"It is not a human right to destroy people's anuses" - Uganda MP; Uganda passes pro-Harlem bill

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Bring it..you think we give a fukk at this point. :comeon:

Ofcourse we knew the devil would raise its ugly head when stringent measures are taken to protect Black children and our own sanity.

It's now high time Black people put principle over money and ties to the west.
Look, keep your money and your fakkitry, it's yours..you earned it.

Imagine the nerve of these white fakkit nations trying to force Black Africans to play nice with gays..yet they won't dare try that shyt with the Arabs.
You're not protecting anyone by persecuting somebody else. That's nonsense. If protection was the actual goal of these tyrants, they would focus on the malnutrition crisis that's impacting tens of thousands of Ugandan children, and not on establishing worthless laws that were crafted along with white bigot missionaries.
 

bnew

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Uganda’s President Museveni refuses to sign anti-LGBTQ bill​

A spokesman says Museveni is not opposed to the bill’s punishments, but wants lawmakers to study ‘the issue of rehabilitation.’

UGANDA PRESIDENTIAL AGE LIMIT

Museveni's decision was announced late Thursday after a meeting of parliamentarians in his ruling party, almost all of whom support the bill approved last month [File: AP]
Published On 20 Apr 202320 Apr 2023


President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda has refused to sign into law a controversial new bill against homosexuality that prescribes the death penalty in some cases, requesting that it should be amended.

Museveni’s decision was announced late on Thursday after a meeting of parliamentarians in his ruling party, almost all of whom support the bill approved by lawmakers last month.

The meeting resolved to return the bill to the national assembly “with proposals for its improvement”, a statement said.

A spokesman for the presidency said Museveni was not opposed to the punishments proposed in the bill, but wanted parliamentarians to look into “the issue of rehabilitation”.

“[Museveni] told the members that he had no objections to the punishments but on the issue of rehabilitation of the persons who have in the past been engaged in homosexuality but would like to live normal lives again,” spokesman Sandor Walusimbi said on Twitter.

“It was agreed that the bill goes back to parliament for the issues of rehabilitation to be looked at before he can sign it into law,” Walusimbi added.

Homosexuality is already illegal in the East African country under a colonial-era law criminalising sex acts “against the order of nature”. The punishment for that offence is life imprisonment.

International pressure​

Museveni is under pressure from the international community to veto the bill, which needs his signature to become law.

The United States has warned of economic consequences if the legislation is enacted. A group of United Nations experts has described the bill, if enacted, as “an egregious violation of human rights”.

Amnesty International in a statement earlier on Thursday had urged Museveni to veto what the group described as a “draconian and overly broad” bill.

“The passing of this appalling bill is a heart-breaking moment for the LGBTI community and their loved ones in Uganda,” Agnes Callamard, the group’s leader, said in the statement. “Nobody should ever be criminalized for their sexual orientation or gender identity.”

The bill enjoys wide support in Uganda, including among church leaders and others who have called for a harsh new law targeting homosexuals. It was introduced by an opposition lawmaker who said his goal was to punish the “promotion, recruitment and funding” of LGBTQ activities in the country.

Only two of 389 legislators present for the voting session opposed the bill.

Death penalty​

The bill prescribes the death penalty for the offence of “aggravated homosexuality,” and life imprisonment for “homosexuality”.

Aggravated homosexuality is defined as cases of sexual relations involving people infected with HIV as well as minors and other categories of vulnerable people.

Jail terms of up to 20 years are proposed for those who advocate or promote the rights of LGBTQ people.

A suspect convicted of “attempted aggravated homosexuality” can be jailed for 14 years and the offence of “attempted homosexuality” is punishable by up to 10 years, according to the bill.

Anti-gay sentiment in Uganda has grown in recent weeks amid press reports alleging sodomy in boarding schools, including a prestigious one for boys where a parent accused a teacher of abusing her son.
 

ReasonableMatic

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There are dozens of countries that allow you to be zesty. Go there.

If the people vote, so be it.
So when white people voted for our enslavement in the name of the Bible. Our ancestors shoulda said “so be it”

Fast forward the same white men using the same Bible to cause more harm to Africa and y’all fall for it.

Slavery, colonialism and Neo-colonialism had The Bible at its root and driving force.

The LOST NIKKA was created using The Bible and is still producing them with full force.

KOONS really in love with Christianity :scust:
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“Everyday I pray and thank the Lord that I’m still alive”
*proceeds to show white Jesus*

- Gucci Mane (Long Live Dolph, 2021)

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Christianity :scust:
 

3rdWorld

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Why is this any of US business? shyts annoying we always in other countries business

That's why anti immigration zealots fail to understand why some nationalities reserve the right to travel to America enmasse..same as Indians in the UK. The UK was all in their business, so they came down.
 
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karim

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African countries have cultural norms from eternity down to the tribe and clans, of what is taboo and what isn't. It's a personal issue among them and an actually widely accepted thing among Africans that at the very least it's taboo. No one despite these bills is gonna personally persecute you for being a member of the LGBTQ. The law is just a matter of principal based on who they are as a people.

There's plenty gay and lesbian people and they aren't getting touched. But based on tradition which they deeply respect.. they're like nah we are not consigning this.
You don't know what you are talking about. The anti-gay shyt is a mixture of colonial laws and christian propaganda. It has nothing to do with african cultural norms, even if it's framed that way. It's also not true that lgbtq people aren't touched, they are constantly being persecuted.
 

Blackrogue

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You don't know what you are talking about. The anti-gay shyt is a mixture of colonial laws and christian propaganda. It has nothing to do with african cultural norms, even if it's framed that way. It's also not true that lgbtq people aren't touched, they are constantly being persecuted.

have you been to africa? If you were in africa and african you'd know everything I said is true. If anything the western influence is the one trying to make africans accept this and its not a cultural norm even pre colonialization or prior to Christianity. I'm amazed you can give me a lecture on my own people and say I don't know what I'm talking about so confidently.
 

karim

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have you been to africa? If you were in africa and african you'd know everything I said is true. If anything the western influence is the one trying to make africans accept this and its not a cultural norm even pre colonialization or prior to Christianity. I'm amazed you can give me a lecture on my own people and say I don't know what I'm talking about so confidently.
Lol, yes I have been to Africa and I have family in Africa, where the older generations were educated in jesuit boarding schools, who taught them to hate gays. That's why I know that nothing you say is true and that you do not know what you are talking about.
 

Blackrogue

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Lol, yes I have been to Africa and I have family in Africa, where the older generations were educated in jesuit boarding schools, who taught them to hate gays. That's why I know that nothing you say is true and that you do not know what you are talking about.

lol ok. what tribe clan and country are you from?
 

karim

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lol ok. what tribe clan and country are you from?
:mjlol: I am from no tribe, clan or country, I have family all over central africa. Anyways, you don't have to believe me, you can just consult scholars:
What it meant to be a woman in many African pre-colonial societies was not rigid. “Among the Langi of northern Uganda,” writes Sylvia Tamale, dean of the faculty of Law at Makerere University Uganda, “the mudoko dako, or effeminate males, were treated as women and could marry men.” There were also the Chibados or Quimbanda of Angola, male diviners whom, some scholars have argued, were believed to carry female spirits through anal sex.
 

karim

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lol ok. what tribe clan and country are you from?
:mjlol: I am from no tribe, clan or country, I have family all over central africa. Anyways, you don't have to believe me, you can just consulting scholars:
What it meant to be a woman in many African pre-colonial societies was not rigid. “Among the Langi of northern Uganda,” writes Sylvia Tamale, dean of the faculty of Law at Makerere University Uganda, “the mudoko dako, or effeminate males, were treated as women and could marry men.” There were also the Chibados or Quimbanda of Angola, male diviners whom, some scholars have argued, were believed to carry female spirits through anal sex.
 

GreenGhxst

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every man upset about homosexuality wants to fukk a man a$$hole

50% of those also want their a$$hole fukked

just be brave about your sexuality, stop being a bytch about your true desires

its weird to me how upset some straight people get about trans and gay people

just live your life and stop projecting dumb bytch

:dahell:
 
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