US Sets Visa Restrictions On Uganda Officials After Anti-LGBTQ Law
The United States has imposed visa restrictions on Uganda officials after the African nation passed an anti-LGBTQ law that was condemned by many countries and the United Nations, the U.S. State Department said on Friday.
The law, considered one of the harshest in the world, was enacted in May and carries the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality,” an offense that includes transmitting HIV through gay sex. It drew immediate rebukes from Western governments and put in jeopardy some of the billions of dollars in foreign aid the country receives each year.
U.S. President Joe Biden had threatened aid cuts and other sanctions, while Secretary of State Antony Blinken said last month the government would consider visa restrictions against Ugandan officials.
The State Department statement on Friday did not mention any names or even the number of officials that would be hit with the visa restriction but said the U.S. would hold accountable those who are responsible for abusing human rights in Uganda, “including those of LGBTQI+ persons.”
The State Department also updated its Uganda travel guidance for U.S. citizens to highlight the risk that LGBTQI+ persons could be prosecuted and subjected to life imprisonment or the death penalty based on provisions in the law, it said.
“The United States strongly supports the Ugandan people and remains committed to advancing respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms in Uganda and globally,” the State Department said.
The law also imposes a life sentence for same-sex intercourse and a 20-year sentence for the promotion of homosexuality.
Firms including media and non-governmental organizations that knowingly promote LGBTQ activity will also incur harsh fines, the law says.
Homosexuality was already illegal in the conservative and highly religious East African country, and homosexuals faced ostracism and harassment by security forces.
Meanwhile, in Ghana, the bill, which is currently under review by the Parliamentary Select Committee on Constitutional, Legal, and Parliamentary Affairs, seeks to provide for human sexual rights and Ghanaian family values while seeking to prohibit the activities of gays, lesbians, bisexuals, transgender, and queers in Ghana.
Also, recently, Ghana’s Speaker of Parliament Alban S. K. Bagbin has indicated that he prefers to die than to see the legalization of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) activities in Ghana.
“For you all to participate in it count me out of Ghana because I will prefer to join my maker than to live. That is me; I am a Catholic and I will not do anything that will end the world because God says the world is eternal until he comes back we cannot do that to end the world.
Will Ghana be ready to face the US Visa Restriction if the nation passes the bill into law?
Credit: Reuters