UGANDA-RIGHTS/GAY PRIDE Ugandans celebrate gay pride a year after anti-gay bill was overturned
Record ID:
144654
UGANDA-RIGHTS/GAY PRIDE Ugandans celebrate gay pride a year after anti-gay bill was overturned
- Title: UGANDA-RIGHTS/GAY PRIDE Ugandans celebrate gay pride a year after anti-gay bill was overturned
- Date: 8th August 2015
- Summary: (SOUNDBITE) (English) GAY ACTIVIST SANDRA NTEBI, SAYING: "Why do I have to celebrate it in an isolated place? Who am I showing that I am proud? Because we are celebrating to our own selves. But my dream is to see myself have this (SHOWS RAINBOW FLAG), wear this, they understand it, and I am moving on my streets than keeping in this isolated place."
- Embargoed: 23rd August 2015 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Uganda
- Country: Uganda
- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVAAU4YCE30WK8HNZU9OEZF0QPT4
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Dozens of members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community in Uganda gathered on Saturday (August 8) to celebrate gay pride in Entebbe, a year after a tough anti-homosexuality law has been overturned.
Held at the Entebbe Botanical Gardens near the shores of Lake Victoria, more than 100 people waved rainbow flags in an effort to raise awareness about being gay in Uganda.
Like most of sub-Saharan Africa, Uganda is highly religious and socially conservative. Disapproval of homosexuality is widespread and attacks on gays are common.
"We feel and we think this is a step moving forward and it is about trying to show the wider community that violence, discrimination, harassment, stigma against LGBT people is bad, so we are here to send a message to the wider population that we do exist and we want rights like any other Ugandan," said gay rights activist Moses Kimbugwe.
Legislation passed by parliament almost a year ago, which would have punished gay sex with long prison terms, provoked a storm of international protests and led some donor countries to withhold aid but the constitutional court overturned the law last August.
The earlier version would have punished gay sex with long prison terms, including life sentences for "aggravated homosexuality".
Influential evangelical pastors have urged Ugandan legislators to reintroduce the law since it was quashed.
The organizers of the event had kept the exact location under wraps until today because of concerns about safety as in most of Africa's 54 states, LGBT people have to hide their sexual orientation for fear of persecution or criminal prosecution.
"Why do I have to celebrate it in an isolated place? Who am I showing that I am proud? Because we are celebrating to our own selves. But my dream is to see myself have this, wear this," said another activist." said Sandra Ntebi another Gay Activist, referring to the rainbow colours she was wearing.
Homosexuality remains taboo in Uganda and many socially conservative African societies where some religious groups have branded it a corrupting Western import.
The constitutional court overturned the earlier law on the grounds parliament had passed it without the required quorum.
Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni has since told legislators from his ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM) party that he favored a debate in the assembly on the re-introduction of the law, but wanted to remove penalties against gay sex between two consenting adults.
It is not clear when the law may be debated in parliament.
Museveni wrote in his commentary that he favored punishment for those who recruited children or lure adults into gay sex using financial inducements, but expressed misgivings about punishing consenting adult homosexuals. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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