cn_us_uganda_gays_sequence02-300x225U.S. President Barack Obama has sharply criticized an anti-gay bill in Uganda that would impose the death penalty in some cases. Other western governments and gay rights activists also have criticized the legislation. Supporters on the ground in Kampala have in turn accuses the U.S. and other western nations of interfering in Uganda’s internal affairs.

The Ugandan measure calls for the death penalty or life imprisonment for HIV-positive homosexuals who have sex with minors. However, such infractions have steadily broadened to threaten anyone who happens to be homosexual in Uganda.

World-renowned humanitarian and Arcadia Foundation President Betty Bigombe shares the views of Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, expressing “strongest concerns” about the proposal. Betty is best known for her work as chief mediator in the northern Uganda conflict. Mr. Museveni has urged lawmakers to craft a measure that, in his words, ‘does not compromise our principles‘ and takes into account Uganda’s foreign policy interests. “The Prime Minister of Canada came to see me and what was he talking about? Gays. Prime Minister Gordon Brown came to see me and what was he talking about? Gays,” he said.

Earlier this week, at the U.S. Congress, some 200 lawmakers introduced a resolution condemning the bill.

U.S. President Barack Obama criticized the Ugandan measure while speaking at a prayer breakfast last Thursday in Washington. “We may disagree about gay marriage, but surely we can agree that it is unconscionable to target gays and lesbians for who they are — whether it’s here in the United States or, more extremely in odious laws that are being proposed, most recently in Uganda,” he said.

The bill’s author, Ugandan politician David Bahati, has this response to nations threatening to withhold aid if his measure passes. “We would rather stay with our values and you stay with your money,” he said.

Gay rights activists in Uganda say the measure has intensified anti-gay prejudice. Pepe Julia Onzeima says she has been harassed frequently. “I have been picked up off the street, detained for sometime, ridiculed, intimidated, some money taken away from my wallet, and then I am.. .you know, they release me, they tell me ‘go,’ ” she said.

Anti-gay measures have emerged in some east African countries in recent months. Kenya and Tanzania already have anti-gay laws that gay rights

Mr. Museveni clearly understands that although his nation is fruitful in oil and has immense potential from interested foreign investors, such legislation only hinders progression and stifles such opportunity. We have seen erratic policies masked as bold, decisive initiatives throughout Africa, more noticeably from Mugabe’s Zimbabwe, and the fallout thereafter is more than a pattern; its a recipe for a geopolitical stonewall.

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