UPDATE: This from petition site Avaaz.org: “Uganda’s anti-gay law has failed! It looked sure to pass last week, but after 1.6 million petition signatures delivered to Parliament, tens of thousands of phone calls to our own governments, hundreds of media stories about our campaign and a massive global outcry, Ugandan politicians dropped the bill!
It was down to the wire – religious extremists tried to push the bill through on Wednesday, and then convened an unprecedented emergency session of Parliament on Friday. But each time, within hours, we reacted. A huge congratulations to everyone who signed, called, forwarded and donated to this campaign – with our help, thousands of innocent people in Uganda’s gay community do not wake up this morning facing execution for whom they chose to love.”
It’s never over, Uganda can try again in 18 months, but it’s a nice reprieve.
The African nation of Uganda has been mulling a bill that would attach the death penalty, or life imprisonment, to those who are gay since 2009. While the bill has been delayed, there is no telling if and when it might be back on the agenda. It’s just one more example of the kinds of twisted attitudes to homosexuality in Africa.
Brendan writes:
The fate of the Kill The Gays Bill in Uganda, which could result in the death penalty for those charged with engaging in same-sex acts, remains unclear. Even if capital punishment is taken off the table, homosexuality – already illegal in Uganda – may soon carry the penalty of life in prison.