosexuality.[68]

In 2015, Mark Kariuki, head of the Evangelical Alliance in Kenya and a bishop, said that then U.S. President Barack Obama should "leave the gay talk in America" during his state visit to Kenya. He also said that he does not want to "open doors for [Kenya] to be destroyed."[69]

Rafiki, a 2018 Kenyan drama film directed by Wanuri Kahiu was internationally successful and the first Kenyan film to be screened at the prestigious Cannes Film Festival in France. However it was banned by the KFCB "due to its homosexual theme and clear intent to promote lesbianism in Kenya contrary to the law".[70] The KFCB warned that anyone found in possession of the film would be in breach of the law in Kenya, where gay sex is punishable by 14 years in jail. The ban raised international outrage by the supporters of LGBT rights.[71][72]

The film's director, Wanuri Kahiu, sued Kenya's government, to allow the film to be screened and become eligible to be submitted as Kenya's entry for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards.[73] On 21 September 2018, the Kenyan High Court lifted the ban on the film, allowing it to be screened in the country for seven days, therefore meeting the eligibility requirements.[74][75] After the ban was lifted, the film was shown to a sold-out crowd at a cinema in Nairobi.[76] Despite the ban being lifted, it was not selected as Kenya's submission in the Foreign Language Film category, with Supa Modo being sent instead.[77][78]

Views of government officials

In November 2010, Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga said the behavior of gay couples was "unnatural" and that, "If found the homosexuals should be arrested and taken to relevant authorities". He asserted that "there was no need for homosexual relationships" because the most recent census showed there were more women than men. He said it was "madness for a man to fall in love with another man while there were plenty of women" and that "there was no need for women to engage in lesbianism yet they can bear children".[79] Days later, Odinga denied ordering the arrest of gay couples, saying he meant only that same-sex marriages are illegal in Kenya.[80]

In November 2010, the commissioner of prisons, Isaiah Osugo, announced a plan for closed-circuit television surveillance in Kenyan prisons to curb sex between male inmates.[81]

The chief justice of the Kenyan Supreme Court, Willy Munyoki Mutunga, said at a groundbreaking ceremony for FIDA Uganda in Kampala on 8 September 2011,[82]

The other frontier of marginalization is the gay rights movement. Gay rights are human rights. Here I'm simply confining my statement to the context of human rights and social justice paradigm, and avoiding the controversy that exists in our constitutions and various legislation. As far as I know, human rights principles that we work on, do not allow us to implement human rights selectively. We need clarity on this issue within the human rights movement in East Africa, if we are to face the challenges that are spearheaded by powerful political and religious forces in our midst. I find the arguments made by some of our human rights activists, the so-called "moral arguments", simply rationalizations for using human rights principles opportunistically and selectively. We need to bring together the opposing viewpoints in the movement of this issue for final and conclusive debate.

When former U.S. President Barack Obama visited Kenya in July 2015, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta rebutted Obama's stance on equal rights for all, including sexual orientation, by stating that for Kenyans LGBT rights are a non-issue and not in line with Kenyan culture.[83]

In April 2018, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said that LGBT rights are "not acceptable" and "of no importance to the people of the Republic of Kenya." He also added that the LGBT rights issue in Kenya is not an "issue of human rights" but an "issue of [Kenyan] society and culture."[84]

LGBT rights movement in Kenya

LGBT rights organisations in Kenya include the Gay and Lesbian Coalition of Kenya, Gay Kenya Trust, National Gay & Lesbian Human Rights Commission, and the East Africa Trans Health & Advocacy Network.

In March 2019, 3 out of 5 judges in the Court of Appeal ruled that the government could not use colonial-era laws criminalising gay sexual activity to block the National Gay Lesbian Human Rights Commission (NGLHRC) from being registered as a non-profit organization, and dismissed the appeal after the government's Non-Governmental Organisations Coordination Board rejecting its application for registration as a charity on the basis that it was for gay and lesbian people.[85] The government appealed the judgment to the Supreme Court, which in a 3-2 decision dismissed the appeal.[86]

The body of murdered LGBTQ activist and fashion business owner, Edwin Chiloba was found in Uasin Gishu on 3 January 2023.[87][88]

Summary table

Same-sex sexual activity legal   Penalty: Up to 14 to 21 years in prison with fines. A bill that would ban "aggravated homosexuality" with death was attempted in 2023.
Equal age of consent  
Anti-discrimination laws in employment only   Limited protection under the Children Act 2022.
Anti-discrimination laws in the provision of goods and services  
Anti-discrimination laws in all other areas (Incl. indirect discrimination, hate speech)  
Same-sex marriages   (Constitutional ban since 2010)[3]
Recognition of same-sex couples  
Stepchild adoption by same-sex couples  
Joint adoption by same-sex couples  
LGBT people allowed to serve openly in the military  
Right to change legal gender  
Access to IVF for lesbians  
Conversion therapy made illegal  
LGBT propaganda laws removed allowing LGBT freedom of expression  
Commercial surrogacy for gay male couples  
MSMs allowed to donate blood  

See also

References

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External links

lgbt, rights, kenya, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, lgbt, people, kenya, face, significant, challenges, experienced, lgbt, residents, sodomy, felony, section, kenyan, penal, code, punishable, years, imprisonment, sexual, practices, termed, gross, indecency, f. Lesbian gay bisexual and transgender LGBT people in Kenya face significant challenges not experienced by non LGBT residents 4 5 Sodomy is a felony per Section 162 of the Kenyan Penal Code punishable by 21 years imprisonment and any sexual practices termed gross indecency are a felony under section 165 of the same statute punishable by 5 years imprisonment On 24 May 2019 the High Court of Kenya refused an order to declare sections 162 and 165 unconstitutional 6 The state does not recognise any relationships between persons of the same sex same sex marriage is banned under the Kenyan Constitution since 2010 There are no explicit protections against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity Adoption is restricted to heterosexual couples only LGBT rights in KenyaKenyaStatusIllegal since 1897 as East Africa Protectorate 1 PenaltyUp to 14 to 21 years prison with fines Gender identityNoMilitaryNoDiscrimination protectionsLimited protection following a legal process 2 Family rightsRecognition of relationshipsNo recognition of same sex unionsRestrictionsSame sex marriage constitutionally banned since 2010 3 AdoptionLGBT individuals and same sex couples are not allowed to adopt Transgender people have historically suffered discrimination and there are no statutory provisions relating to transgender rights However there have been a series of court rulings in favour of transgender rights such as the right to change the names appearing on legal documents It is currently unclear as to whether these rulings constitute substantive law on the issue of changing legal gender Kenyan society is highly conservative and a large majority of people hold negative views of LGBT people 5 In 2023 Pew Research Center estimated that over 90 of Kenyans oppose same sex marriage 7 Nevertheless public support has slowly been growing and various organisations are working to protect and improve LGBT rights 8 Contents 1 Laws about same sex sexual activity 1 1 Statutes 1 2 Constitutional provisions 1 2 1 Article 2 1 2 2 Article 10 1 2 3 Article 19 1 2 4 Article 20 1 2 5 Article 24 1 2 6 Article 27 1 2 7 Article 28 1 2 8 Article 31 1 3 Failed decriminalisation efforts 2 Pending bill to punish homosexuality with death 3 Recognition of same sex unions 3 1 False rumor about impending same sex marriage in Mtwapa 3 2 Traditional female same sex marriage 4 Adoption and family planning 5 Gender identity and expression 6 Intersex rights 7 International pressure on Kenya to legalise same sex sexual activities 7 1 Reports and recommendations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 7 2 Universal Periodic Reviews 7 3 Pressure from the U S Department of State 8 Public opinion and living conditions 8 1 Views of government officials 9 LGBT rights movement in Kenya 10 Summary table 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksLaws about same sex sexual activityStatutes Expressions of homosexuality are illegal under Kenyan statutes and carry a maximum penalty of 14 years imprisonment to 21 years in certain aggravating circumstances Sex acts between women are mentioned under the gender neutral term person in Section 162 of the Penal Code and are enforced equally Indeed Prime Minister Raila Odinga on 28 November 2010 called for them to be arrested along with gay men 9 10 The Kenyan Penal Code of 1930 as revised in 2006 provides as follows 11 Section 162 Unnatural offenses Any person who a has carnal knowledge of any person against the order of nature or c permits a male person to have carnal knowledge of him or her against the order of nature is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen years dd Provided that in the case of an offence under paragraph a the offender shall be liable to imprisonment for twenty one years if i the offence was committed without the consent of the person who was carnally known or ii the offence was committed with that person s consent but the consent was obtained by force or by means of threats or intimidation of some kind or by fear of bodily harm or by means of false representations as to the nature of the act dd Section 163 Attempt to commit unnatural offenses Any person who attempts to commit any of the offences specified in section 162 is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for seven years Section 165 Indecent practices between males Any male person who whether in public or private commits any act of gross indecency with another male person or procures another male person to commit any act of gross indecency with him or attempts to procure the commission of any such act by any male person with himself or with another male person whether in public or private is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for five years The Kenya Human Rights Commission reported in 2011 about how these statutes have indirect but very adverse effects on LGBTI persons saying 12 pages 21 23 Same sex sexual practices remain criminalized and even though there are few convictions based on sections 162 to 165 of the Penal Code LGBTI persons are routinely harassed by the police held in remand houses beyond the constitutional period without charges being preferred against them and presented in court on trumped up charges Closely related to this is a cartel of corrupt police officials who routinely extort and blackmail LGBTI persons with the threat of arrest and imprisonment if they do not give those bribes LGBTI sex workers mostly MSMs men who have sex with men are often asked for bribes and sexual favours by male police officers in exchange for their freedom and security Those who fail to give bribes or sexual favours are charged with tramped up charges and sometimes raped by state security officers In a 2020 2021 report the Nairobi based National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission reported incidents of police demanding bribes 13 14 Constitutional provisions The Constitution of Kenya 3 which took effect 27 August 2010 does not expressly protect the rights of LGBTI persons because according to the experts who drafted the constitution a majority of Kenyans would have rejected the constitution in the referendum to adopt it 15 Nevertheless few argue that Kenya s statutes discriminating against LGBTI persons are unconstitutional and void because of the constitution s broad protection of civil and human rights Peter Anaminyi the national director of Feba Radio Kenya predicted in June 2011 that within 18 months there would be a challenge to the constitutionality of the Kenya Penal Code 16 Article 2 Article 2 of the Constitution of Kenya provides in paragraph 5 that the general rules of international law shall form part of the law of Kenya and in paragraph 6 that a ny treaty or convention ratified by Kenya shall form part of the law of Kenya under this Constitution In paragraph 4 the constitution states a ny law including customary law that is inconsistent with the Constitution is void to the extent of the inconsistency and any act or omission in contravention of the Constitution is invalid A subsequent section of this article lists Kenya s obligations under international law and treaties concerning LGBTI rights 17 To the extent that any Kenyan law violates Kenya s voluntary or involuntary obligations under international law the law is arguably void under Article 2 18 pages 448 9 Article 10 Article 10 2 b of the Constitution of Kenya provides that The national values and principles of governance include human dignity equity social justice inclusiveness equality human rights non discrimination and protection of the marginalised Concerning this provision Right there there is a firm basis for one to argue against the violation of their LGBTI persons dignity on the basis of their gender or sexual orientation There is firm ground to contest for inclusion non discrimination and equality too 17 Article 19 Article 19 of the Constitution of Kenya provides that 1 The Bill of Rights Articles 19 59 is an integral part of Kenya s democratic state and is the framework for social economic and cultural policies 2 The purpose of recognizing and protecting human rights and fundamental freedoms is to preserve the dignity of individuals and communities and to promote social justice and the realization of the potential of all human beings Article 20 Article 20 3 b of the Constitution of Kenya requires courts when applying a provision of the Bill of Rights to adopt the legal interpretation that most favours the enforcement of a right or fundamental freedom Concerning this article Makau Mutua the chair of the Kenya Human Rights Commission and the dean at the University at Buffalo Law School The State University of New York says that where a right is contested the courts must take the most liberal interpretation of the law to avoid denying the right 19 Article 24 Article 24 1 of the Constitution of Kenya provides that A right or fundamental freedom in the Bill of Rights shall not be limited except by law and then only to the extent that the limitation is reasonable and justifiable in an open and democratic society based on human dignity equality and freedom taking into account all relevant factors Article 27 Article 27 of the Constitution of Kenya provides that Every person is equal before the law and has the right to equal protection and equal benefit of the law Equality includes the full and equal enjoyment of all rights and fundamental freedoms Women and men have the right to equal treatment including the right to equal opportunities in political economic cultural and social spheres The State shall not discriminate directly or indirectly against any person on any ground including race sex pregnancy marital status health status ethnic or social origin colour age disability religion conscience belief culture dress language or birth A person shall not discriminate directly or indirectly against another person on any of the grounds specified or contemplated in clause 4 Concerning this article The Equal Rights Trust and the non governmental Kenya Human Rights Commission said in 2012 20 While the Constitution does not explicitly provide for non discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity there is scope for this to be rectified through the courts or subsequent legislation Article 27 4 of the Constitution of Kenya 2010 provides that the state shall not discriminate directly or indirectly on any ground including listed characteristics while Article 27 5 states that persons shall not discriminate on any of the grounds specified or contemplated in clause 4 Thus defined the prohibition on discrimination by both the state and non state actors should be read as inclusive of sexual orientation and gender identity In a May 2012 submission to the United Nations Human Rights Committee the government of Kenya agreed with this interpretation of Article 27 4 21 Makau Mutua argues that the Kenya Penal Code is unconstitutional under this article He said 19 Article 27 which is the Equal Protection of the Constitution provides every person is equal before the law and has the right to equal protection before the law That s an unequivocal categorical and blanket protection against discrimination The article doesn t exclude homosexuals from the ambit of constitutional protection Further Article 27 4 prohibits discrimination on the grounds of sex The prohibition of discrimination on the grounds of sex has been understood to include sexual orientation The Constitution eliminates all wiggle room by prohibiting both direct and indirect discrimination Article 28 Article 28 of the Constitution of Kenya provides that Every person has inherent dignity and the right to have that dignity respected and protected This article offers fresh impetus to the rights of the LGBTI community 17 Article 31 Article 31 of the Constitution of Kenya provides that Every person has the right to privacy Privacy is a fundamental human right enshrined in numerous international human rights instruments Failed decriminalisation efforts In 2013 the Cosmopolitan Affirming Church CAC opened in Nairobi becoming the first openly LGBT church in the country 22 The church is considered to be a rare space where Kenya s LGBT community can escape hostility from society 22 In 2016 The Employment and Relations Court in the Kenyan town of Nyeri ordered the Anglican Church of Kenya to reinstate three priests who were suspended in 2015 after allegations surfaced that they were gay 23 The priests later sued Bishop Joseph Kagunda of the Mount Kenya West Diocese and it was later agreed that they would settle the lawsuit through mediation 24 In December 2018 it was announced that the Anglican Church in Kenya had given each of the three priests individual compensations of KSh 6 8 million 25 The High Court of Kenya heard a legal challenge against on 22 and 23 February 2018 filed by the Kenyan National Gay and Lesbian Rights Commission NGLHRC will argue that sections of the Kenyan Penal Code are in breach of the Constitution and deny basic rights to Kenyan citizens The case Eric Gitari v Attorney General amp another Petition no 150 of 2016 filed in 2016 seeks to strike down sections Section 162 a and c and section 165 of the Penal Code Cap 63 that criminalise consensual same sex relations between adults Eric Gitari executive director of NGLHRC and the main petitioner states that sections of the Penal Code are used to justify violence against LGBT persons in Kenya 26 27 28 The constitutional division of Kenya s High Court will hear submissions from both parties on 25 October on the relevance of the decision by the Supreme Court of India to legalise gay sex by overturning Section 377 to Kenya given that both countries have shared the law dating back to the days of British colonial rule that criminalises sexual acts against the order of nature 29 30 31 The High Court was expected to announce its ruling on 22 February 2019 32 On the scheduled date however it was announced that the ruling would be delayed until 24 May 2019 33 On 24 May 2019 the High Court of Kenya refused an order to declare sections 162 and 165 unconstitutional 6 LGBT activists vowed to file an appeal in the Court of Appeal 34 35 In a separate case a Court of Appeal in Mombasa Kenya ruled on 22 March 2018 that conducting forced anal examinations on people who are accused of same sex relations is unconstitutional The ruling reversed a 2016 High Court decision that had upheld the Kenyan authorities use of forced anal exams to attempt to provide evidence of homosexual conduct The National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission NGLHRC a nongovernmental organisation based in Nairobi filed a constitutional challenge after police arrested two men in Kwale County in February 2015 on charges of homosexuality and subjected them to forced anal exams HIV tests and hepatitis B tests at Mombasa s Madaraka Hospital 36 37 38 Following this decision Empowering Marginalized Communities EMAC a non governmental organization based in Machakos county prosecuted a case that involved two members of the LGBT community who were allegedly caught having sex in Kakuyuni area of Kangundo sub county The two men were taken for anal examination at the Kangundo Level 4 hospital This was contested at the magistrate court of Kangundo and thus the anal examination was halted 39 Pending bill to punish homosexuality with deathCopying the Anti Homosexuality Act of Uganda a carbon copy bill called the Family Protection Act has been introduced This law allows aggravated homosexuality to be punished with death and would ban all promotion of LGBT activity 40 The bill was ruled against on 12th September 2023 according to the Gay and Lesbian Coalition of Kenya website citation needed Recognition of same sex unionsArticle 45 2 of the Constitution of Kenya specifically authorises heterosexual marriage but makes no reference to same sex marriage Every adult has the right to marry a person of the opposite sex based on the free consent of the parties 41 In October 2009 two Kenyan men Charles Ngengi and Daniel Chege became civil partners at a ceremony in London United Kingdom The ceremony received widespread attention in Kenya most of it critical Chege s relatives were harassed severely by people living in his home village of Gathiru in Murang a District 42 False rumor about impending same sex marriage in Mtwapa In February 2010 a rumor spread in the coastal town of Mtwapa that two Kenyan men were going to marry in a local hotel The rumor unleashed a house to house witch hunt by anti gay vigilantes street attacks targeting gay men the sacking of an AIDS fighting medical center and a widening wave of ultra homophobic national media coverage 43 A local radio station Kaya FM picked up the story and started a series of programs on gays which included phone in talk shows filled with homophobic discourse and incitements to violence 43 Baraka FM Rahma FM and ultimately national radio stations including Kiss and Classic FM also ran the story Five days before the date of the non existent wedding many of the muftis and imams discussed the impending wedding during Friday prayers and asked the community to be vigilant against homosexuals They told their congregants to demonstrate and to flush out homosexuals from the midst of Mtwapa and to ensure that no gay wedding took place 43 The day before the non existent wedding a press conference condemning the wedding was held by Sheikh Ali Hussein regional coordinator of the Council of Imams and Preachers of Kenya together with Bishop Lawrence Chai regional representative of the National Council of Churches of Kenya They warned that God is about to punish the fastest growing town in the Coast region Come night come day we shall not allow that marriage to be conducted in this town tomorrow We shall stand firm to flush out gays who throng this town every weekend from all corners of this country 43 They also warned the owner of a building in the town who was allegedly renting rooms only to homosexuals to evict them within seven days or face their wrath The two denounced the Mtwapa clinic run by the Kenya Medical Research Institute which has an AIDS program for counseling and treating men who have sex with men We ask that the government shut it down with immediate effect or we will descend on its officials 43 A former member of Kenya s parliament Omar Masumbuko addressed the mob gathered outside the police station He said that homosexuality must be stopped and every means used to make that happen 43 He told the crowd they should not even bother to bring the homosexuals they find to the police station but should take care of the issue themselves 43 Traditional female same sex marriage Female same sex marriage is practiced among the Gikuyu Nandi Kamba Kipsigis and to a lesser extent neighboring peoples Approximately 5 10 of women in these nations are in such marriages However this is not seen as homosexual but is instead a way for families without sons to keep their inheritance within the family The couples are considered married though the terms used for them are mother in law and daughter in law The female husband the mother in law carries on the family name and property while the female wife the daughter in law bears children with the intention of having a son The female husband may be widowed but may also have a living male husband but he will not be the father of the female wife s children and the identity of the biological father though often kin is kept secret Such marriages may be polygamous in 2010 a woman was interviewed who had taken five wives 44 Adoption and family planningThe Children Act 2001 makes homosexuals and unmarried couples ineligible to adopt children 45 Even if that ineligibility does not apply specifically a court may refuse to make an adoption order in respect of any person or persons if it is satisfied for any reason that it would not be in the best interests of the welfare of the child to do so 46 Gender identity and expressionWith respect to transgender persons there is no legal means to change your gender in Kenya The governmental Kenya National Commission on Human Rights reported in April 2012 that the transgender community face much discrimination in the country 47 T ransgender people in Kenya suffer stigma and discrimination and are not able to access gender re assignment therapy A witness who testified at the Inquiry indicated that she had undergone all the processes of re assignment but Kenyatta National Hospital declined the surgery and did not offer any reasons for declining Her attempts to appeal to the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentist s Board have not been successful Without being allowed to complete the therapy transgender people suffer identity problems since they are biologically either male or female yet they present themselves in one of the gender by mode of dressing personality expressions or through other socially defined roles When arrested police often face difficulties regarding what cells male or female to detain transgender individuals When at entertainment areas they are afraid of using bathrooms designated for either sex for fear of being caught by other people and accused or mistaken to be using bathrooms for sexual crimes The witness testified that sometimes they meet opposite sex partners who demand to have sexual relationships with them When they discover that they are not female or male depending on the gender of the sex partner they scream and attract members of public to the hotel room causing public nuisance stigma and embarrassment to the transgender person Transgender people face stigma discrimination and violence in Kenya Discrimination in particular is prevalent as is sexual violence This is in the areas of recognition of a third sex by the government access to justice employment and other spheres of public life Transgender Education and Advocacy TEA is a human rights organisation working towards ending human rights violations against transgender transsexual people Established in December 2008 the TEA aims to change the public mentality towards transgender transsexual people through awareness raising campaigns advocating for legal and policy reforms and empowering transgender transsexual people 48 Intersex rightsMain article Intersex rights in Kenya Intersex people face stigma discrimination and violence in Kenya including mutilation and non consensual medical interventions and difficulties in obtaining documentation International pressure on Kenya to legalise same sex sexual activities nbsp LGBT activists at Cologne Pride carrying a banner with the flags of 72 countries where homosexuality is illegal Reports and recommendations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Kenya became a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights on 1 May 1972 49 Under Article 40 of the Covenant 50 the United Nations Human Rights Committee UNHRC reviewed and made recommendations on 24 March 2005 concerning Kenya s 18 years late second periodic report The UNHRC urged Kenya to repeal Section 162 Penal Code which criminalises homosexuality 51 page 6 On 19 August 2010 in its third periodic report Kenya responded formally to this recommendation 52 53 Kenya may not decriminalize same sex unions at this stage as such acts are considered as taboo and offences against the order of nature which are repugnant to cultural values and morality Indeed the public gave overwhelming presentations to the Committee of Experts on Constitutional Review against the inclusion of same sex rights under the new constitution It must however be reiterated that the government does not discriminate against anyone in the provision of services No one is ever required under the law to declare their sexual orientation under any circumstances Kenya further addressed these issues in May 2012 21 Kenya is currently not undertaking any measures to decriminalize same sex unions Public opinion is strongly against the legalization of same sex unions The Constitution provides under article 45 2 that a person has the right to marry a person of the opposite sex based on the free consent of both parties However under article 27 4 the Constitution the grounds prohibited for non discrimination are not limited and therefore this allows room for individuals to claim the violation of their rights on the grounds of their sexual orientation in the event that they are discriminated against either directly or indirectly by the State or other individuals Until such time that public opinion will change the Government has tried to accord certain protections to lesbian gay bisexual and transgender persons Universal Periodic Reviews The United Nations Human Rights Committee UNHRC in May 2010 completed a Universal Periodic Review of the human rights situation in Kenya During the review Kenya stated 54 page 8 50 With regard to same sex relationships there had been serious intolerance because of cultural beliefs and overwhelming opposition to the decriminalization of such relationships as observed during the constitutional review process However the Government did not support discrimination in terms of access to services The following recommendations were made to Kenya the country that initiated the recommendation is listed in parentheses 54 page 22 103 5 Take concrete steps to provide for the protection and equal treatment of lesbian gay bisexual and transgender persons Netherlands decriminalize same sex activity between consenting adults Czech Republic repeal all legislative provisions which criminalize sexual activity between consenting adults United States of America decriminalize homosexuality by abrogating the legal provisions currently punishing sexual relations between consenting individuals of the same sex and subscribe to the December 2008 General Assembly Declaration on sexual orientation and human rights France In response Kenya indicated on 6 May 2010 that same sex unions were culturally unacceptable in Kenya 54 page 23 108 More specifically Geoffrey Kibara Secretary Justice and Constitutional Affairs Ministry of Justice National Cohesion and Constitutional Affairs said on behalf of the Kenyan delegation 55 We wish to state as follows One there has been a serious intolerance to homosexual relationships in the country because of cultural beliefs In fact these relationships are considered taboo in Kenya The only way we see these being accepted would be over the long term if there are cultural changes But currently there is serious opposition to decriminalizing same sex relationships In fact during the constitution making process public views were received on this and they were overwhelmingly towards continuing the current criminalization of same sex relationships But we also want to state that as a government we do not support discrimination on people who practice same sex relationships Discrimination whether in terms of access to services is expressly outlawed particularly with regard to access to HIV AIDS prevention and support facilities The law that is HIV and AIDS Prevention and Control Act of 2006 expressly prohibits any discrimination towards same sex relationships or people on the basis of their sexual orientation Pressure from the U S Department of State The U S Department of State s 2011 human rights report found that societal discrimination based on sexual orientation was widespread in 2011 and resulted in loss of employment and educational opportunities Violence against the LGBT community also occurred particularly in rural areas and among refugees Nongovernmental organisation groups reported that police intervened to stop attacks but were not generally sympathetic to LGBT individuals or concerns 56 On 26 June 2012 the United States embassy in Nairobi held what was believed to be the first ever LGBT pride event in Kenya A public affairs officer at the embassy said The U S government for its part has made it clear that the advancement of human rights for LGBT people is central to our human rights policies around the world and to the realisation of our foreign policy goals Similar events were held at other U S embassies around the world 57 Public opinion and living conditions nbsp Guest house rules in the predominantly Islamic 58 East Coast Public opinion on same sex marriage 2023 based on Pew Research Center 59 Strongly favor 3 Somewhat favor 6 Not sure 1 Somewhat oppose 8 Strongly oppose 82 According to the 2020 Pew Global Attitudes Project 14 of Kenyans said homosexuality should be accepted by society up from 1 in 2002 However a majority 83 responded that homosexuality should not be accepted by society 60 61 The non governmental Kenya Human Rights Commission published in 2011 the first research paper on the legal and social status of LGBTI people in Kenya Among those who came out or were outed to their family members 89 percent reported that they were disowned 12 pages 24 25 Employees were reported to have been terminated or subjected to hostility ridicule humiliation and discrimination when their sexual orientation or gender identity became known in the workplace 12 page 26 Traditional religious and cultural values play a substantial role in this figures Leaders within the three dominate religions in Kenya Catholic Anglican and Islamic condemn homosexuality and transgender identity as signs of decadence disease and immorality In June 2011 Kisauni Islamic College principal Sheikh Majid Obeid blamed inflation and drought on people who engage in same sex acts Council of Imams and Preachers of Kenya Organizing secretary Sheikh Mohammed Khalifa said We are asking Kenyans to shun businesses owned by such people and further show them open discrimination as a way of stopping the beastly act They grossly abuse rights of others and should not be accepted among the society 62 A mob of 100 people led by religious leaders and village elders on 23 February 2012 stormed a meeting of homosexuals at the Likoni CDF Youth Empowerment and Library Centre Likoni police boss Abagarro Guyo and district officer Moses Ouma then ordered the meeting closed Sheikh Amir Zani of the Muzadhalfa mosque described the seminar as illegal ungodly and unacceptable He threatened to mobilise the community to cane the gays if they organised such a meeting again But the Ministry of Youth and Sports district officer David Ogal defended the organisers of the seminar and accused residents of misunderstanding their aims 63 Here we are dealing with very vital education to vulnerable groups including gays We are offering peer and HIV AIDS education to the youth because they are at the highest risk of infection The gay community like other groups approached us and requested to be educated on safe sex They have a right to safe sex By doing this we are not promoting homosexuality but imparting knowledge There is a lot of social discrimination and stigma about the issue and we as a society must fight it The governmental Kenya National Commission on Human Rights reported in April 2012 that 64 LGBIs are discriminated stigmatised and subjected to violence because of their sexual orientation In cases where they need medical care they suffer stigma perpetuated by health care providers who breach their privacy and confidentiality by exposing their sexual orientation to other colleagues at the facilities The health care providers are not friendly and hardly understand their sexual and reproductive health needs LGBIs face physical harassment by members of public who mock and assault them for practicing unnatural sexual relations In cases of assault by mob justice the police often fail to come to their rescue Upon arrest police subject them to unnecessary body and house searches allegedly looking for evidence that could link them to other crimes They are profiled as drug users past prison convicts or individuals with track records of crimes They often face arbitrary arrest are often detained at the police stations subjected to torture and unnecessary harassment by the police who extort money from them and are only released after bribing their way out They also suffer sexual abuse from the arresting officers When their identities are discovered LGBIs cannot seek employment or undertake other forms of business for example running a kiosk Sometimes they have to keep relocating to different residential areas to hide their identity Further they are often evicted from their rental houses by neighbours and condemned for their orientation which is termed evil In cases where they are not evicted they are not allowed to use common utilities in the residential compounds such as swimming pools LGBIs are also unable to access spiritual nourishment from the society because they are labelled as evil and the teachings in places of worship interpret LGBI activities as unnatural and unacceptable In response Peter Karanja the general secretary of the National Council of Churches of Kenya said on 11 May 2012 65 We are concerned that the direction the debate has taken is that of the recognition of homosexuality and prostitution which are against African beliefs and more so our Christian principles This is a matter that deserves reflective discussion by our society in recognition of our values and beliefs This is a view shared by our Muslim brothers and sisters We do not however imply that those who practice them should be locked up we believe they need assistance to change from these Julius Kalu a bishop of the Anglican Church of Kenya in Mombasa was reported to have said in July 2012 that the movement to allow same sex marriages is a bigger threat to the Christian church than terrorism even though Christians in Kenya have endured several terror attacks in 2012 66 However on 11 August 2012 during a meeting with LGBT Christians Kalu denied having made that statement It was not me who said that gays are worse than terrorists Never However all things work together for good to those who love God and I confess to you that that article however disparaging and infamous has helped me know a lot about LGBT people Because of it I have been contacted by my fellow bishops in the listening group in the UK Canada and individual LGBTI people in Kenya Therefore let me clear the air on this issue I never said anything of that sort This is my very first time to ever see or even meet with LGBTI people and especially from Kenya It is indeed a shame to me that I ve been shepherding to LGBTI people in the Anglican Church when I even don t know The July 2012 murder of Tanzanian LGBT rights campaigner Maurice Mjomba was raised during the meeting and Kalu was reported to have appeared visibly disturbed saddened and struck with grief by the news According to the report he stated that there was a need for human societies to live in love care and harmony with one another without assigning indifferences He condemned the murder of Mjomba as a heinous and cowardly act and expressed the wish that someday soon LGBTI people will live in a free world without violence and discrimination 67 In 2014 the Kenya Film Classification Board KFCB banned the LGBT themed film Stories of Our Lives made by a Nairobi based arts collective from distribution or screening in Kenya on the grounds that it promotes homosexuality 68 In 2015 Mark Kariuki head of the Evangelical Alliance in Kenya and a bishop said that then U S President Barack Obama should leave the gay talk in America during his state visit to Kenya He also said that he does not want to open doors for Kenya to be destroyed 69 Rafiki a 2018 Kenyan drama film directed by Wanuri Kahiu was internationally successful and the first Kenyan film to be screened at the prestigious Cannes Film Festival in France However it was banned by the KFCB due to its homosexual theme and clear intent to promote lesbianism in Kenya contrary to the law 70 The KFCB warned that anyone found in possession of the film would be in breach of the law in Kenya where gay sex is punishable by 14 years in jail The ban raised international outrage by the supporters of LGBT rights 71 72 The film s director Wanuri Kahiu sued Kenya s government to allow the film to be screened and become eligible to be submitted as Kenya s entry for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards 73 On 21 September 2018 the Kenyan High Court lifted the ban on the film allowing it to be screened in the country for seven days therefore meeting the eligibility requirements 74 75 After the ban was lifted the film was shown to a sold out crowd at a cinema in Nairobi 76 Despite the ban being lifted it was not selected as Kenya s submission in the Foreign Language Film category with Supa Modo being sent instead 77 78 Views of government officials In November 2010 Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga said the behavior of gay couples was unnatural and that If found the homosexuals should be arrested and taken to relevant authorities He asserted that there was no need for homosexual relationships because the most recent census showed there were more women than men He said it was madness for a man to fall in love with another man while there were plenty of women and that there was no need for women to engage in lesbianism yet they can bear children 79 Days later Odinga denied ordering the arrest of gay couples saying he meant only that same sex marriages are illegal in Kenya 80 In November 2010 the commissioner of prisons Isaiah Osugo announced a plan for closed circuit television surveillance in Kenyan prisons to curb sex between male inmates 81 The chief justice of the Kenyan Supreme Court Willy Munyoki Mutunga said at a groundbreaking ceremony for FIDA Uganda in Kampala on 8 September 2011 82 The other frontier of marginalization is the gay rights movement Gay rights are human rights Here I m simply confining my statement to the context of human rights and social justice paradigm and avoiding the controversy that exists in our constitutions and various legislation As far as I know human rights principles that we work on do not allow us to implement human rights selectively We need clarity on this issue within the human rights movement in East Africa if we are to face the challenges that are spearheaded by powerful political and religious forces in our midst I find the arguments made by some of our human rights activists the so called moral arguments simply rationalizations for using human rights principles opportunistically and selectively We need to bring together the opposing viewpoints in the movement of this issue for final and conclusive debate When former U S President Barack Obama visited Kenya in July 2015 Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta rebutted Obama s stance on equal rights for all including sexual orientation by stating that for Kenyans LGBT rights are a non issue and not in line with Kenyan culture 83 In April 2018 Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said that LGBT rights are not acceptable and of no importance to the people of the Republic of Kenya He also added that the LGBT rights issue in Kenya is not an issue of human rights but an issue of Kenyan society and culture 84 LGBT rights movement in KenyaMain article Gay and Lesbian Coalition of Kenya LGBT rights organisations in Kenya include the Gay and Lesbian Coalition of Kenya Gay Kenya Trust National Gay amp Lesbian Human Rights Commission and the East Africa Trans Health amp Advocacy Network In March 2019 3 out of 5 judges in the Court of Appeal ruled that the government could not use colonial era laws criminalising gay sexual activity to block the National Gay Lesbian Human Rights Commission NGLHRC from being registered as a non profit organization and dismissed the appeal after the government s Non Governmental Organisations Coordination Board rejecting its application for registration as a charity on the basis that it was for gay and lesbian people 85 The government appealed the judgment to the Supreme Court which in a 3 2 decision dismissed the appeal 86 The body of murdered LGBTQ activist and fashion business owner Edwin Chiloba was found in Uasin Gishu on 3 January 2023 87 88 Summary tableSame sex sexual activity legal nbsp Penalty Up to 14 to 21 years in prison with fines A bill that would ban aggravated homosexuality with death was attempted in 2023 Equal age of consent nbsp Anti discrimination laws in employment only nbsp Limited protection under the Children Act 2022 Anti discrimination laws in the provision of goods and services nbsp Anti discrimination laws in all other areas Incl indirect discrimination hate speech nbsp Same sex marriages nbsp Constitutional ban since 2010 3 Recognition of same sex couples nbsp Stepchild adoption by same sex couples nbsp Joint adoption by same sex couples nbsp LGBT people allowed to serve openly in the military nbsp Right to change legal gender nbsp Access to IVF for lesbians nbsp Conversion therapy made illegal nbsp LGBT propaganda laws removed allowing LGBT freedom of expression nbsp Commercial surrogacy for gay male couples nbsp MSMs allowed to donate blood nbsp See also nbsp LGBT portal nbsp Kenya portal Human rights in Kenya Kenya Human Rights Commission LGBT rights in Africa Denis NziokaReferences Where is it illegal to be gay BBC News 10 February 2014 Salerno Rob 4 January 2024 2023 World Same Sex Marriage and LGBT Rights Progress Part 4 Africa and Oceania a b c Kenya Constitution PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 May 2019 Retrieved 25 March 2012 Why are Kenya and Uganda cracking down on LGBTQ rights Al Jazeera 23 March 2023 Retrieved 24 August 2023 a b Hansford Amelia Kenya set to introduce cruel anti homosexuality law PinkNews Retrieved 18 September 2023 a b Blow To LGBTQ As High Court Declines To Repeal Section 162 of the Penal Code KahawaTungu 24 May 2019 Archived from the original on 29 May 2019 Retrieved 24 May 2019 Gubbala Sneha Poushter Jacob Huang Christine How people around the world view same sex marriage Pew Research Center Retrieved 28 November 2023 Lucas Barasa and Joy Wanja 18 May 2010 Kenya gay demand recognition Saturday Nation Arrest Gays Kenyan PM Orders Behind the Mask 30 November 2010 Archived from the original on 20 July 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2012 Kenya gay activist criticises Odinga crackdown threat BBC News Africa 29 November 2010 accessed 30 November 2010 Kenya Penal Code Sections 162 163 and 165 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 June 2014 Retrieved 17 March 2012 a b c The Outlawed Amongst Us Kenya Human Rights Commission 2011 Archived from the original on 15 January 2016 Retrieved 22 March 2012 2020 2021 Annual Legal Aid Report PDF 2021 Okata Jackson April 2024 How trans and intersex people in Kenya have to bribe police hospitals and landlords to survive CNN Retrieved 4 April 2024 Kenya Law Review Experts Rule Out Rights for Homosexuals Daily Nation reported by Mathias Ringa reprinted in allAfrica com 18 October 2009 Peter Anaminyi 2 June 2011 Kenya is on the verge of a Gene Robinson moment The Guardian a b c Kenya Gay Kenyans must join the civil society interview with Mugambi Kiai Archived 2 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine International Lesbian Gay Bisexual Trans and Intersex Association Courtney E Finerty 2012 Being Gay in Kenya The Implications of Kenya s New Constitution for its Anti Sodomy Laws Cornell International Law Journal v 45 a b Makau Mutua 12 May 2012 Rights body has finally stood up for gays and lesbians Daily Nation In the Spirit of Harambee The Equal Rights Trust in partnership with the Kenya Human Rights Commission 27 February 2012 pages 119 120 PDF a b Replies from the Government of Kenya to the list of issues CCPR C KEN Q 3 to be taken up in connection with the consideration of its third periodic report CCPR C KEN 3 United Nations Human Rights Committee CCPR C KEN Q 3 Add 1 30 May 2012 paragraph 116 page 20 a b God and justice Kenyan gay church prays for historic ruling Daily Nation Retrieved 26 June 2019 Ohikere Onize Kenyan court reinstates defrocked Anglican priests world wng org Retrieved 18 July 2019 Kenyan court orders mediation to solve Anglican homosexuality dispute Religion News Service 6 November 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2019 nationmedia 2017 Three suspended Nyeri gay priests get ksh 6 8million as NTV Retrieved 26 June 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Kenya s top court considers case to legalize homosexuality CNN 23 February 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2019 Landmark LGBT rights case in Kenya High Court Mshale 21 February 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2019 Kenya may decriminalise homosexuality Afrika News 28 February 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2019 In legal battle over gay sex Kenya court to consider India verdict on Section 377 28 September 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2019 India s gay sex ruling could help legalise homosexuality in Kenya PinkNews PinkNews www pinknews co uk 27 September 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2019 In legal battle over gay sex Kenyan court to consider Indian ruling Reuters 27 September 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2019 Kenya s Top Court Sets Date to Announce Ruling on Legalization of Gay Sex www intomore com Retrieved 26 June 2019 Kenya Court Delays Ruling on Gay Sex Ban Until May Voice of America Retrieved 26 June 2019 Kenya upholds law criminalising gay sex 24 May 2019 Retrieved 26 June 2019 Kenyan court declines to scrap anti gay sex law The East African Retrieved 26 June 2019 Kenya court outlaws anal exams in landmark victory for gay rights DW 22 03 2018 DW COM Retrieved 26 June 2019 Kenya Court Finds Forced Anal Exams Unconstitutional Human Rights Watch 22 March 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2019 The Star The Star Retrieved 26 June 2019 Mutio Agnes 25 February 2020 2 men busted having sex in a Kakuyuni lodging Mauvoo Mauvoo Archived from the original on 18 August 2020 Retrieved 20 April 2021 Martine Joseph Sheetal Kenya could lose billions if harsh anti LGBTQ law comes into force PinkNews Retrieved 7 November 2023 Kenya Constitution PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 May 2019 Retrieved 17 March 2012 A family scarred by homophobia Archived 11 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Daily Nation 22 October 2009 a b c d e f g Doug Ireland 20 February 2010 False Gay Marriage Rumor Sparks Kenyan Riots Archived 11 May 2020 at the Wayback Machine Gay City News Atanga et al eds Gender and Language in Sub Saharan Africa 2013 35ff The Children Act 2001 Section 158 3 c d PDF The Children Act 2001 Section 158 3 PDF Realising Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights in Kenya A Myth or a Reality Kenya National Commission on Human Rights April 2012 pages 95 96 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 June 2012 Retrieved 16 May 2012 Welcome to Transgender Education amp Advocacy Archived from the original on 23 February 2014 United Nations Treaty Collection treaties un org Archived from the original on 1 September 2010 Article 40 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Archived from the original on 5 July 2008 Concluding Observations of the Human Rights Committee Kenya United Nations Human Rights Committee 83rd Session CCPR CO 83 KEN 29 April 2005 Consideration of reports submitted by States parties under article 40 of the Covenant Third periodic report of States parties Kenya United Nations Human Rights Committee CCPR C KEN 3 13 January 2011 page 20 The United Nations Human Rights Committee is scheduled to review this report 17 18 July 2012 Archived from the original on 4 April 2013 Retrieved 9 July 2012 a b c Report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review Kenya U N Human Rights Council Eighth Universal Periodic Review A HRC 15 8 17 June 2010 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 October 2014 Retrieved 14 May 2012 rtsp webcast un org ondemand conferences unhrc upr 8th hrc100506am1 eng rm start 01 07 39 amp end 01 23 19 Comments and Answers by Kenya permanent dead link U N Human Rights Council Eighth Universal Periodic Review 7th Plenary Meeting 6 May 2010 time stamp 10 53 12 45 2011 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices Kenya Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor U S Department of State page 32 US Embassy in Nairobi Hosts Gay Pride Event Archived 11 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Voice of America accessed 28 June 2012 Oded Arye 2000 Islam and Politics in Kenya Lynne Rienner Publishers p 11 ISBN 9781555879297 How people in 24 countries view same sex marriage PewResearchCenter Retrieved 13 June 2023 The Global Divide on Homosexuality Persists Pew Research Center 25 June 2020 Retrieved 26 January 2021 Pew Global Attitudes Project pages 35 82 and 117 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 February 2010 Retrieved 3 December 2009 Galgalo Bocha 13 June 2011 Clerics seek harsher laws for gays Archived 6 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Daily Nation Daniel Nyassy 23 February 2012 Kenya Gays Flee As Irate Residents Storm Likoni Seminar Daily Nation via allAfrica com Realising Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights in Kenya A Myth or a Reality Archived 3 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Kenya National Commission on Human Rights April 2012 pages 92 94 Catherine Karongo 11 May 2012 NCCK says no to push for gay marriages CapitalFM News Patrick Beja 23 July 2012 Bishop Gays dangerous than terrorists The Standard Digital Littauer Dan 14 August 2012 Kenya gay terrorist bishop says he is against gay hate Gay Star News Archived from the original on 28 August 2018 Retrieved 20 May 2020 Kenyan Film Board Bans TIFF Film Stories Of Our Lives Archived 9 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Indiewire 6 October 2014 Kenyan Pastors to Obama Don t Bring The Gay Talk Here Theology Philosophy and Science 22 July 2015 Archived from the original on 10 January 2020 Retrieved 29 April 2018 via YouTube KFCB on Twitter Twitter Retrieved 18 July 2018 Ban of Kenyan film over lesbianism criticised Daily Nation Retrieved 3 May 2018 Kenya bans Rafiki ahead of Cannes debut over lesbian scenes BBC News 27 April 2018 Retrieved 8 May 2018 Mutuko Mumbi 11 September 2018 Government Sued for Preventing Kenyan Movie From Winning Oscars Kenyans Retrieved 11 September 2018 High court lifts ban on lesbian themed movie Rafiki The Star Kenya 21 September 2018 Retrieved 21 September 2018 High Court lifts ban on controversial lesbian movie dismisses moral police Ezekiel Mutua Tuko 21 September 2018 Retrieved 21 September 2018 Lesbian film Rafiki sells out after Kenyan court lifts ban The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 23 September 2018 Musyoka Michael 28 September 2018 Supa Modo is Kenya s Submission to Oscars Rafiki Loses Out Kenyans co ke Retrieved 28 September 2018 Vourlias Christopher 28 September 2018 Kenya Picks Berlinale Crowd Pleaser Supa Modo as Its Oscar Hopeful Variety Retrieved 28 September 2018 Kenya PM Orders Arrest of Gay Couples Daily Nation reported by Lucas Barasa 29 November 2010 reprinted on AllAfrica com Raila denies gays arrest order Daily Nation reported by Oliver Mathenge 2 December 2010 reprinted on allafrica com Surveillance cameras to curb gay sex in prisons Archived 1 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Daily Nation reported by Mathias Ringa 3 November 2010 YouTube YouTube Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 President Kenyatta openly differs with President Obama over gay rights issue K24TV 26 July 2015 Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 Retrieved 29 April 2018 via YouTube President Gay rights of no importance in Kenya CNN 20 April 2018 Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 Retrieved 29 April 2018 via YouTube Victory for Kenya s LGBT community as charity wins right to be Reuters 22 March 2019 Retrieved 28 June 2019 Supreme Court victory for gays and lesbians in fight to register lobby Daily Nation 2 March 2023 Retrieved 2 March 2023 Prominent Kenyan LGBTQ activist Edwin Chiloba reportedly found dead CNN Reuters 6 January 2023 Retrieved 6 January 2023 Kenyan LGBTQ activist Edwin Chiloba found dead in metal box Al Jazeera 6 January 2023 Retrieved 7 January 2023 External linksUK government travel advice for Kenya Local laws and customs Rainbow Kenya Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LGBT rights in Kenya amp oldid 1217260629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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