Jun 20, 2012

ANOTHER DANGEROUS/GUTLESS UGANDAN GOVERNMENT LIAR/MOUTHPIECE: Ethics Minister Simon Lokodo told Reuters that 38 NGO organizations are being targeted for supporting Uganda's homosexuals and gays and lesbians for "recruiting" young children into homosexuality. UPDATE -- LOKODO TOLD TO ¨TONE IT DOWN¨



¨...we gay Ugandans hide so well, and are gracefully camouflaged, that fellow Ugandans frequently ask themselves who the "evil gays" are. Of course, we are their kin.¨

KAMPALA (Reuters) - Uganda said on Wednesday it was banning 38 non-governmental organizations it accuses of promoting homosexuality and recruiting children.

Homosexuality is illegal in Uganda, along with more than 30 other countries in Africa, and activists say few Africans are openly gay, fearing imprisonment, violence and losing their jobs.

Ethics ¨Minister¨ Simon Lokodo ¨corrected¨
Ethics Minister Simon Lokodo told Reuters the organizations being targeted were receiving support from abroad for Uganda's homosexuals and accused gays and lesbians of "recruiting" young children in the country into homosexuality.

"The NGOs are channels through which monies are channeled to (homosexuals) to recruit," the minister, a former Catholic priest, said.

He did not name which organizations were on the list.

A bill calling for harsh penalties against homosexuals and outlawing the "promotion" of homosexuality, including providing financial support to gays and lesbians, is pending in the east African country's parliament.

A previous bill called for the death penalty for repeat offenders, although the new version is expected to drop this clause, as well as calls for life imprisonment, after international condemnation of the proposal and threats to cut off aid.

Lokodo said the local and international nongovernmental organizations would be de-registered for promoting homosexuality.

"I have got a record of meetings that they have held to empower, enhance and recruit (homosexuals)," Lokodo said.

On Monday, he ordered the breakup of a gay rights conference being held at a hotel just outside the capital Kampala.

Police officers sealed off the venue for several hours, detaining gay activists from around the region.

"They claimed they (were) investigating a security threat," Pepe Julian Onziema, an activist with Sexual Minorities Uganda who attended the conference. "(The minister) is just trying to intimidate us."

Around 15 activists from Uganda, Rwanda, Kenya and Tanzania were questioned and later released without charge.

"They were questioned on what exactly they were up to and the assembly they were involved in," Kampala Metropolitan police spokesman Idi Senkumbi said.

Mohammad Ndifuna, the director of Human Rights Network Uganda, one of the organizations to be banned, said the minister's threat was part of a larger attack on civil society in Uganda.

"We know that they have been all kinds of threats coming towards the (NGO) sector for different reasons," said Ndifuna.

In May, Uganda threatened to de-register the British charity Oxfam over accusations of government involvement in violent land grabs in the country.¨ Uganda to ban NGOs accused of promoting gay rights

UPDATE ON FRIDAY -- Ugandan minister: Gays have freedom of assembly

The Ugandan government has issued a statement following reports of gay rights workshops being broken up and NGOs being dissolved saying gay people have the right to freely assemble in the African state.

Ethics Minister Simon Lokodo signed the statement following international reports on the situation for gay Ugandans.

The statement says: “No government official is (supposed) to harass any section of the community and everybody in Uganda enjoys the freedom to lawfully assemble and associate freely with others.” HERE

·  Thanks to Reuters, International
·  Thanks to Box Turtle Bulletin, sidebar
·  Thanks to Jocelyn
·  Thanks to Pink News, United Kingdom, sidebar

No comments: