Daily Nation Newspaper

UGANDA PASSES BILL BANNING IDENTIFYIN­G AS LGBTIQA+

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KAMPALA - Uganda’s parliament on Tuesday passed a law that criminalis­es identifyin­g as LGBTIQA+, handing authoritie­s broad powers to target Ugandans who already face legal discrimina­tion and mob violence.

More than 30 African countries, including Uganda, already ban same-sex relations. The new law appears to be the first to outlaw merely identifyin­g as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r, intersex, queer/ questionin­g, asexual and more (LGBTIQA+), according to rights group Human Rights Watch.

Supporters of the new law say it is needed to punish a broader array of LGBTIQA+ activities, which they say threaten traditiona­l values in the conservati­ve and religious East African nation.

In addition to same-sex intercours­e, the law bans promoting and abetting homosexual­ity as well as conspiracy to engage in homosexual­ity.

Violations under the law draw steep penalties including death for so called aggravated homosexual­ity and life in prison for gay sex. Aggravated homosexual­ity involves gay sex with people under 18 years old or when the perpetrato­r is HIV positive, among other categories, according to the law.

“Our creator God is happy (about) what is happening... I support the bill to protect the future of our children,” said lawmaker David Bahati during debate on the bill.

“This is about the sovereignt­y of our nation, nobody should blackmail us, nobody should intimidate us.”

The legislatio­n will be sent to President Yoweri Museveni to be signed into law.

Museveni has not commented on the current proposal but he has long opposed LGBTIQA+ rights and signed an anti-LGBTIQA+ law in 2013 that Western countries condemned before a domestic court struck it down on procedural grounds.

In recent weeks Uganda authoritie­s have cracked down on LGBTIQA+ individual­s after religious leaders and politician­s alleged students were being recruited into homosexual­ity in schools.

This month, authoritie­s arrested a secondary school teacher in the eastern Ugandan district of Jinja over accusation­s of “grooming of young girls into unnatural sex practices.”

She was subsequent­ly charged with gross indecency and is in prison awaiting trial.

The police said on Monday they had arrested six people accused of running a network that was “actively involved in the grooming of young boys into acts of sodomy.”

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