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377a gays will be executed!

tun_dr_m

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If you hate gays put them on a plane to Uganda that 's it!

http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20091210/wl_time/08599194664500


Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill: U.S., Western Donors Keep Quiet

Time.com



By ZOE ALSOP / KAMPALA Zoe Alsop / Kampala – 39 mins ago

Updated: Dec. 9, 2009 6:45 p.m.

The late-November afternoon sun bore down on the park in downtown Kampala, and all along the benches, Ugandan office workers took their siestas. There could have been no less likely setting for criminal conspiracies to topple an East African state. Still, the doctor's voice dropped a notch when an office worker in a brown suit settled in close by. The medic shifted a battered fedora over his eyes. "I am the gay doctor," the physician whispered to me, making sure nobody around heard. He talked about the gay and lesbian couples who go to his office to avoid ridicule in public hospitals. "They know they can trust me, and trust is a big issue," he said. "There is the stigma of being gay, but also the stigma of being [HIV] positive. They are such hidden communities. Nobody wants to deal with their problems."

In a matter of weeks, the Ugandan doctor's admission to TIME could land him in jail and his patients on death row. An anti-homosexuality bill now before Uganda's Parliament would include some of the harshest anti-gay regulations in the world. If the bill becomes law, the doctor, who asked that his name not be published, could be prosecuted for "aiding and abetting homosexuality." In one version of the bill, his sexually active HIV-positive patients could be found guilty of practicing acts of "aggravated homosexuality," a capital crime, according to the bill. (See the struggle for gay rights in the U.S.)

Thanks to a clause in the would-be law that punishes "failure to disclose the offense," anybody who heard the doctor's conversation could be locked up for failing to turn him in to the police. Even a reporter scribbling the doctor's words could be found to have "promoted homosexuality," an act punishable by five to seven years in prison. And were any of the Ugandans in the park to sleep with someone of the same sex in another country, the law would mandate their extradition to Uganda for prosecution. Only terrorists and traitors are currently subject to extraterritorial jurisdiction under Ugandan law. Even murderers don't face that kind of judicial reach.

(Update: Reports out of Kampala late Wednesday indicate that the death penalty may be dropped from the final version of the bill, which may come to a vote as early as two weeks from now.)

"You may think that this bill targets only homosexual individuals," said Sylvia Tamale, dean of law at Uganda's Makerere University, speaking at a public dialogue on the bill in November. "If passed into law, it will stifle the space of civil society. The bill also undermines the role of the media to report freely. We are all potential victims of this bill."(See "On Scene: With Uganda's Anti-Gay Movement.")

The bill has an American genesis of sorts, inspired to a large extent by the visits of U.S. evangelicals who are involved with a movement that promotes Christianity's role in getting homosexuals to become "ex-gays" through prayer and faith. Ugandan supporters of the bill appear to be particularly impressed by the ideas of Scott Lively, a California conservative preacher who has written a book, The Pink Swastika, about what he calls the links between Nazism and a gay agenda for world domination, which, by itself, would have raised the anti-colonial sensitivities of Ugandan society. Says the Rev. Kapya Kaoma, an Episcopalian priest from Zambia who authored a recent report on anti-gay politics in Uganda, Nigeria and Kenya: "The U.S. culture wars have been exported to Africa."

One of the bill's loudest supporters is a charismatic pastor, Martin Ssempa, who heads a Ugandan campus AIDS eradication organization that is funded in part by the U.S. and who was associated with the global outreach of Southern California's Saddleback Church, run by Rick Warren, author of best-selling book The Purpose Driven Life. Ssempa has a penchant for burning condoms. In 2007, he organized a rally against homosexuality to protest "homosexual agents and activists" who were "infiltrating Uganda." Asked how the anti-homosexuality bill might affect the fight against HIV and AIDS, Ssempa seemed bemused. "I don't see what this bill has to do with HIV," he told TIME. Warren, who has called Uganda a "purpose-driven nation," cut ties with Ssempa in October as controversy over the bill grew.

Despite Ssempa's beliefs, experts say the law would impede efforts to stem the spread of HIV and AIDS, especially among the category of "men who have sex with men" - the terminology often used because of the stigma around being openly gay or bisexual. Many homosexuals marry or date women and identify themselves as heterosexual even though they are sleeping with men. That community is disproportionately affected by the disease in sub-Saharan Africa, in part because of a long-standing unwillingness on the continent to acknowledge homosexuality. Indeed, the situation is one of double jeopardy, combining the pariah status of homosexuals in a deeply conservative culture with the stigma of AIDS, which until recently was perceived as a heterosexual disease in Africa, even by gay men. The "gay doctor," who has worked in AIDS wards, said he was stunned when he was told in 2000 that a gay friend may have contracted AIDS. "Most people think they can't get HIV through anal sex," says Grace, who leads a campus group for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth at Makerere University and did not want to give her full name.

To make matters worse, Uganda's ostrich-like denials on homosexuality seem to be tolerated by international donors such as Washington and the U.N. Even in 2009 - a year when the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, known as PEPFAR, gave $285 million for HIV and AIDS programs in Uganda - just one program targeting "men who have sex with men" has been allowed to register with the government, a prerequisite for access to international funding. The program, the Most at Risk Populations Network, received just $5,000. "We used to print educational materials, but it was very expensive," Peter Yiga, of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance of Uganda, tells TIME. "We are lacking funding because we can't register. As an LGBT organization, it is very tricky to register in Uganda without getting arrested."

In 2004, UNAIDS' coordinator in Uganda, Ruben del Prado, was prematurely transferred to India after he quietly held meetings with LGBT groups about the possibility of prevention work among the community. The Ugandan government accused him of holding secret meetings with groups "that promote homosexuality." Since then, Western aid officials have been decidedly silent on the topic of homosexuality and HIV. Officials at UNAIDS, for example, say their organization has adopted a formal policy not to comment on the proposed law. A UNAIDS official in Uganda, who declined to be identified, says the group believes "quiet diplomacy" is the best approach.

The U.S. embassy in Kampala has said it opposes the bill, as have other American officials. Even Scott Lively recently declared that the bill's proposed prescriptions go too far. Rick Warren, however, seems to be avoiding tackling the subject directly. Although he cut ties with Ssempa, the popular preacher released a statement to Newsweek saying, "It is not my personal calling as a pastor in America to comment or interfere in the political process of other nations." That position irks the Rev. Kaoma, who is an Anglican pastor with the Archdiocese of Boston. Warren, he says, has immense influence among Uganda's political Élite, counting many parliamentarians, including the country's First Lady Janet Museveni (who is reportedly close to Ssempa), among his friends. "He eats with them, he knows what goes on, they respect him," said Kaoma in a conference call. At the very least, Warren could get his purpose-driven nation to reflect on the purpose of this severe piece of legislation.

- With reporting by Howard Chua-Eoan / New York

View this article on Time.com

Related articles on Time.com:

* On Scene: With Uganda's Anti-Gay Movement
 
http://www.sodomylaws.org/world/uganda/ugnews12.htm

Uganda Homosexuals Ordered Arrested

Associated Press, September 29, 1999

KAMPALA, Uganda — President Yoweri Museveni has ordered the arrests of homosexuals in Uganda, saying U.N. human rights conventions do not necessarily apply to Africa, a newspaper reported.

Homosexuality is illegal in Uganda and carries a maximum punishment of life imprisonment.

"I have told the Criminal Investigation Department to look for homosexuals, lock them up and charge them," Tuesday’s edition of the government-owned New Vision newspaper quoted him as saying.

Two recent and highly publicized gay marriages in Uganda appeared to prompt Museveni’s remarks during a speech Monday to regional legislators meeting in the capital.

"Even the Holy Bible spells it out clearly that God created Adam and Eve as wife and husband, but not men to marry fellow men" the newspaper quoted Museveni as saying.

The Ugandan leader criticized the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, saying it had not been drawn up with the participation of African countries and therefore was "not universal to Africa."

The declaration, while not explicitly mentioning homosexuality, is widely viewed as enshrining the rights of gays and lesbians.
 
http://www.heraf.or.ke/kenyaafricaaround-the-world/in-uganda-homosexuals-face-death.html

In Uganda homosexuals face death

In Uganda homosexuals face death

By George Orido

Uganda had many people living with HIV and Aids before the scourge became an issue in



Kenya.

A lot of Kenya’s interventions are based on lessons from her neighbour. The world also took cue and Uganda was mentioned in donor meetings and Aids conferences as a model for successful intervention.

Uganda has introduced a strict legislation outlawing any form or abetting homosexuality. Here are some of its provisions:

Any parent who does not denounce their lesbian daughter or gay son to the authorities would be fined Ush5,000,000 (Ksh 200,000) or be imprisoned for three years.

Any teacher who does not report a lesbian or gay pupil to the authorities within 24 hours will also get the same punishment.

Any landlord or landlady who offers housing to a suspected homosexual risks seven years of imprisonment.

Any local council official or member who does not denounce somebody accused of same-sex attraction risks imprisonment or a heavy fine.

Working with gays

Any medical doctor who seeks to prevent the spread of HIV and Aids through working with groups most at risk, risks her or his career.

All civil society leaders should have a comprehensive position on sexual and reproductive health. Failure to do so, they risk their organisations being closed down.

Any human rights activist who seeks to promote an understanding of homosexuals and homosexuality, and will be punished accordingly.

Any person alleged to be a homosexual risks life imprisonment and in some circumstances, the death penalty.
 
http://www.sodomylaws.org/world/uganda/ugnews12.htm

Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East
Country
Africa Lesbian Gay Male Maximum Penalty
Algeria Illegal Illegal 3 years/fine
Angola Illegal Illegal Unknown
Benin Illegal Illegal Unknown
Botswana Legal Illegal 7 years
Burkina Faso Legal Legal 3 years
Burundi Legal Legal Punishable as an "immoral act"
Cameroon Illegal Illegal 5 years/fine
Cape Verde Illegal Illegal Bail
Central African Republic Legal Legal
Chad Legal Legal
Comoros Legal Legal
Congo Legal Legal
Djibouti Illegal Illegal Unknown
Egypt Illegal Illegal A variety of laws are applied
Equatorial Guinea Not available Not available No information
Eritrea Illegal Illegal 3 years
Ethiopia Illegal Illegal 3 years
Gabon Legal Legal
Gambia Not available Illegal 14 years
Ghana Legal Illegal Unknown
Guinea Illegal Illegal 3 years/fine
Guinea Bissau Legal Legal
Ivory Coast Legal Legal
Kenya Legal Illegal 14 years
Lesotho Legal Legal
Liberia Illegal Illegal Misdemeanor
Libya Illegal Illegal 5 years
Madagascar Legal Legal
Malawi Illegal Illegal Unknown
Mali Legal Legal 2 years/fine
Mauritania Illegal Illegal Death
Mauritius Illegal Illegal 5 years
Morocco Illegal Illegal 3 years/fine
Mozambique Legal Illegal 3 years/hard labor
Namibia Legal Illegal Unknown
Niger Legal Legal
Nigeria Legal Illegal Death
Reunion Legal Legal
Rwanda Legal Legal
Sao Tome and Principe Legal Legal
Senegal Illegal Illegal 5 years/fine
Seychelles Not available Illegal Unknown
Sierra Leone Not available Not available Unknown
Somalia Illegal Illegal 3 years
South Africa Legal Legal
Sudan Illegal Illegal Death
Swaziland Illegal Illegal Prison or fine
Tanzania Legal Illegal 14 years
Togo Illegal Illegal 3 years
Tunisia Illegal Illegal 3 years
Uganda Legal Illegal Life
Zaire Unclear Unclear Unknown
Zambia Legal Illegal 14 years
Zimbabwe Legal Illegal 3 years

Americas Lesbian Gay Male Maximum Penalty
Antigua & Barbuda Legal Legal
Netherlands Antilles Legal Legal
Argentina Legal Legal
Aruba Legal Legal
Bahamas Legal Legal
Barbados Illegal Illegal Unknown
Belize Legal Legal
Bermuda Legal Legal
Bolivia Legal Legal
Brazil Legal Legal
Canada Legal Legal
Cayman Islands Legal Legal
Chile Legal Legal
Colombia Legal Legal
Costa Rica Legal Legal
Cuba Legal Legal
Dominican Republic Legal Legal
Ecuador Legal Legal
El Salvador Legal Legal
Falkland Islands / Malvinas Legal Legal
French Guyana Legal Legal
Greenland Legal Legal
Grenada Legal Illegal Unknown
Guadeloupe Legal Legal
Guatemala Legal Legal
Guyana Legal Illegal Life
Haiti Legal Legal
Honduras Legal Legal
Jamaica Legal Illegal 10 years / hard labor
Martinique Legal Legal
Mexico Legal Legal
Nicaragua Illegal Illegal 3 years
Panama Legal Legal
Paraguay Legal Legal
Peru Legal Legal
Puerto Rico (USA) Legal Legal
Saint Kitts and Nevis Illegal Not available
Saint Lucia Illegal Illegal 25 years
Surinam Legal Legal
Trinidad and Tobago Illegal Illegal 10 years
Turks and Caicos Islands Legal Legal
United States of America Legal Legal
Uruguay Legal Legal
Venezuela Legal Legal

Asia-Pacific Lesbian Gay Male Maximum Penalty
Afghanistan Illegal Illegal Death
Australia Legal* Legal*
Bangladesh Illegal Illegal Life
Bhutan Illegal Illegal Life
Brunei Illegal Illegal 10 years
Burma/Myanmar Illegal Illegal 10 years/fine
Cambodia Legal Legal
China Legal Legal
Cook Islands (New Zealand Associated State) Legal Illegal 14 years
Fiji Islands Legal Legal
French Polynesia/Tahiti Legal Legal
Guam (USA) Legal Legal
Hong Kong Legal Legal
India Illegal Illegal Life
Indonesia Legal Legal
Japan Legal Legal
Kazakhstan Legal Legal
Kiribati Legal Illegal 14 years
Kyrgyzstan Legal Legal
Laos Not available Not available Unknown
Macao Legal Legal
Malaysia Illegal Illegal 20 years/caning and fine
Maldives Legal Illegal Life
Marshall Islands Legal Illegal 10 years
Micronesia Legal Legal
Mongolia Legal Legal
Nauru Not available Not available
Nepal Illegal Illegal Life
New Caledonia Legal Legal
New Zealand Legal Legal
Niue (New Zealand Associated State) Legal Illegal 10 years
North Korea Unknown Unknown Unknown
Pakistan Illegal Illegal Death
Papua New Guinea Legal Illegal 14 years
Philippines Legal Legal
Singapore Illegal Illegal Life
Solomon Islands Illegal Illegal 14 years
South Korea Legal Legal
Sri Lanka Legal Illegal 12 years
Taiwan Legal Legal
Tajikistan Legal Legal
Thailand Legal Legal
Tokelau (New Zealand Associated State) Legal Illegal 10 years
Tonga Legal Illegal 10 years
Turkmenistan Legal Illegal 2 years
Tuvalu Legal Illegal 14 years
Uzbekistan Legal Illegal 3 years
Vanuatu/New Hebrides Legal Legal
Vietnam Legal Legal
Western Samoa Illegal Illegal 7 years

Europe Lesbian Gay Male Maximum Penalty
Albania Legal Legal
Andorra Legal Legal
Armenia Legal Legal
Austria Legal Legal
Azerbaijan Legal Legal
Belgium Legal Legal
Belarus Legal Legal
Bosnia-Herzegovina Legal Legal
Bulgaria Legal Legal
Croatia Legal Legal
Cyprus Legal Legal
Czech Republic Legal Legal
Denmark Legal Legal
Estonia Legal Legal
Faroe Islands Legal Legal
Finland Legal Legal
France Legal Legal
Georgia Legal Legal
Germany Legal Legal
Greece Legal Legal
Hungary Legal Legal
Iceland Legal Legal
Ireland Legal Legal
Italy Legal Legal
Latvia Legal Legal
Liechtenstein Legal Legal
Lithuania Legal Legal
Luxembourg Legal Legal
Macedonia Legal Legal
Malta Legal Legal
Moldavia Legal Legal
Monaco Legal Legal
Montenegro Legal Legal
Netherlands Legal Legal
Norway Legal Legal
Poland Legal Legal
Portugal Legal Legal
Romania Legal Legal
Russia Legal Legal
San Marino Legal Legal
Serbia Legal Legal
Slovakia Legal Legal
Slovenia Legal Legal
Spain Legal Legal
Sweden Legal Legal
Switzerland Legal Legal
Turkey Legal Legal
Ukraine Legal Legal
United Kingdom Legal Legal
Vatican City Legal Legal

Middle East Lesbian Gay Male Maximum Penalty
Bahrain Illegal Illegal 10 years
Iran Illegal Illegal Death
Iraq Legal? Legal? Legal but taboo?
Israel Legal Legal
Jordan Legal Legal
Kuwait Illegal Illegal 7 years
Lebanon Illegal Illegal 1 year
Oman Illegal Illegal 3 years
Palestine Illegal Illegal 10 years
Qatar Illegal Illegal 5 years (some uncertainty)
Saudi Arabia Illegal Illegal Death
Syria Illegal Illegal 1 year
United Arab Emirates Illegal Illegal Death
Yemen Illegal Illegal Death
 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091213...zZWMDeW5fdG9wX3N0b3J5BHNsawNob3VzdG9uYmlnZ2U-


Houston biggest US city to elect openly gay mayor
AP


Houston Mayor-elect Annise Parker, center, celebrates her runoff election AP – Houston Mayor-elect Annise Parker, center, celebrates her runoff election vicotry at a campaign party …

* Mayor-elect Annise Parker Slideshow:Mayor-elect Annise Parker

By MONICA RHOR, Associated Press Writer Monica Rhor, Associated Press Writer – 56 mins ago

HOUSTON – Houston became the largest U.S. city to elect an openly gay mayor, with voters handing a solid victory to City Controller Annise Parker after a hotly contested runoff.

Parker defeated former city attorney Gene Locke with 53.6 percent of the vote Saturday in a race that had a turnout of only 16.5 percent.

"This election has changed the world for the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered community. Just as it is about transforming the lives of all Houstonians for the better, and that's what my administration will be about," Parker told supporters after Locke conceded defeat.

Parker, 53, has never made a secret or an issue of her sexual orientation. But it became the focus of the race after anti-gay activists and conservative religious groups endorsed Locke and sent out mailers condemning Parker's "homosexual behavior."

Locke, 61, tried to distance himself from the anti-gay attacks while courting conservative voters who could tip the election in his favor. Meanwhile, gay and lesbian political organizations nationwide rallied to support Parker by raising money for her campaign and making calls urging people to vote.

Several other U.S. cities, including Portland, Ore., Providence, R.I., and Cambridge, Mass., have openly gay mayors, but none as large as Houston.

A little more than 152,000 residents turned out to cast ballots in the nation's fourth largest city, which has a population of 2.2 million. Of those voters, 81,743 chose Parker — some 11,000 votes more than Locke received.

Although Locke condemned the anti-gay rhetoric, two of his key supporters contributed money to a conservative political action committee that sent out an anti-gay mailer earlier this month, urging voters not to pick Parker because she was endorsed by the "gay and lesbian political caucus."

Campaign finance reports show Ned Holmes, finance chairman of Locke's campaign, and James Dannenbaum, a member of the campaign's finance committee, each gave $20,000.

Late Saturday, Locke offered his congratulations to Parker and urged the city to move on from the bruising campaign fight.

"Here's what our city needs now: It needs unity. It needs us to come together and heal like we've never healed before, and to move forward under a new administration," he said.

Parker and Locke, both Democrats in the nonpartisan race, advanced to the runoff after garnering more votes than two other candidates on Nov. 3. Parker will succeed Bill White, who is term-limited after serving six years and is seeking the Democratic nomination for governor.

Houston is predominantly Democratic and about 25 percent black and one-third Hispanic. About 60,000 of its residents identify themselves as gay or lesbian.

___

On the Net:

Harris County elections: http://www.election.co.harris.tx.us/

___

Associated Press writer Terry Wallace in Dallas contributed to this report.
 
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