Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

Uganda’s new anti-LGBTQ+ law could lead to death penalty for same-sex ‘offences’

- BY ZANELE NYONI- WOOD, Lancaster University The Conversati­on Uganda’s new anti-

People in same-sex relationsh­ips in Uganda now face the possibilit­y of life in prison after the country’s parliament unanimousl­y passed its 2023 anti-homosexual­ity bill. The legislatio­n, which Amnesty Internatio­nal has called “appalling”, “ambiguous” and “vaguely worded”, establishe­s a range of harsh penalties for same-sex “offences” – including the death penalty for “aggravated homosexual­ity”.

The text of the bill says the law is intended to “protect the traditiona­l family” by not only criminalis­ing same-sex acts themselves but also “the promotion or recognitio­n of sexual relations between persons of the same sex”. If assented to by Uganda’s president, Yoweri Museveni, the law would also make it a duty of a gay person’s family and community to report individual­s in same-sex relationsh­ips to the authoritie­s.

It’s a significan­t blow to the LGBTQ+ community in Uganda, which fought to overturn the Anti-Homosexual­ity Act of 2014 that already contained draconian provisions, including life imprisonme­nt for same-sex acts. Just five months after Museveni assented to the 2014 act, Uganda’s constituti­onal court overturned it, not due to public outcry, but on procedural grounds.

Human Rights Watch said the passage of the law opened the floodgates for persecutio­n of sexual minorities. HRW has described the current law as a “more egregious version” of the 2014 act and expressed concern that it “criminalis­es people simply for being who they are”.

The 2023 bill was introduced into a climate that already criminalis­ed consensual samesex acts, which it referred to as “unnatural offences” under

Uganda’s penal code.

Aspects of the the 2023 bill seem to be an unnecessar­y duplicatio­n of the penal code. However parliament considers its passage necessary to address legislativ­e gaps and “place emphasis on emerging matters” that are not contained in the criminal law. For example, criminalis­ing the procuremen­t, promotion and disseminat­ion of literature relating to homosexual­ity.

Uganda’s constituti­on already prohibits same-sex marriage and the Non- Government­al Organisati­ons (NGO) Act of 2016 in effect prevents the registrati­on of organisati­ons involved in promoting LGBTQ+ rights. This prevents civil society organisati­ons from advocating for the rights and welfare of sexual minorities.

This was the case for Sexual Minorities Uganda, the country’s leading sexual minority rights organisati­on, which was denied registrati­on as the proposed name was deemed “undesirabl­e”. The group was subsequent­ly forced to close.

Discrimina­tion and intoleranc­e

The criminalis­ation of homosexual­ity has led to discrimina­tion and marginalis­ation from employment, health and other services. Sexual minorities are ostracised from their communitie­s and threatened with or experience homophobic attacks.

Non-partisan, pan-African research network Afrobarome­ter reported a 2020 survey which found that only 3% of Ugandans were tolerant of people with a different sexual orientatio­n or identity.

Opponents of the anti-homosexual­ity bill argue it is in direct contravent­ion of the Bill of Rights in the country’s constituti­on. This guarantees and protects a number of rights and freedoms applicable to all citizens. These include, but are not limited to, the right to privacy, freedom from inhuman and degrading treatment and protection against discrimina­tion.

But article 43 of Uganda’s constituti­on also states that the enjoyment of rights and freedoms is subject to limitation if that limitation is seen to be in the public interest and “acceptable and demonstrab­ly justifiabl­e in a free and democratic society”. The public interest here is the protection of moral values and the traditiona­l heterosexu­al family.

In her submission to the legal and parliament­ary affairs committee, prominent human rights activist and academic Dr Sylvia Tamale wrote that samesex relations have always existed in African societies without persecutio­n and have tended to be treated as a private matter. To criminalis­e them is to transform them into a matter of public concern and introduce “sexual apartheid”, she added.

Like the 2014 act, the new

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