The climate in Uganda is hostile to homosexuals; many political leaders have used openly anti-gay rhetoric, and have said that homosexuality is "akin to bestiality", was "brought to Uganda by white people" and is "un-African".
Simon Lokodo, Minister for Ethics and Integrity, is known by Ugandan LGBTQ activists as "the country's main homophobe", has suggested that rape is more morally acceptable than consensual sex between people of the same sex, has accompanied violent police raids on LGBT events and actively suppresses freedom of speech and of assembly for LGBTQ people. In 2005,
Human Rights Watch reported on Uganda's abstinence until marriage programs. "By definition... [they] discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation. For young people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender... and cannot legally marry in Uganda,... these messages imply, wrongly, that there is no safe way for them to have sex. They deny these people information that could save their lives. They also convey a message about the intrinsic wrongfulness of homosexual conduct that reinforces existing social stigma and prejudice to potentially devastating effect." The
U.S. Department of State's 2011 human rights report concluded that LGBTQ persons faced discrimination, harassment and legal restrictions, citing a number of incidents. A 2018 article in
African Health Sciences said that Uganda's high HIV rate has "roots" in Uganda's stigma against same-sex sexual behavior and sex work. In 2004, the Uganda Broadcasting Council fined
Radio Simba over $1,000 and forced it to issue a public apology after hosting homosexuals on a live talk show. The council's chairman, Godfrey Mutabazi, said the programme "is contrary to public morality and is not in compliance with the existing law". Information Minister
Nsaba Buturo said the measure reflected Ugandans' wish to uphold "God's moral values" and "We are not going to give them the opportunity to recruit others."
Freedom of speech In June 2012, the Ugandan Government announced the ban of 38 non-governmental organizations (NGO) it accused of "promoting homosexuality" and "undermining the national culture".
Simon Lokodo, the country's Minister of Ethics and Integrity, claimed the NGOs were "receiving support from abroad for Uganda's homosexuals and "recruiting" young children into homosexuality." He also said that "they are encouraging homosexuality as if it is the best form of sexual behaviour". That same month, Lokodo ordered Ugandan police to break-up an
LGBTQ rights workshop in
Kampala. Later in the month, the Ugandan Government, in an apparent rebuke of Lokodo, announced that it will no longer attempt to break up meetings of LGBT rights groups.
Recognition of transgender identity In October 2021, trans woman
Cleopatra Kambugu Kentaro was issued new ID identifying her as female. She is the first Ugandan to have a change of gender legally recognised.
Violence and harassment Vigilante attacks, including harassment, beatings and murder occur. Both state and non-state actors are involved in targeting those perceived as LGBT. However, the
United States Department of State considers that mob violence is prevalent in many circumstances in Uganda. It is directed at a range of socially disapproved individuals for actual or perceived wrongdoing, due, in the view of the State Department's report, to the community's lack of confidence in the police and judiciary. Extrajudicial police actions against LGBTQ individuals, such as arbitrary detention, beatings and psychological coercion, meet the United Nations criteria for torture. In June 2021, a raid on the Happy Family Youth Shelter in Kampala resulted in forty-four arrests. Police claimed that an illegal same-sex wedding was being held and that the participants were "doing a negligent act likely to spread infection of disease." Several of the detainees then alleged that police performed invasive anal examinations on them. Thirty-nine of the 44 were released on bail after several days in detention, with the trial scheduled for 8 July. In October 2019, 28-year-old Ugandan LGBT activist Brian Wasswa was beaten to death in his own home. In August 2016, an LGBT event was brutally interrupted by police officers who violently attacked and beat the people present at the event, eventually arresting sixteen. In August 2017, the organisers of Pride Uganda had to cancel the event after threats of arrest by the police and the government.
Media 'outing' In August 2006, a Ugandan newspaper,
The Red Pepper, published a list of the first names and professions (or areas of work) of forty-five allegedly gay men. In October 2010, the tabloid paper
Rolling Stone published the full names, addresses, photographs, and preferred social-hangouts of 100 allegedly gay and lesbian Ugandans, accompanied by a call for their execution.
David Kato,
Kasha Jacqueline, and
Pepe Julian Onziema, all members of the Civil Society Coalition On Human Rights and Constitutional Law, filed suit against the tabloid. A High Court judge in January 2011 issued a permanent injunction preventing
Rolling Stone and its managing editor
Giles Muhame from "any further publications of the identities of the persons and homes of the applicants and homosexuals generally". The court further awarded
USh plus court costs to each of the plaintiffs. The judge ruled that the outing, and the accompanying incitement to violence, threatened the subjects' fundamental rights and freedoms, attacked their right to human dignity, and violated their constitutional right to privacy. ==LGBTQ rights activism==