Namibia: Same-Sex Marriage’s Fate in Geingob’s Hands

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Namibia: Same-Sex Marriage’s Fate in Geingob’s Hands


Swapo legislator Jerry Ekandjo’s private member’s bill, which deals with changes to the Marriage Act, including the prohibition of same-sex marriages and any acknowledgment of such unions in Namibia, has sailed in both chambers of Parliament.

Ekandjo wants a precise definition of the term spouse that aligns with Namibia’s existing definition of marriage.

In the Marriage Amendment Bill (2023), Section 1 (b) the definition of spouse states that the term spouse is “wherever it occurs in this and any other legislation means a partner in a marriage between persons of the opposite sex.”

In the National Council, Swapo’s Andreas Amundjindi proposed the definition of spouse to mean “a person, being one half of a legal union between a genetically born man and a genetically born woman of the opposite sex of that person.”

The bill, with its amendment, was tabled yesterday with no objection in the National Assembly, and it will soon be presented to President Hage Geingob for either approval or rejection.

Ekandjo’s bill comes on the heels of the Supreme Court’s ruling to recognise same-sex marriages solemnised outside Namibia.

Ekandjo cited Article 81 of the Constitution, which grants Parliament the power to challenge Supreme Court decisions.

He argued that the Supreme Court’s ruling on the acquisition of Namibian citizenship through marriage overlooked Article 14 of the Constitution as well as the Marriage Act.

Contradictions

This year, Cabinet approved the draft Marriage Bill that was proposed by the ministry of home affairs.

The bill, that is yet to be tabled in the National Assembly by the line ministry, is in contradiction with Ekandjo’s private member’s bill and will seek to replace the current marriage law.

In the previous interview with this publication, former deputy minister of home affairs, Daniel Kashikola stated that the ministry holds a differing perspective from Ekandjo’s interpretation of marriage, deeming it “defective and confined to genetic factors”.

“The definition posits marriage as a contract solely between a genetically born man and a woman… without further elaboration,” he said.

He emphasised that confining the legal concept to genetics could lead to complications, highlighting the existence of individuals born with dual genitalia.

“This raises the question of how such cases would be addressed,” Kashikola had pointed out.