Yahoo – AFP, Isaac Kasamani, 2 January 2013
A Ugandan
court on Wednesday dismissed charges against a British theatre producer accused
of staging a play about gay people in the country without proper authorisation,
his lawyer said, citing lack of evidence.
David
Cecil, 34, had faced up to two years in prison on charges of "disobeying
lawful orders". He was arrested in September and briefly jailed before
being granted bail.
His lawyer
John Francis Onyango said that no evidence was submitted to the court and his
client was now free.
"The
case was dismissed and David was given back his passport," Onyango told
AFP. "The prosecutor has not presented any evidence and failed to sustain
the case."
The
groundbreaking play "The River and The Mountain" was performed at
several venues around Kampala in August despite an injunction by Uganda's
government-run media council.
The play
examined the plight of a man coming out as a homosexual and the motivations of
Uganda's vociferous anti-gay lobby.
Written by
British playwright Beau Hopkins, it was directed and performed by Ugandans.
Homosexuality
is already a crime in Uganda but proposed legislation currently before
parliament would see the death penalty imposed for certain homosexual acts.
Although
legislators have said the bill could be changed, in its current form, anyone
caught engaging in homosexual acts for the second time, or engaging in gay sex
where one partner is a minor or has HIV, would be sentenced to death.

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