We stand with Tourism and the LGBTQ Community in Uganda

Uganda LGBTQ

No tourism promotions, advertising, nor content that encourages travel to Uganda is currently accepted by eTurboNews due to safety concerns.

The ruling political party in Uganda, known as the National Resistance Movement (NRM), is behind the recent bill that would criminalize the LGBTQ community in a way no country in the world has ever done.

The National Resistance Movement is the ruling political force in the Republic of Uganda.

Membership to NRM is open to all Ugandans, irrespective of ethnic identity, sex, tribe, creed or religion, birth, economic status, race and disability, or other sectional division, who are prepared to abide by its Constitution, Code of Conduct, Rules, Regulations, and By-laws as may from time to time be made.

Uganda’s President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni, leading this party, is a firm opponent to the “alternative LGBTQ lifestyle” and convinced this must be a religious, moral, and a criminal issue in his country.

Anyone who is gay, lesbian, bi-sexual, or transgender or those protecting people of this class, will face lifelong prison terms in Uganda once the President signs it into law.

This Uganda bill is facing strong opposition by many world leaders and even by the Pope.

There was a glimmer of hope today that the bill would not be signed. The bill as it currently is won’t be signed, but it will be signed once it is rephrased to include a compromise for “amnesty” for those that “come out” as LGBTQ and get “help.”

Last month, eTurboNews warned readers that “your life could be in danger when traveling to Uganda.”

eTurboNews stands with all members of the travel and tourism sector in Uganda, and with the LGBTQ community!

eTurboNews has covered and assisted Uganda tourism for two decades, but as of last month, this publication stopped tourism related coverage and canceled advertising in support of Uganda.

This was related to the Uganda Tourism Board CEO in a private email by this publisher, who is also Chairman of the World Tourism Network and the original founder of the African Tourism Board.

Signed by 15 leading scientists from South Africa, the United States, Canada, the UK, Kenya, and Australia, a group of leading scientists found that genetics play a role in homosexuality, and that the practice cannot be caught like a “common cold.” Nor can homosexuality be indoctrinated; they say: “Exposure to rainbow flags will not make a child gay.”

“Sexual orientation is not limited to any specific region. It is not confined by borders drawn on a map. It needs no passport to travel. Indeed, there’s clear evidence for same sex relationships in Africa dating back hundreds of years,” a letter published today by CNN said.

CNN also reported that Professor Glenda Gray, President and CEO of the South African Medical Research Council, said: “Despite the rhetoric, homosexuality is not a pernicious western import. If anything, it´s state-sponsored homophobia that´s un-African and against the principles of Ubuntu, not homosexuality.”

CNN recently published an interview with an LGBTQ activist in Uganda.

It’s now a crime to be human in Uganda!

A concerned Uganda citizen in an interview on CNN

Members of the World Tourism Network in Uganda and many of the tourism stakeholders contacted by eTurboNews assured this publication that it’s completely safe to travel to Uganda. They also confirmed Uganda is open for tourism.

The U.S. Embassy did not yet address this pending bill, but points out that Uganda has been a reliable partner for the United States in promoting stability in the Horn and East/Central Africa regions and in combating terror, particularly through its contribution to the African Union Mission in Somalia. 

eTurboNews promised complimentary advertising for members of the Uganda Tourism community once this bill was no longer an issue to the safety of tourists traveling to the Pearl of Africa.

Today, the Uganda National Resistance Movement issued the following press release, that is giving insight on how the President in Uganda and his party members feel about this bill.

The content is chilling and discretion is advised when reading it.

H.E. Museveni to return the Anti-Homosexuality Bill to parliament for changes before it’s signed into law

President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni has congratulated the members of parliament for their stand on homosexuality and agreed to assent to the Anti-Homosexuality Bill 2023 into law.
 
“It is good that you rejected the pressure from the imperialists. Those imperialists have been messing up the world for 600 years causing so much damage,” the President said, adding that most of the problems and the instability in many African countries are caused by imperialists trying to impose what is not meant for Africa.
 
This was during an interaction with members of the NRM Parliamentary caucus at Kololo Independence grounds on Thursday about the Anti Homosexuality Bill 2023 sent to him for signing into law.
 
“Therefore, I congratulate you for making that stand and also the bishops, the religious people, and the citizens,” H.E. Museveni added.
 
The President who is also the National Chairman of the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM) was, however, informed by Attorney General Kiryowa Kiwanuka that the bill passed by parliament in its current form criminalizes even those who voluntarily come out to have practiced homosexuality and need to be helped. He proposed a provision for amnesty for those who will have come out to be helped,, not to punish them to allow others not to fear to come out.
 
“This country has issued an amnesty for people who have carried out criminal activities of treasonous nature against this country. A similar provision would be provided in this law to ensure that a person who comes out on his own is not criminalized. In that regard I would like to beg the members of Parliament and implore them to allow Your Excellency to return this bill so that we can address that matter,” the Attorney General said.
 
This, according to the President, was his main concern.
“The issue I raised is a matter of subsistence. I agree with the bill, but my original problem is the physiologically disoriented person. What you are saying is that the law doesn’t recognize him as long as he does not act. But how do you provide for him to come out?” H.E. Museveni said by asking members of Parliament to make some corrections especially not to frighten someone who needs rehabilitation to come out.

The President promised to meet the legal affairs committee of Parliament, the sponsor of the motion Hon. Asuman Basalirwa, and other interested parties next week to finalize the bill.
 
“Since we have agreed now, I’m going to return that bill, and you quickly deal with those issues and we sign it.”
 
However, the President reminded NRM MPs of the need to be patriots when fighting what he termed as imperialists. He reminded them that in the 1980s they fought to liberate Uganda with no pay until recently.
 
“That’s how we can fight. We’re dangerous, because we can fight for no or low pay,” the President said, calling upon members of Parliament to brace themselves for the likely consequences including cutting the wage bill which is about 8 trillion shillings to cater for sectors like health where promoters of homosexuality are threatening to cut their aid to Uganda.

“One of the things they’re threatening is to kill our 1.2 million people who have been surviving on PEPFAR funds to buy drugs for HIV/AIDS so that we don’t buy the drugs for our people, and they die,” the President noted after information that the bill for AIDS medicine is 260 million dollars.
 
“This is a simple matter which we can fight, but parasites can’t fight. If you fear to sacrifice, you cannot fight. For you to fight I want to first cure you of parasitism. Europe is lost, and they also want us to be lost. Those who want an easy life will end up being prostitutes,” the President emphasized.
 
H.E. the President told MPS that up until now he has failed to agree with the view of those promoting homosexuality as an alternative way of life.

There was a heated yet healthy exchange between the President and members of Parliament on whether to make amendments to the bill or pass it in its current form where legislators assured the President of their full support concerning implementing the bill once signed into law.
 
The Woman Member of Parliament for Busia, Auma Hellen Wandera, told the President that homosexuals, once rehabilitated, can change, giving an example of her female colleagues who were homosexuals but changed and are happily married with families.
 
Ndorwa East MP, David Bahati, informed the President and members that the law he sponsored in 2001 and the current one both criminalize the acts of homosexuality and their promotion, saying that children recruited unknowingly should be rehabilitated to become better citizens.
 
Vice President Jessica Alupo also called upon members of Parliament to support the President and Parliament to make a few changes to the bill so that it is passed when everybody is content.
 
“What is clear here is that no one of us here supports homosexuality and nobody has intentions to support it,” the Vice President said.
 
Hon. Bright Rwamirama called upon the President to be firm and sign the bill to protect the country from immoral acts.
 
“Homosexuality is not [a] sickness. The bill is before you, and there’s no contradiction at all. Those people trying to convince you otherwise want to water it down,” Minister Rwamirama said.
 
On another note, the Chairman of the NRM caucus who is also the Government Chief Whip, Hon. Hamson Obua, informed the President that his office has received reports with concerns from a section of MPs hailing from Lango and Acholi, Sebei, and from some districts in Karamoja about cattle rustling, asking the President to find a decisive solution to this vice.
 
President Museveni assured the affected communities that the problem is solvable, and he has already met Army commanders to find solutions to the vice, causing insecurity in Northern Uganda.

“We have all the assets to solve that problem, and there’s no need to worry. It’s not such a big issue. It’s a problem of command and will be sorted out. I will have to spend some time in that area so that I supervise that work myself,” the President said.
 
The meeting was also attended and addressed by the First Lady who is also the NRM Chairperson for Ntungamo district, as well as the Chairperson of the Legal Affairs Committee of Parliament, Robbinah Rwakojo, among others.

Opinion – Editorial

About the author

Juergen T Steinmetz

Juergen Thomas Steinmetz has continuously worked in the travel and tourism industry since he was a teenager in Germany (1977).
He founded eTurboNews in 1999 as the first online newsletter for the global travel tourism industry.

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