Daily Maverick

Passing of Uganda’s draconian anti-gay bill provokes outrage

The world is watching to see whether it will be signed into law. By

- Peter Fabricius

While South Africans were celebratin­g Human Rights Day this week, the parliament in homophobic Uganda passed legislatio­n that criminalis­es simply identifyin­g as LGBTQI+.

The law prescribes a life sentence for convicted homosexual­s and the death penalty for “aggravated homosexual­ity”.

The passage of the 2023 Anti-Homosexual­ity Bill completely violates Uganda’s own constituti­on, many critics say, and has provoked domestic and internatio­nal outrage. The United Nations, the US and others have called on President Yoweri Museveni not to sign the bill into law.

Volker Türk, the UN’s High Commission­er for Human Rights, said the passing of the “draconian” and “discrimina­tory” bill, which he called “probably among the worst of its kind in the world”, was a “deeply troubling developmen­t”.

“If signed into law by the president, it will render lesbian, gay and bisexual people in Uganda criminals simply for existing, for being who they are. It could provide carte blanche for the systematic violation of nearly all of their human rights and serve to incite people against each other,” Türk said in a statement.

US President Joe Biden had “grave concerns” about the bill as well as increasing violence targeting LGBTQI+ persons, White House spokespers­on Karine Jean-Pierre said this week. “If the [bill] is signed into law and enacted, it would impinge on universal human rights, jeopardise progress in the fight against HIV/Aids, deter tourism and investment in Uganda, and damage Uganda’s internatio­nal reputation.

“The bill is one of the most extreme anti-LGBQTI measures in the world. Human rights are universal – no one should be attacked, imprisoned or killed simply because of who they are or whom they love.”

A US official told CNN that the country’s ambassador to the UN, Linda ThomasGree­nfield, had spoken twice with Museveni to express “deep concern” about the bill.

Anglican Archbishop Thabo Makgoba has appealed for Museveni not to sign the bill into law. In a message on Thursday to his Ugandan counterpar­t, Archbishop Stephen Samuel Kaziimba Mugalu, said: “It is our prayer that as your country lives with the implicatio­ns of this discrimina­tory bill, the Church will promote inclusiven­ess and care for all God’s people.

“It is our sincere prayer that the president will not sign this bill into law and we pray that the Church will urge him not to do so.”

The most disturbing aspect of the bill is that it creates the new crime of “aggravated homosexual­ity”, which could incur the death penalty for a “serial offender” or one who has gay sex involving incest; or without consent; or under duress; or with children; or – even with their consent – with people with mental or physical disabiliti­es.

“If the law comes into force, it will violate the rights to freedom of expression and associatio­n; liberty; privacy; equality; freedom from discrimina­tion, inhuman and degrading treatment; and a fair hearing – all guaranteed under Ugandan and internatio­nal law – for all Ugandans,” said Human Rights Watch.

“The provisions of the anti-homosexual­ity bill are barbaric, discrimina­tory and unconstitu­tional,” tweeted Sarah Kasande, a lawyer and human rights activist in Kampala.

Just two MPs from the ruling party, Fox Odoi-Oywelowo and Paul Kwizera Bucyana, opposed the new legislatio­n.

“The bill is ill-conceived, it contains provisions that are unconstitu­tional, reverses the gains registered in the fight against gender-based violence and criminalis­es individual­s,” Odoi-Oywelowo told The Guardian.

Museveni has 30 days to sign the bill into law or reject it, and everyone is watching to see what he does. Last week he defiantly told parliament that Uganda would not embrace homosexual­ity, claiming that the West was seeking to compel other countries to “normalise ... deviations”.

Once before, in 2009, Uganda introduced a bill that included the death sentence for gay sex. Later, in 2014, the Anti-Homosexual­ity Act became law, but it replaced the death penalty clause with a proposal for life in prison and was ultimately struck down.

Former president Jacob Zuma appeared to subtly endorse Uganda’s anti-gay stance when he appointed homophobic columnist

Jon Qwelane as South African High Commission­er to Kampala in 2010.

The SA Human Rights Commission had taken Qwelane to court, saying he had advocated hatred against gay people in a 2008 column in the now defunct Sunday Sun newspaper. The Constituti­onal Court eventually ruled in July 2021 that Qwelane’s column had indeed been harmful to gay people and constitute­d hate speech.

Africa already had a dismal climate for gay people, as 32 out of 54 countries have criminalis­ed consensual same-sex sexual acts, said Daniele Paletta, communicat­ion manager at ILGA World, an internatio­nal advocacy group for LGBTQI+ rights.

In three states, Mauritania, Somalia and parts of Nigeria, homosexual­ity is a capital offence, according to ILGA World’s website.

Only SA and Cape Verde have legalised same-sex marriage and only SA provides constituti­onal protection of gay rights.

In its submission to Uganda’s parliament before the bill was passed on Tuesday, Human Rights Watch said it “would violate multiple fundamenta­l rights guaranteed under Uganda’s constituti­on and internatio­nal human rights instrument­s to which Uganda is a party”.

It noted that the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights had ruled that government­s were obliged to “prevent violence and other human rights violations against individual­s on the basis of their sexual or gender identity”, and said the bill would “not only contravene that obligation, but pervert it by facilitati­ng violence and rights violations”.

Human Rights Watch research found that, after the 2014 Anti-Homosexual­ity Act was passed in Uganda, LGBTQI+ people faced reduced access to health services and HIV prevention informatio­n. They also experience­d discrimina­tory evictions by landlords, or were fired from their jobs on the basis of their perceived sexual orientatio­n or gender identity.

The organisati­on called for the bill to be scrapped and for other penal code provisions that criminalis­e adult consensual same-sex conduct to be repealed.

approached the Department of Internatio­nal Relations and Cooperatio­n and the Ugandan High Commission in Pretoria to give them an opportunit­y to comment on the bill but neither replied.

 ?? ?? A Ugandan transgende­r woman watches the live broadcast of the anti-gay bill’s passing at a shelter for LGBTQI+ people in Kampala on 21 March. Photo: Stuart Tibaweswa/AFP
A Ugandan transgende­r woman watches the live broadcast of the anti-gay bill’s passing at a shelter for LGBTQI+ people in Kampala on 21 March. Photo: Stuart Tibaweswa/AFP

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