First Ugandan men to go on trial on homosexuality charges...
Kim Mukisa and Jackson Mukasa face life imprisonment if found guilty in first such case since introduction of new anti-gay law. Kim Mukisa, 24, a businessman, was charged with "having sexual knowledge of a person against the order of nature" and Jackson Mukasa, 19, with permitting a person to have sexual knowledge of him against the order of nature.The trial is scheduled to start on 7 May.
US funded HIV/AIDS organisation falsely accused of recruiting and training homosexuals...
The Walter Reed Project in Kampala was raided and shut down recently by police for conducting “illegal homosexual research” and “recruiting” youth aged 15 to 25 and “training them in homosexual practices.”
Despite the fact that the majority of HIV/AIDS sufferers in Uganda are women and children, the official report on an April 3 police raid accused the organisation of “collecting sperm in masturbation rooms” and maintained rooms for “practicing” homosexuality as part of the center’s “homosexual recruitment project.” Uganda's new anti-gay law will have a detrimental effect of those infected with HIV both in the straight and LGBT communities.
In December 2012, UK Evangelical Paul Shinners attended an Anti-Gay rally hosted by the outspokenly gay David Kiganda. Though his anti-gay sentiments calling for them to pass a law that gave homosexuals the DEATH PENALTY. He "claims" not to be homophobic (though he declined to explain what he thought homophobia even meant). He has made no attempt to appologise for his involvement with Kiganda's church, despite the overwhelming evidence of it's involvement in the "Kill the Gays" Bill. Here is the poster for the 7th Day of Prayer that Shinners attended (he also attended the 6th Day of Prayer and has made many trips to Kiganda's church in Kampala)...
"Kill the Gays" Bill author attends Bishop Kiganda's 8th Day of Prayer...
Bishop Kiganda's 8th Annual National Prayer Day on December 31 was attended by legislator David Bahati, among the high profile presences. David Bahati is the MP who first proposed the Anti-Homosexuality Bill to Parliament in 2009. It was originally called the "Kill the Gays" Bill, due to the inclusion of the DEATH PENALTY.
http://www.gaystarnews.com/article/uganda-preachers-pressure-politicians-push-%E2%80%98kill-gays%E2%80%99-law020113
Rebecca Kadaga will be given an honor due to her courage to stand up against the Canadian Prime Minister who during the summit chided Uganda’s human rights record, according to Bishop David Kiganda, chief organizer of the reception. He added that he expects Ugandans to turn up in big numbers to welcome the speaker. The Speaker of the Ugandan Parliament, Ms. Rebecca Kadaga, took Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird to task at an international summit in Quebec City for his remarks criticizing Uganda’s ban on same-sex “marriage.” Kadaga accused Baird of harboring a “colonial attitude” towards African nations and interfering in her country’s internal affairs, after Baird, in an address to the Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), denounced Uganda for violating gay rights and oppressing homosexuals. Rebecca Kadaga (the Speaker of Parliament) was the person who promised to pass the Anti-Homosexuality Bill (with the death penalty) as a Christmas present for the Ugandan people back in December 2012 before Paul Shinners' attendence at the anti-gay rally.
Martin Ssempa shows graphic gay porn in David Kiganda's church and Kiganda prays over David Bahati for the passage of the Anti-Homosexuality Bill...
The following video shows Pastor Martin "eat da poo poo" Ssempa, the Christian leader driving support for the Anti-homosexuality Bill, screens gay porn in Pastor Kiganda’s church in Kampala. Kiganda and Ssempa pray over David Bahati...
Anti-gay law good, but church needs to do more... "As I left the hotel, I met Pastors Joseph Sserwadda and David Kiganda who approached me in a let-somebody-see style. Indeed victory was written all over their lips and my suspicion was that they had been part of the “clapping audience” as Mr Museveni appended his signature to the bill."
Despite the overwhelming evidence of Paul Shinners' anti gay rhetoric in Uganda and the fact that his host David Kiganda (on a number of visits over the last decade) is deeply involved in the Anti-Gay movement in Uganda, Shinners has not once apologised to the LGBT community in Uganda or the community in the Cambridgeshire town of St. Neots, where he runs a Cafe/bookshop under the umbrella of his charity to fund these homophobic hate campaigns in Uganda and other African countries. Paul Shinners' association with David Kiganda alone warrants an apology and reparations to the Ugandan LGBT community.
Shinners' needs to answer for his crimes against humanity...
Please take a second to sign and share the change .org petition...
Since this situation came to light, Shinners hasn't lifted a finger to condemn his host in Uganda or do a thing to help the people in Uganda who are in hiding and fear for their lives.
The new vile, homophobic anti gay legislation is backed by the general population as well as religious leaders from both the Christian churches and the Muslim leaders. The situation is terrible in Uganda, but the battle against prejudice and religious bigotry isn't won in the west yet...
The Religious Right Insists On Comparing Marriage Equality With Slavery...
For some bizarre reason evangelicals seem intent on comparing their struggle to destroy the LGBT "agenda" with the struggle to end slavery. This only helps show the insanity and backwards thinking of these people.
Lesbian denied communion at mother’s funeral by Catholic Priest...
Marcel Guarnizo said to her, “I cannot give you communion because you live with a woman, and in the eyes of the church that is a sin.” Not only did Guarnizo put his hand over the communion platter, but also he walked away during Johnson’s eulogy. And he refused to go to the cemetery with the family for her mother’s burial.
The controversial clause, introduced under the Thatcher Government, was repealed by Labour because it was widely seen as prompting anti-gay feelings in schools. At least 46 schools had words similar to the previous legislation in their school policies. Deborah Glynn, from St Helens, Lancashire, cited research by the British Humanist Association to the conference which, she said, showed that there are many schools bringing this wording back into their policies. "A lot are fundamentalist groups - mainly Christian," she said.
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