Submitted by crinadmin on
Summary: Observers say that if the bill does come to a vote, it will be overwhelmingly approved and, contrary to previous information, it would not be possible for President Yoweri Museveni to veto it.
 [25 October 2011] - Ugandaâs Anti-Homosexuality (aka âKill the gaysâ) bill was reintroduced to parliament today. The bill includes the death penalty for some offences, provides for Ugandans fleeing the country to be extradited, requires that all people in Uganda report homosexuals and would ban advocacy by anyone for LGBT human rights. The bill has been the focus of massive international condemnation since it was first introduced in 2009. President Obama called it âodious.â It ran out of time at the end of the last parliament in May and there has been speculation ever since as to whether it would be reintroduced and if so when. The parliament is considering a large number of other bills and the country has been convulsed by mass protests by the opposition and increasing concerns that the government is becoming more authoritarian. The reintroduction of the bill could be seen as a deliberate distraction from those concerns. Chief proponent of the bill, David Bahati MP, who last year defended the bill to Rachel Maddow, is now the Chair of the ruling NRM party. The bill will be the same one which ran out of time in the last parliament. That version came out of a parliamentary committee in May with the death penalty clauses âhidden.â This led to reports that capital punishment had been removed as a sop to international reaction. But the penalty of âaggravated homosexualityâ had been redefined to âdefilementâ â a crime that is punishable by death in Ugandan law. Earlier today, the editor of the tabloid which âoutedâ murdered Ugandan gay activist David Kato amongst others by publishing their faces next to the headline âhang them,â spoke with blogger Melanie Nathan. Giles Muhame welcoming the âKill the Gaysâ billâs return told her that: âThe Ugandan society is hugely conservative with millions looking at homosexuality as a âwestern evilâ creeping into their clean culture.â Speaking in the parliament today, MP Barnabus Tinkasimire said: âThe anti-gays Bill is overdue because the spirit of my ancestors tell me that they lived without these practices.â âI have been hearing government officials that when we pass the anti-gays bill, we shall loose the donorâs money. We canât afford to stay with such ills in our society and when it comes before the floor, we shall all pass it and support it,â he added, attracting an ovation from fellow backbenchers. This is probably a referral to a new policy by the British government to redirect development aid from governments which actively represses LGBT people. The Ugandan government announced in August that it was not backing the bill, which led to worldwide headlines that the bill was dead. Observers say that if the bill does come to a vote, it will be overwhelmingly approved and, contrary to previous information, it would not be possible for President Yoweri Museveni to veto it. Even though the bill has not passed since 2009, Ugandan LGBT say that it has led to a massive and violent backlash against them in the country, fueled by hate-speech from politicians, media and clergy. Leader Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera, who received one of the worldâs leading human rights awards earlier this month, has been forced to regularly shift from house to house, afraid to stay long in the same place. Police and security forces regularly stop and intimidate her. Speaking to swissinfo.ch after receiving the award, she said: âHarassment occurs almost on a daily basis, verbal attacks in public or more sinister repression. The simple suspicion of being a homosexual has serious consequences: being evicted from your home or losing your job is quite common; many homosexuals commit suicide.â  Further Information:Â
pdf: http://www.care2.com/causes/kill-the-gays-bill-back-in-ugandas-parliamen...