On December 17, 2012, the Ugandan daily newspaper
New Vision published an article reporting that the regional president of the
Adventist Church for Eastern and Central Africa, Blaisious Ruguri, had delivered a speech at the Mbarara Church in which he declared that Adventists "fully" supported the government's "
Anti-Homosexuality Bill" (which criminalized same-sex intimacy with lengthy prison terms and demanded the death penalty for repeat offenders. The article, which includes a photo of Ruguri standing alongside state
MP Medard Bitekyerezo, quotes Ruguri saying: :"Our stand is 'zero tolerance' to this vice and to
western influence on this crucial issue because God says no to it. We are together with
the President and the Speaker and we fully support the Anti-Homosexuality Bill. I call upon all religious ministers, all
Ugandans, and all
Africans to say no to Homosexuality. Let us stand for our
sovereignty as Ugandans and as God-fearing people even the heavens fall." On December 19, the president of
Kinship International, Yolanda Elliott, sent a letter to the Adventist Church's global leader, then-President
Ted Wilson, and to the Church's top public relations officer at the time, Garret Caldwell, that read in part: :"Through Pr. Ruguri’s statements and the Adventist church’s continued membership in the Inter-Religious Council of Uganda, the church is now justifying the prosecution, imprisonment, and potential execution of Ugandan LGBT people and their families. As Adventists, and regardless of the church’s statements on human sexuality, we believe that the Seventh-day Adventist Church should never stand for the violation of basic
human rights. The recent End It Now campaign is just the latest example of our church’s track record of standing against violence and abuse. Because of that track record, we do not accept that one of the church’s top-ranking leaders can support legalized violence against a minority group or use the pulpits and authority of the worldwide church to do so." On December 21, the global Adventist Church's news agency, ANNissued a press release saying that the New Vision article did not "convey an accurate representation of his [Ruguri's] intentions or the voted position of the denomination regarding homosexuality." The release quoted Ruguri declaring he had no knowledge of the contents of the
Anti-Homosexuality Bill and that the newspaper had misrepresented his actual views: :"It is unfortunate that the media took the liberty to extend my statements to suggest what I did not say or imply. I have never seen that bill. Mine was a general statement to disapprove of homosexual practice and behavior. Our church is a ministry of mercy, and as a minister in the Seventh-day Adventist Church I cannot condemn homosexuals to death or to hell." ==Jamaican Adventist Politicians and Criminalization of Homosexuality==