Jamaica Gleaner

Imam mocked for mistakenly marrying a man

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KAMPALA (AP):

THE MOCKING of a Ugandan imam who unknowingl­y married a man in a Muslim ceremony highlights intoleranc­e in the East African country, a gay-rights activist said Thursday.

The imam, who says he did not know his partner was male, has been suspended from clerical duty and his partner charged with committing an “unnatural” offence.

On social media, many Ugandans have mocked the imam as a suspected homosexual who is not being truthful.

Frank Mugisha, who runs the group Sexual Minorities Uganda, told The Associated Press the case proved “how homophobic the country is.”

“The imam could be right when he says he didn’t know,” he said. “Ugandans should respect people’s privacy. They are not necessaril­y homosexual­s.”

Mugisha said it was not clear whether the imam’s partner is transgende­r, one reason his group had decided not to release a statement regarding the case.

It was not possible to talk to the imam or his partner, who was arrested days after the ceremony for alleged theft of a TV in the central Ugandan district of Kayunga, where the marriage took place weeks ago.

The local Daily Monitor newspaper reported that a female police officer reported the suspect as male after conducting a body search. The newspaper report included the account of a cleric at the imam’s mosque who said the imam needed counsellin­g after his bride “refused to undress while they slept”.

ILLEGAL ACT

Gay sex i s criminalis­ed i n Uganda, where there have been efforts in recent years to enact stiffer penalties targeting homosexual­s, including death by hanging. Many Ugandans believe homosexual­ity is imported from the West.

A harsh anti-gay law enacted in 2014 was later overturned by a panel of judges amid internatio­nal pressure and threats of aid cuts. In enacting that law, President Yoweri Museveni accused “arrogant and careless Western groups” of trying to recruit Ugandan children into homosexual­ity, although he did not identify the groups.

According to Human Rights Watch, 32 African nations have varying laws criminalis­ing homosexual­ity. In many cases, the antigay laws are left over from the colonial era.

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