President
Yoweri Museveni is asking the US to advise Uganda's scientists about
homosexuality, as he considers whether to sign a law increasing punishments.
Mr Museveni's spokesman said the
president would not sign the law until he had received the scientific advice.
President Yoweri Museveni says he
wants to know whether
homosexuality is a choice or
genetic
|
Last week he said he had decided to
sign the Anti-Homosexuality Bill, which parliament has passed.
The US - one of Uganda's largest aid
donors - has warned that enacting the bill would complicate relations.
President Barack Obama described it as
an affront, and a danger to, Uganda's gay community.
BBC regional analyst Richard Hamilton
says President Museveni is trying to please a conservative local constituency
while avoiding alienating Western aid donors.
Homosexual acts are already illegal in Uganda. Under the
proposed legislation, those convicted could face life imprisonment.
The law would also make it a crime not to report gay people.
'Abnormal'
In a statement, Mr Museveni said: "I...
encourage the US government to help us by working with our scientists to study
whether, indeed, there are people who are born homosexual.
"When that is proved, we can review this
legislation."
Presidential spokesman Tamale Mirundi told Reuters news
agency the bill would be on hold for now "until more conclusive research
is done, and that's what the president is saying".
Mr Museveni originally refused to sign the bill, saying that
it was wrong to punish people who were born "abnormal".
But then government officials said Ugandan scientists had
advised him that homosexuality was a behavioural choice.
The scientists' report said there was no definitive gene for
homosexuality but it was not an "abnormality" and it could be
influenced by environmental factors.
"The practise needs regulation like any other human
behaviour, especially to protect the vulnerable," it said.
In December a gay rights campaigner spoke of her fears about
the legislation
The private member's bill originally proposed the death
penalty for some offences, such as if a minor was involved or the perpetrator
was HIV-positive, but that clause has been dropped.
Uganda already has legislation banning gay sex between men,
but the proposed law sharply tightens restrictions - and covers lesbians for
the first time.
Promotion of homosexuality - even talking about it without
condemning it - would also be punishable by a prison sentence.
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