; Anti-LGBT sentiment A U.S. diplomat based in Kampala wrote on 24 December 2009 about the worsening human rights situation in Uganda, notably the build-up of religious-populist anti-LGBT sentiment by individuals both within and outside the Ugandan government. The cable, titled
Comment: Homophobic Demagogues (released on February 17, 2011), discussed the proceedings of an 18 November 2009 United Nations-funded Kampala consultative conference on human rights which involved members of the
Uganda Human Rights Commission and human rights advocates. Before the debate, an anonymous text message to the diplomat from a Ugandan national described the fear among the underground LGBT community regarding the invitation to attend the debate. During the conference,
Sexual Minorities Uganda advocacy officer
David Kato spoke on the issue of LGBT rights and the anti-LGBT atmosphere in the country, but members of the UHRC "openly joked and snickered" during the speech, and a rumor circulated that David Bahati MP had ordered the Inspector General of Police to arrest, causing Kato and other attending members of SMUG to leave the conference immediately after he finished the speech. Bahati then made a "tirade against homosexuality" to the conference, resulting in massive applause and Ssempa pounding his fist on the table in agreement. The cable also covered US efforts to curb the
Uganda Anti-Homosexuality Bill, as well as the view of the diplomat regarding the backers of the bill; in particular, Bahati was described as a man whose "homophobia...is blinding and incurable". A later cable, dated 16 February 2010, described a Ugandan LGBT community which had already been negatively affected by the sentiment. The cable iterated that "even if the draft bill is shelved in the weeks ahead, rampant homophobia in Uganda won't go away". The cable also covered a January 2010 closed-door conference between
Maria Otero, the US under secretary for democracy and global affairs, and general human rights activists based in the country who expressed fear about government surveillance and wiretapping of communications. ; War crimes The revealed diplomatic cables suggest that the U.S. told
Uganda to let it know when the army was going to commit
war crimes using American intelligence, but did not try to dissuade it from doing so. The U.S. assists the Ugandan government in fighting against the rebel movement, the
Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), providing information and $4.4 million (£2.8 million) worth of military hardware each year. == Zimbabwe ==