The 77 Countries Where Homosexuality Is Now Illegal [Map]

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The news that India has re-criminalized homosexuality has come as a blow to the worldwide LGBT movement.

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1.2 billion people live in the South Asian state, roughly 16% of the world's total population.

But India isn't alone in considering homosexual acts a crime. According to the 2013 report from the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association, 76 countries (plus India) have laws making homosexuality illegal. The map below highlights the countries:

Homosexuality illegal

Business Insider/ILGA

In five of these countries (Iran, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Mauritania, Sudan, plus parts of Nigeria and Somalia), homosexuality is punishable by death. Additionally, there are a number of countries where homosexuality is not illegal, but laws exist that seriously restrict homosexuality - most famously, Russia, who enacted a law that prohibited homosexual "propaganda" last year. In some parts of the U.S., laws against sodomy remain inexplicably on the books and, even more inexplicably, people are arrested under them.

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India's huge size isn't the only sad thing about the news today. It also appears to be a huge backwards step - India had actually decriminalized colonial-era homosexuality laws in 2009. Today's decision by the Supreme Court reversed that, and while India's law minister promised to review the ruling, as AFP notes, it's unlikely a new pro-gay law could pass anytime soon.