LGBTQ+ rights

Uganda’s anti-LGBTQ+ bill appears to violate constitution, UN rights chief says

Reuters

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Uganda’s anti-LGBTQ+ bill appears to violate constitution, UN rights chief says

Quin Karala, 29, a member of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer (LGBTQ) community and a single mother of one poses for a picture with rainbow colours at the offices of Rella Women's Empowerment Program, for LGBTQ rights advocacy, after a Reuters interview in Kulambiro suburb of Kampala, Uganda April 4, 2023. REUTERS//File Photo

Abubaker Lubowa/Reuters

'I hope that the judiciary is going to look into it and I can tell you, if they look at human rights law, their own constitution, they will find it in violation of it,' says Volker Turk

GENEVA, Switzerland – The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said Uganda’s anti-LGBTQ bill appears to violate the constitution and urged the country’s judiciary to review it.

The proposal signed into law by President Yoweri Museveni is considered one of the harshest in the world and carries the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality.” The government says the constitution has been followed.

“I hope that the judiciary is going to look into it and I can tell you, if they look at human rights law, their own constitution, they will find it in violation of it,” Volker Turk told Reuters on Tuesday, May 30, describing the law as “devastating.”

He did not elaborate on which aspect of the constitution had been violated.

Asked about alleged breaches of international law, a spokesperson later added: “a whole range,” saying these included the rights to equality, non-discrimination and to life.

Uganda’s information minister, Chris Baryomunsi, rejected the criticism, telling Reuters: “We followed the constitution, we followed the laid out procedures and the law has been legally passed. For us we do not consider homosexuality as a constitutional right, it is just a sexual deviation which we do not promote as Ugandans and Africans.

“So we disagree with the West on that, homosexual acts are not a human right, they are not. It is abnormal behavior which is being promoted by societies in the West.”

A Ugandan organization, Human Rights Awareness and Promotion Forum, and 10 other individuals have filed a complaint against the law at the constitutional court, one of the petitioners, Busingye Kabumba, told Reuters. However, it is not yet clear if the court will take up the case.

Turk also said that “each and every aspect of the law” would also be examined by UN human rights experts.

He criticized “so-called religious groups” for stoking the government to pass the legislation. “They want to use the machinery of the state to impose their views which is utterly unacceptable,” he said. – Rappler.com

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