Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has signed into law a bill that toughens penalties against gay people and defines some homosexual acts as crimes punishable by life in prison.
Homosexual acts are
already illegal in Uganda, and Museveni had gone back and forth recently
about whether he would sign the controversial bill in the face of vocal
opposition from the West.
At the public signing of
the bill Monday, a defiant Museveni declared that he would not allow the
West to impose its values on Uganda.
"We have been
disappointed for a long time by the conduct of the West, the way you
conduct yourselves there," he told CNN's Zain Verjee in Entebbe. "Our
disappointment is now exacerbated because we are sorry to see that you
live the way you live, but we keep quiet about it. Now you say 'you must
also live like us' -- that's where we say no."
The bill, introduced
first in 2009, originally included a death penalty clause for some
homosexual acts. It was briefly shelved when Britain and other European
nations threatened to withdraw aid to Uganda, which relies on millions
of dollars from the international community.
The nation's parliament
passed the bill in December, replacing the death penalty provision with a
proposal of life in prison for "aggravated homosexuality." This
includes acts in which one person is infected with HIV, "serial
offenders" and sex with minors, according to Amnesty International.
The bill also proposed
years in prison for anyone who counsels or reaches out to gays and
lesbians, a provision that would ensnare rights groups and others
providing services to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.
Museveni's position on
the law changed several times since lawmakers passed it late last year.
In January he said he wouldn't sign the bill, describing homosexuals as
"sick" people who needed help, not imprisonment. But he backtracked this
month and said he'd sign it because scientists had determined that
there is no gene for homosexuality and that it is merely a choice to
embrace abnormal behavior.
"It was learned and could be unlearned," Museveni said.
Shortly after his
announcement, U.S. President Barack Obama warned that enacting the bill
would affect relations between the two nations. He described the
proposal as an "affront and a danger to the gay community" in Uganda.
The U.S. is among the nation's largest donors.
On Monday, Museveni
rejected the suggestion that the new laws were a step back for Uganda
and said he wasn't concerned about the West's perception of his country.
cont. reading after the cut
"Worried? Not at all,"
he told CNN. "If the West doesn't want to work with us because of
homosexuals, then we have enough space here to live by ourselves and do
business with other people."
"We see how you do
things, the families, how they're organized. All the things, we see
them, we keep quiet," he said. "It's not our country, maybe you like it.
So there's now an attempt at social imperialism -- to impose social
values of one group on our society."
Homosexuality in Africa
Homosexuality is illegal
in 38 African countries, where most sodomy laws were introduced during
colonialism. In Uganda, homosexual acts were punishable by 14 years to
life in prison even before the controversial bill was signed into law.
Lawmakers in the
conservative nation sought tougher legislation, saying the influence of
Western lifestyles risked destroying family units.
Rights groups worldwide have condemned the bill as draconian.
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