KAMPALA- American President Barack Obama has
warned that his country and Uganda’s relationship would be “complicated”
if President Museveni assents to the Anti-Homosexuality Bill.
A statement from the White House in Washington
quoted Mr Obama as saying that the bill will “complicate our valued
relationship with Uganda”, adding: “The Anti-Homosexuality Bill in
Uganda, once law, will be more than an affront and a danger to the gay
community in Uganda. It will be a step backward for all Ugandans and
reflect poorly on Uganda’s commitment to protecting the human rights of
its people. It also will mark a serious setback for all those around the
world who share a commitment to freedom, justice and equal rights.”
Mr Obama’s Sunday warning came a day after
President Museveni announced at the NRM party’s parliamentary retreat in
Kyankwanzi that he would assent to the Bill after a presentation by
Ugandan scientists concluded that homosexuality is not natural.
“It is on the strength (that people are not
homosexuals by genetics) that I am going to sign the bill,” President
Museveni told the MPs. “I know we are going to have a big battle with
the outside groups about this but I will tell them what our scientists
have to say.”
Whereas Parliament had passed the Bill in
December, President Museveni was hesitant to assent to it, first citing
the lack of quorum on the day it was passed but later indicating that he
needed a scientific explanation on whether homosexuality was a natural
condition.
Barely 24 hours after his Kyankwanzi
pronouncement, the President was already facing the “battle” with the
American National Security Adviser, Ms Susan Rice, calling Mr Museveni
to express her government’s and Mr Obama’s reservations on the matter.
According to the Foreign Affairs Permanent
Secretary, Ambassador James Mugume, the Americans had called to offer
“further evidence” that homosexuality is a natural behaviour in
contradiction with what the local scientists had presented.
“We are discussing with the US government. We are
waiting to see what they have [to present]. I am told that the Americans
have some materials and evidence that they feel were left out by our
scientists,” Mr Mugume said in a telephone interview yesterday.
Asked when the US was scheduled to table the said
evidence, Ambassador Mugume could not give a clear time-line, only
saying: “It will not take a lot of time. It will be soon.”
Weighing in, the President’s Press Secretary, Mr Tamale Mirundi, said: “Uganda’s relationship with the US has not been based on homosexuality. We have had a long relationship with the US even before the word homosexuality was invented. Museveni will not allow them (homosexuals) to be persecuted but they also cannot be allowed to exhibit themselves.”
Weighing in, the President’s Press Secretary, Mr Tamale Mirundi, said: “Uganda’s relationship with the US has not been based on homosexuality. We have had a long relationship with the US even before the word homosexuality was invented. Museveni will not allow them (homosexuals) to be persecuted but they also cannot be allowed to exhibit themselves.”
While Ambassador Mugume did not offer details of
Ms Rice’s call, the American top official posted on her Twitter account
that “she had spoken at length” with Mr Museveni.
Thereafter, the US White House posted Obama’s
official statement on their website, in which he warned of the
“complication” of relationships if Uganda went ahead and passed the law.
“As a country and a people, the United States has
consistently stood for the protection of fundamental freedoms and
universal human rights. We believe that people everywhere should be
treated equally, with dignity and respect, and that they should have the
opportunity to reach their fullest potential, no matter who they are or
whom they love,” the statement said in part.
A post on the US embassy in Kampala official
Facebook page yesterday, quoted Ambassador Scott H. DeLisi, saying:
“This is not a debate about homosexuality, it is about fundamental
rights for all citizens regardless of gender, sexual orientation, or
community.”
Ms Erin Truhler, an information officer with the embassy, insisted she had “no specifics apart from what is in the statement.”
The statement did not delve into the specifics of
the US-Uganda relations that are likely to be strained by the Bill, but
the former supports local efforts in the social, economic, political and
security spheres.
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