The East African (Nairobi)

Uganda: Withdraw Anti-Gay Law, Govt Told

Nairobi — Both Britain and Canada's prime ministers have told President Yoweri Museveni that a proposed law that would result in homosexuals in Uganda being imprisoned for life or even executed needs to be withdrawn.

The proposed legislation has created a furore in Western countries with protesters saying it contravenes international human rights legislation.

Both British leader Gordon Brown and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper are understood to have told President Museveni that the legislation was unacceptable when they met with Uganda's leader over a private breakfast meeting at the Commonwealth Heads of Government summit that finished on Monday (November 30).

Although homosexuality remains a crime in many Commonwealth countries, few have proposed as draconian new legislation as that currently being debated in Kampala.

The Anti-Homosexuality Bill 2009 is going through Uganda's Parliament after receiving its first reading last month.

According to Clause 2 of the Bill, a person who is convicted of gay sex is liable to life imprisonment.

But if that person is also HIV positive the penalty -- under the heading "aggravated homosexuality" -- is death.

The Bill is not an official piece of legislation from the Ugandan government but it has allowed it to proceed, and some top officials are said to have supported it.

"If adopted, a Bill further criminalising homosexuality would constitute a significant step backwards for the protection of human rights in Uganda," a Canadian government spokesperson said.

The Bill proposes a three-year prison sentence for anyone who is aware of evidence of homosexuality and fails to report it to the police within 24 hours.

It would also impose a sentence of up to seven years for anyone who defends the rights of homosexuals.

Mockery of principles

Addressing the Commonwealth People's Forum, Stephen Lewis, the former UN envoy on Aids in Africa, said that the Bill made a mockery of Commonwealth principles.

"Nothing is as stark, punitive and redolent of hate as the Bill in Uganda."

In the UK, so strong is the level of protest that there have been calls either for British aid to Kampala to be halted or for Uganda to be suspended from the Commonwealth until the legislation is withdrawn.

Meanwhile, despite concerns over its human rights record, Rwanda has been admitted to the Commonwealth at the summit in Trinidad and Tobago.

It was only the second country to be admitted without a British colonial past or constitutional link to Britain.

A Rwandan minister said the move showed his country's "tremendous progress" over the last 15 years.

Mozambique is the other Commonwealth member without historic UK ties.

It joined the 54 member state organisation 14 years ago

A report in July by the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI) urged Rwanda to tackle a lack of political freedom and harassment of journalists before it was admitted.

It also articulated deep reservations over the country's human rights record.

"CHRI acknowledges that Rwanda has what appears to be a well-deserved reputation for governmental efficiency and for being less corrupt than a number of other countries -- but its claims about the lack of corruption appear hollow when considering its complicity in the illicit economy of the region," the report said.

Rwanda expressed its desire to join the Commonwealth in 2008, despite its historic association with Francophone countries.


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Comments 1 to 4 of 4 Post a comment

  • Omugabe
    Dec 6 2009, 13:39

    Go ahead, Ugandans, and ignore the criminal colonialists who are keen to 'divide & dominate' further undermine African societies with their homosexual neo-colonialism.

    Homosexual tendency is a birth/behavioral defect.

    However, the perverted homosexual behavior IS LEARNED; because no one was born trying to mate with another.

    And no society that would be healthy is going to condone and promote deviant behaviors that will bring decadence to the society, by increasing threat to the children of Africa.

    If euros want to filth stirrers, then they should DO SO IN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES!

    Africans are The First Man! If homosexuality was normal and natural, then it would have evolved in indigenous societies over the thousands of generation Africans have been on the planet.

    Yet to date, no indigenous society condones or promotes homosexual behavior; because wise Africans know that behaviors resulting from birth defect to be abnormal and unnatural deviance.

  • Steve Biko
    Dec 7 2009, 14:29

    All human beings originated from southern Africa -- much closer to South Africa than Uganda. Indigenous groups in southern Africa have same gender loving traditions. Your rewrite of history denies the existence of many African people. Learn true history. Uganda is not the whole of Africa. Read Azanian information as well. Is Mandela less African than you? At least acknowledge that many Africans who have spent their entire lives fighting european imperialism have different opinions than you. THIS would be truly opposing european "divide and conquer." And do you attend a church or mosque that informs your opinions? Why not attend a truly African faith community to learn a much broader, truly African history?

  • kalema2008
    Dec 6 2009, 14:25

    I wish for the first time Uganda may stand by this and refuse to keep the african culture in light . http://www.jobseastafrica.com/

  • C Webste
    Dec 6 2009, 19:04

    I am African, I am gay. We are loving people searching for happy lives just like you. Your misunderstanding is unfortunate and diminishes us both, you probably have gay people in your family or know them as friends - these are good people, as we have always been, perhaps they are too scared to let you really know them. My country, South Africa, gives me the same rights as heterosexuals, there (in Africa) we live well, and contribute to our country trying to make it a better place for everyone.