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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsQuiet diplomacy faulted for Africa's anti-gay laws
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) Last month, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni met in his office with a team of U.S.-based rights activists concerned about legislation that would impose life sentences for some homosexual acts. South African retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu joined them by phone, pointing out similarities between Uganda's Anti-Homosexuality Bill and racist laws enforced under South Africa's former apartheid government.
Museveni made clear he had no plans to sign the bill, said Santiago Canton of the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights, who attended the Jan. 18 meeting. "He specifically said this bill is a fascist bill," Canton recalled. "Those were the first words that came out of his mouth."
One month later, however, Museveni appears to have changed his mind, saying through a spokesman last week that he would sign the bill "to protect Ugandans from social deviants." Coming one month after Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan signed into law his country's harsh anti-gay bill, which criminalizes same-sex marriage and activism, Museveni's new position highlights Western governments' apparent inability to temper governmental discrimination against gays in Africa.
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"We need a better strategy," said Julie Dorf, senior adviser at the Council for Global Equality. "We do believe that our government here in the U.S. needs to ramp up the potential consequences that countries might face for these regressive anti-human rights measures. I have no doubt that President Museveni watched very carefully what happened after President Jonathan signed the Nigeria bill. And the truth is, there wasn't much of a reaction."
http://news.yahoo.com/quiet-diplomacy-faulted-africa-39-anti-gay-laws-092526333.html
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Quiet diplomacy faulted for Africa's anti-gay laws (Original Post)
alsame
Feb 2014
OP
theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)1. Very interesting article.
Thanks for posting this.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)2. I'm skeptical whether western, predominantly white countries
with a history of colonialism in Africa would have been able to turn public/elite opinion around on this by making threats. Associating LGBT rights with the values of colonialism could have made things even worse.