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Uganda Passes Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill

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Uganda’s parliament passed an extreme anti-LGBTQ+ bill on Tuesday that includes a lifetime prison sentence for engaging in same-sex sexual relations and the death penalty in other cases.

The bill, officially known as “Anti-Homosexuality Bill, 2023,” now awaits the signature of Uganda President Yoweri Museveni to become law. Museveni, who is not a supporter of LGBTQ+ rights, returned a similar bill to the parliament in April, asking for revisions to soften the legislation’s harsh penalties and treatment of LGBTQ+ people.

“Let’s protect Ugandans, let’s protect our values, our virtues,” parliament speaker Anita Among said in parliament after the bill’s passage. “We have a culture to protect. The Western world will not come and rule Uganda.”

Despite Museveni’s earlier request to include provisions for the so-called rehabilitation of LGBTQ+ people, the legislation passed on Tuesday remains relatively unchanged from the earlier bill that caused an outcry from governments and advocacy groups around the world.

People found to be “engaging in acts of homosexuality” would be sentenced to life in prison. Mere suspicion of being LGBTQ+ is not criminalized in the current bill. The bill still calls the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality” which refers to people living with HIV engaging in same-sex sexual relations and repeat offenders.

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