PRESIDENT Joyce Banda has said Malawi will overturn its ban on homosexual acts - the first African country to do so since 1994.
PRESIDENT Joyce Banda has said Malawi will overturn its ban on homosexual acts - the first African country to do so since 1994.Two Malawian men were sentenced to 14 years in prison in 2010 after saying they were getting married.Several Western leaders have recently said they would cut aid to countries which did not recognise gay rights.Mrs Banda took power last month after her predecessor, Bingu wa Mutharika, died of a heart attack.She has since reversed several of his policies, including devaluing the currency, in a bid to get donor funding restored.Many donors cut aid under Mr Mutharika, accusing him of economic mismanagement and political repression.After a storm of international condemnation, he did pardon the two Malawian men on "humanitarian grounds only” but said they had "committed a crime against our culture, against our religion, and against our laws”.Homosexual acts are illegal in most African countries. In Uganda, an MP recently introduced a bill which stipulated the death penalty could be imposed for some homosexual offences, although he has since said he now wants this changed to life in prison.South Africa is the only African country where same-sex marriages are legal - discrimination based on sexual orientation was banned after a new constitution was introduced when white minority rule ended in 1994.