ENTEBBE, Uganda (Reuters) - Uganda's president signed a law imposing harsh penalties for homosexuality on Monday, defying protests from rights groups, criticism from Western donors and a U.S. warning that it will complicate relations.
The new bill strengthened existing
punishments for anyone caught having gay sex, imposing jail terms of up to life
for "aggravated homosexuality" - including sex with a minor or while
HIV positive.
It criminalised lesbianism for the first time
and made it a crime to help individuals engage in homosexual acts. Gay rights
activists in Uganda
said they planned a legal challenge.
Ugandan officials broke into loud applause as
President Yoweri Museveni put his signature to the document in front of foreign
journalists at his State House outside the capital.
"There's now an attempt at social
imperialism, to impose social values. We're sorry to see that you (the West)
live the way you live but we keep quiet about it," he said.
The legislation exposes the wide gulf between
the continent's often culturally conservative administrations and many of the
foreign donor states that support them. Gambia 's President Yahya Jammeh
last week called homosexuals "vermin".
"I feel sick. The degrading words the
president has used ... my country is in a state of insanity right now,"
said Ugandan gay activist Kasha Nabagesera, adding the gay community expected
to challenge the bill in the courts.
Gay and lesbian organisations fear the bill
will encourage other governments to strengthen penalties, increase harassment,
discourage people from taking HIV tests and make it impossible to live an
openly gay life.
"Clawing back these basic rights and
criminalising the expression of divergent views doesn't bode well for anyone in
Uganda ,"
said Maria Burnett of Human Rights Watch.
"UN-AFRICAN"
Homosexuality is taboo in almost all African
countries and illegal in 37 - including Uganda , where rights groups say gay
people have long risked jail. Few Africans are openly gay, as they fear
violence, imprisonment and loss of their jobs.
The law comes a week after U.S. President
Barack Obama said the legislation would be "a step backward for all
Ugandans" and warned it would complicate relations.
A senior Obama administration official had
said the United States would review relations with Uganda if the law was
enacted. Washington is one of Uganda's largest donors, sending more than $400
million a year.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said
on Monday London questioned the bill's compatibility with the Ugandan constitution
and international treaty obligations. But he made no mention of aid cuts from
Britain, another big donor.
Its government also expects to pump oil for
the first time in 2016 and hopes the inflow of petrodollars will cut its
dependence on foreign aid.
"He knows that while the West cares
about homosexuality, it's not to such an extent that they would severely punish
a good ally," said Ugandan political analyst Angelo Izama.
A Ugandan government spokesman said Museveni
had taken the unusual step of signing the bill in public to "demonstrate Uganda 's
independence in the face of Western pressure".
While African leaders broadly court Western
donors with promises to tackle human rights abuses, many have won popular
support by describing homosexuality as "un-African" behaviour.
The Uganda 's move should please
conservative voters ahead of presidential elections scheduled for 2016.
"We don't like (homosexuality) in our
culture," said motor-bike taxi driver Ronald Kibabu. "That can keep
him as president. The election is coming."
Museveni said last week he was putting the
bill on hold to give scientists a chance to prove that homosexuality could be
triggered by genes and was not a "lifestyle choice". They found no
such evidence, Museveni said.
In neighbouring Kenya , a group of MPs has called
for the enforcement of existing anti-gay laws that have been largely ignored.
Some Kenyans praised Uganda 's
actions.
reference: yahoo news
No comments:
Post a Comment