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Uganda is “under attack” PDF Print E-mail
Written by Dan Moshenberg   
Friday, 06 November 2009

Uganda is under attack and, as always, it’s the mothers of the nation who are to blame. 

An anti-homosexuality bill has been tabled before the Parliament of Uganda. Many have risen to denounce and oppose it, both within the country and from across the globe.  Many others have risen to support it. Some in the Church have argued in favor of the capital punishment in the Bill, others have argued for life imprisonment. The ones arguing for life imprisonment are actually considered to be in opposition to the Bill. After all, in Uganda “homosexuality is already an offence under the Penal Code of Uganda as is same-sex marriage, which is prohibited by the Constitution.”

This is the logic of being-under-attack. As Michel Foucault put it, “Society must be defended”, and you, sir, madam, are not of society. You are a threat. Equally, you as a threat are a race, or better a sub-race. LGBTI people are being described as a public health threat, a moral threat, a national security threat, a spiritual threat, a pathogen. When, for example, the Archbishop of Uganda rallied his flock last year to protect him from the threat of the gay community, what did he say? “The team of homosexuals is very rich." Archbishop  Henry Luke Orombi said, “They have money and will do whatever it takes to make sure that this vice penetrates Africa. We have to stand out and say no to them.” Sound familiar? If not, go to Nazi propaganda, especially in its early and middle years, and see how the Jews, the Roma, the homosexuals and the disabled were described. Wealthy, a penetrating vice, infectious and infesting. Vermin. 

The Bill was put forth and its campaign is spearheaded by Ugandan MP David Bahati. Some describe this whole situation as a convenient distraction for the governmentOthers see this as yet another sign that the government is filled with “purveyors of hate, who have no qualms about killing those who disagree with them or are unlike themselves. No doubt, they are more dangerous to the people of Uganda, than gays and lesbians.”

Not the good MP Bahati, however. He explains, in an interview published Sunday, November 1, that Uganda is under attack from the evil of homosexuality, that the “Anti-Homosexuality Bill is a nice piece of legislation. It is a consolidation of values of Ugandans and the country at large. It aims at holding the integrity of Ugandans high in the sky.” The nation is under attack, and now, so is Bahati: “ever since we tabled this Bill, we have come under attack. People have argued that we are promoting a hate campaign against homosexuals. And these attacks are coming mostly from civil society members who claim that homosexuality is a human right.

“These same groups have persistently continued to place this evil in the category of human rights. They have rallied people to resist the Bill. They argue that we are targeting homosexuals, we hate them. But some of the people behind these messages are mothers and respectable people in our country.

“Can you imagine mothers who are supposed to protect their children from abuses like sodomy are the very people protesting this Bill? Instead of protecting their children they are up in arms supporting abusers of these children! People who support this evil have endlessly started to threaten us.”

This is the logic of national-being-under-attack. What is at stake here? Motherhood. Mr. Bahati simply wants to save the mothers of Uganda … from themselves.

This is the all too familiar logic of being-under-attack, of protection and security. Hate is called love, violence is called peace, victims are called perpetrators, and love itself is called evil.

Remember the Call to Action: “Denounce this bill through a protest at a Ugandan Diplomatic Mission in your country on November 9th 2009, where applicable. Urge the Government of Uganda to reject this Bill in its entirety.”

Uganda is…not under attack.

Dan Moshenberg runs Women in and Beyond: a blog highlighting women's rights and issues around the world. 


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its justifiable
written by catherine , November 06, 2009
passing a bill of anti-homosexuality is not encouraging hatred but justifying the works and Gods wishes and reason for why a man shall leave his mother and father and be united to his wife who is a woman
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No, Catherine, it's not.`
written by Stephanie Migot , November 06, 2009
@Catherine,

However you feel about homosexuality from a religious perspective, this bill would sanction death for a practice that harms no one but the willing participants. Not only is it attempting to legislate morality, and allowing the government to invade the privacy of the bedroom, but it also brings religious mores and prejudices into the realm of law. Uganda is not a theocracy.

Don't imagine that only LGBTQ individuals will be targeted by this law, should it come to pass. Their straight friends, relatives and associates are expected to denounce them or risk facing punishment as well. Not only that, but it includes any activities or behaviour that occur outside Uganda too. All Ugandans, whether in the country or not, will be considered suspects.

From a legal perspective, this is incredibly bad law. From a social perspective, it will do nothing for social cohesion. Neighbour will turn against neighbour, innocent people will be imprisoned through simple hearsay, and LGBTQ people will merely be driven further underground.

By all means take comfort in your religious beliefs. But it is most uncharitable and un-Christian of you to assume to dictate how others should live their lives.
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Uganda! oh, Uganda!
written by Denis Nzioka , December 15, 2009
Uganda should just accept the fact that gays have always been part and parcel of their history and culture.They cannot 'eradicate' homosexuality or law it away. The more they try to kill it the more it will be more open. I only hope that they see the error in their actions.
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