
BBC (10.16.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
The "Anti-Homosexuality Bill's" chance of passing is high, as senior figures in the ruling National Resistance Movement will probably back it, according to Joshua Mmali, a BBC correspondent in Kampala. It has a "99 percent chance" of passing, said John Otekat Emile, an independent MP. That assessment was shared by Emmanuel Dombo, a ruling party MP.
Activist groups such as Human Rights Watch (HRW) and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission are condemning the bill, saying it violates several international agreements and Uganda's own constitution.
The bill would "put major barriers in the path of effective HIV/AIDS prevention efforts," said HRW. "Discrimination and punitive laws like this aimed at marginalized groups and at those among the most affected by HIV drive people underground and do nothing to help slow down the AIDS epidemic," said Daniel Molokele, Africa program officer at the World AIDS Campaign.
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