BBC News, 13
November 2012
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Uganda will
pass a new law against homosexuality by the end of 2012 as a "Christmas
gift" to its advocates, the speaker of parliament has said.
The AP news
agency quoted Rebecca Kadaga as saying that Ugandans were "demanding"
the law.
Homosexual
acts are already illegal in Uganda, but the bill which is before parliament
proposes tougher sentences for people convicted.
Foreign
donors have threatened to cut aid if gay rights are not respected.
The bill,
tabled by MP David Bahati, proposes jail terms for homosexual acts, including a
life sentence in certain circumstances.
It
prohibits the "promotion" of gay rights and calls for the punishment
of anyone who "funds or sponsors homosexuality" or "abets
homosexuality".
But a
clause which calls for the death penalty against people found guilty of
"aggravated homosexuality" - defined as when one of the participants
is a minor, HIV-positive, disabled or a "serial offender" - is to be
dropped, Mr Bahati has said.
Diplomatic spat
The bill
was strongly condemned last year by Western leaders, including US President
Barack Obama who described it as "odious".
International
donors have threatened to cut off aid to Uganda if the country does not do more
to protect the rights of gay people.
Ms Kadaga
said she hoped the bill, first tabled in 2009 and now before a parliamentary
committee, would be passed by the end of the year, Reuters news agency reports.
"Ugandans
want that law as a Christmas gift. They have asked for it and we'll give them
that gift," Ms Kadaga is quoted as saying.
Last month,
Ms Kadaga was involved in a row with Canada's Foreign Minister John Baird over
gay rights at a meeting of the Inter-Parliamentary Union in Quebec.
When Mr
Bairn warned Uganda not to trample on people's human rights, Ms Kadaga replied:
"If homosexuality is a value for the people of Canada they should not seek
to force Uganda to embrace it. We are not a colony or a protectorate of
Canada."
She
received a rapturous welcome from several hundred anti-gay activists, including
religious leaders, at Uganda's Entebbe airport when she returned from her trip.
In June,
Uganda's Minister for Ethics and Integrity Simon Lokodo said 38
non-governmental organisations which he accused of promoting homosexuality would
be banned.
Clare
Byarugaba, the co-ordinator of Uganda's Civil Society Coalition on Human Rights
and Constitutional Law, said the group would challenge the law in the
constitutional court, Reuters reports.
"The
international community supports us and we also believe in the constitution of
our country which protects the rights and freedoms of everyone," she is
quoted as saying.
Correspondents
say many Ugandans are deeply conservative, and say homosexuality is against
their religious and cultural beliefs.

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