Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Uganda gays wear masks in parade

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ENTEBBE, Uganda — Scores of Ugandan homosexual­s marched through sprawling botanical gardens in the lakeside town of Entebbe on Saturday, their first pride parade since a Ugandan court invalidate­d an anti-gay law.

Many marchers wore masks, signaling they did not want to be publicly identified in a country where gay people and their supporters face severe discrimina­tion.

Although organizers had expected more than 500 people to attend the event, fewer than 200 turned up, said gay activist Moses Kimbugwe, who noted that many were afraid of possible violence after a court’s decision earlier this month to jettison an anti-gay law that had wide support among Ugandans.

Uganda’s Constituti­onal Court ruled last week that the anti-gay law enacted only five months ago was illegal because it was passed during a parliament­ary session that lacked a quorum. Some lawmakers have pledged to try to reintroduc­e the same legislatio­n when parliament emerges from a recess later this month. They said they would try to pass the same law in parliament since it had been invalidate­d on technical grounds and not its substance.

On Saturday, activists held up placards saying they would not give up the fight for gay rights in this conservati­ve East African country of 36 million people.

Some waved rainbow flags as they danced and frolicked on a sandy beach on the shores of Lake Victoria, about 25 miles from the capital, Kampala.

This was the third annual gay-pride event, organizers said.

The first one, in 2012, turned violent after local police tried to break it up, said Ugandan lesbian activist Jacqueline Kasha. This time they had been given assurances by the police that they could go ahead with the march, she said.

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