Parliament outlaws LGBTQ practices
Publish date: 08 September 2025
Issue Number: 1142
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: Burkina Faso
Burkina Faso’s transitional Parliament has passed legislation outlawing conduct deemed to promote LGBTQ practices, introducing fines, prison sentences and sanctions for persons convicted, its Justice Minister said. According to CNN, the Persons and Family Code law, making Burkina Faso the latest in a series of African countries to criminalise lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender activity, also tightens rules on nationality and stateless people. The legislation was passed unanimously by the unelected, 71-member transitional Parliament on Monday and is awaiting the signature of military junta leader Ibrahim Traore. ‘The law provides for a prison sentence ranging from two to five years and a fine,’ Justice Minister Edasso Rodrigue Bayala said last week. ‘A person who (engages in) homosexual practices … will appear before a judge and, in the event of a repeat offence, be deported if you are not a Burkinabe national,’ he said. The government has framed the law as an effort to modernise family law and clarify nationality rules, but rights advocates are likely to call out the restrictions on LGBTQ practices and limits imposed on legal recourse in nationality cases. Anti-gay laws are in place in various conservative African countries including Senegal, Uganda and Malawi, though some others, including SA, Botswana and Angola, have decriminalised LGBTQ practices or enacted protective measures.