The number of nations with laws against gay sex has fallen to 66, continuing the slow, decades-long progress toward recognition of the human rights of LGBTQ+ people.
The latest country to drop its anti-LGBT law is the African island nation of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean east of Madagascar. On Oct. 4, its Supreme Court overturned a law against consensual sexual intercourse between men, declaring it discriminatory and unconstitutional.
This site’s list of nations with anti-homosexuality laws now total 66, which is one more than a similar list maintained by the Human Dignity Trust. The trust’s list excludes the tiny South Pacific island nation of Niue, which we include. For a discussion of the status of Niue, see the article “2022 in worldwide LGBT rights progress – Part 3: Africa and Oceania”.
Before Mauritius, the latest countries to end the criminalization of same-sex intimacy have been the Cook Islands in the South Pacific in April 2023, following in the footsteps of Singapore in Southeast Asia, Antigua & Barbuda, Saint Kitts & Nevis, and Barbados in the Caribbean — all in 2022.
Back in 2006, a total of 92 nations considered homosexual activity a crime, according to ILGA, the the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association.
Other nations that have recently decriminalized same-sex intercourse include Bhutan in the Himalayas (2021), Gabon in central Africa (2020) and Botswana in southern Africa (2019).
In contrast, the justice minister of the violence-plagued West African nation of Mali said this year that he will push for a law criminalizing homosexuality.
For more information, see the Erasing 76 Crimes page “List of 66 countries where homosexuality is illegal.” There you will find:
- A full list of nations with anti-homosexuality laws.
- Recent history of many nations repealing or overturning those laws and a few nations newly adopting them.
- A comparison of this site’s list with the similar list compiled by ILGA, the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association.
Source: African Human Rights Media Network member Erasing 76 Crimes.
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