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Somerville - May 10 - Uganda's
Anti-Homosexuality Bill will be debated in Parliament today and
voted on tomorrow, Wednesday May 11. The bill, thought by many
to have been shelved, had in fact remained before a committee of
Uganda's parliament. There were
hearings on the legislation, known in some quarters as the
"kill the gays" bill, last Friday, May 6.
Political Research Associates (PRA)
again condemns Uganda's Anti-Homosexuality Bill and calls on
those American conservatives who played a role in its conception
to take immediate action to forestall its passage.
U.S. Holocaust revisionist
Scott Lively, who charges homosexuals with perpetrating the
Nazi Holocaust, met with Ugandan lawmakers and government
officials in March 2009, some of whom drafted the infamous
Anti-Homosexuality Bill of 2009, a version of which is before
Parliament today.Language in the bill echoes Lively's false and
malicious charges that western gays are conspiring to take over
Uganda and even the world. Another influential antigay voice in
Uganda, U.S. evangelical leader Rick Warren has told Ugandans
that homosexuality
is not a natural way of life and thus not a human right.
Lively and Warren inspired a
demonization campaign that led directly to the current bill,
which, if passed, would lead to life imprisonment or execution
for the crime of gay sex, and require all Ugandans to report
known homosexuals - including their own family members - to the
police.
"Rick Warren shows one face in the
United States where
he says he loves gays, and another face in Africa, which is
on the verge of pogroms against this community," said PRA
Project Director Rev. Kapya Kaoma. Kaoma authored
Globalizing the Culture Wars: U.S. Conservatives, African
Churches, and Homophobia, which exposed the
U.S. Right's promotion of an agenda in Africa that aims to
criminalize homosexuality.
Under intense pressure, Warren
earlier denounced the bill. However, he has taken no visible
actions to stop its passage. Lively has attempted to dissociate
himself from the legislation, but has refused to condemn it
outright. Pastors Rick Warren and Scott Lively must
unequivocally denounce the Anti-Homosexuality Bill and admonish
its proponents. Warren and Lively must also use their personal
and pastoral relationships, such as Warren's friendship with
Ugandan president Museveni and first lady Janet Museveni, to
ensure that, if passed by Parliament, the bill will be vetoed.
"This reprehensible effort to
further criminalize the LGBT community is an affront to human
rights everywhere," said PRA Executive Director Tarso Luís
Ramos, adding, "The American anti-gay campaigners who lit this
brushfire in Kampala must do everything possible to extinguish
the flames that now threaten to become a devastating
conflagration."
The latest attempt to pass the
Anti-Homosexuality Bill follows the murder of Ugandan human
rights activist David Kato in January 2011. Kato was Uganda's
most prominent advocate for LGBT equality. He and other LGBT
Ugandans had been the targets of an intense demonization
campaign fostered by right-wing Christian activists from the
United States.
"It is already bad enough for us,"
said Frank Mugisha, executive director of
Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG), "If the bill is passed, we
will not be able to live in Uganda. We will be thrown in jail,
or hanged."
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