Uganda has become the latest
African country to pass the Anti-Gay law. Below is President Yoweri Museveni
reaction and reply to President Barack Obama.
- First-time offenders to get 14 years in jail
- Repeat offenders to get life imprisonment as well as acts involving a minor, a disabled person or where one partner is infected with HIV
- The bill originally proposed the death penalty for some homosexual acts, but that was later removed amid international criticism
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I have seen the statement H.E President Obama of the USA made in reaction to my statement that I was going to sign the anti-homosexual Bill, which I made at Kyankwanzi.
I have seen the statement H.E President Obama of the USA made in reaction to my statement that I was going to sign the anti-homosexual Bill, which I made at Kyankwanzi.
Before I react to H.E. Obama’s statement, let me, again, put on
record my views on the issue of homosexuals (ebitiingwa, bisiyaga in some of
our dialects).
Right from the beginning of this debate, my views were as
follows:
1. I agreed with the MPs and almost all Ugandans that promotion
of homosexuality in Uganda must be criminalized or rather should continue to be
criminalized because the British had already done that;
2. those who agreed to become homosexuals for mercenary reasons
(prostitutes) should be harshly punished as should those who paid them to be
homosexual prostitutes; and
3. exhibitionism of homosexual
behavior must be punished because, in this part of the World, it is forbidden
to publicly exhibit any sexual conduct (kissing, etc) even for heterosexuals;
if I kissed my wife of 41 years in public, I would lose elections in Uganda.
The only point I disagreed on with some of the Members of Parliament (MPs) and other Ugandans was on the persons I thought were born homosexual. According to the casual observations, there are rare deviations in nature from the normal. You witness cases like albinos (nyamagoye), barren women or men (enguumba), epa (breastless women) etc. I, therefore, thought that similarly there were people that were born with the disorientation of being attracted to the same sex. That is why I thought that that it was wrong to punish somebody on account of being born abnormal. That is why I refused to sign the Bill and, instead, referred it to our Party (the NRM) to debate it again. In the meantime, I sought for scientific opinions on this matter.
I am grateful to Ms. Kerry Kennedy of the USA who sent me
opinions by scientists from the USA saying that there could be some indications
that homosexuality could be congenital. In our conference, I put these opinions
to our scientists from the Department of Genetics, the School of Medicine and
the Ministry of Health. Their unanimous conclusion was that homosexuality,
contrary to my earlier thinking, was behavioural and not genetic. It was learnt
and could be unlearnt. I told them to put their signatures to that conclusion
which they did. That is why I declared my intention to sign the Bill, which I
will do. I have now received their signed document, which says there is no
single gene that has been traced to cause homosexuality. What I want them to
clarify is whether a combination of genes can cause anybody to be homosexual.
Then my task will be finished and I will sign the Bill.
After my statement to that effect which was quoted widely around
the World, I got reactions from some friends from outside Africa. Statements
like: “it is a matter of choice” or “whom they love” which President Obama
repeated in his statement would be most furiously rejected by almost the
entirety of our people. It cannot be a matter of choice for a man to behave
like a woman or vice-versa. The argument I had pushed was that there could be
people who are born like that or “who they are”, according to President Obama’s
statement.
I, therefore, encourage the US government to help us by working
with our Scientists to study whether, indeed, there are people who are born
homosexual. When that is proved, we can review this legislation. I would be
among those who will spearhead that effort. That is why I had refused to sign
the Bill until my premise was knocked down by the position of our Scientists.
I would like to discourage the USA government from taking the
line that passing this law will “complicate our valued relationship” with the
USA as President Obama said. Countries and Societies should relate with each
other on the basis of mutual respect and independence in decision making.
“Valued relationship” cannot be sustainably maintained by one
Society being subservient to another society. There are a myriad acts the
societies in the West do that we frown on or even detest. We, however, never
comment on those acts or make them preconditions for working with the West.
Africans do not seek to impose their views on anybody. We do not want anybody
to impose their views on us. This very debate was provoked by Western groups
who come to our schools and try to recruit children into homosexuality. It is
better to limit the damage rather than exacerbate it.
I thank everybody.
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