(AP) President Barack Obama
warned Uganda Sunday over its plans to further criminalize
homosexuality, saying it would "complicate our valued relationship."
Defending gay
rights around the world, as he has done at home, Obama said a bill that
President Yoweri Museveni has pledged to sign will mark a "step
backward" for all Ugandans and reflect poorly on the country's
commitment to protect the human rights of its people.
It also would represent a serious setback for anyone committed to freedom, justice and equal rights, Obama said.
Obama
said the United States stands for the protection of fundamental
freedoms and universal human rights and believes people everywhere
should be treated equally.
"That
is why I am so deeply disappointed that Uganda will shortly enact
legislation that would criminalize homosexuality," Obama said in a
written statement issued from Southern California, where he was spending
the weekend. "The Anti-Homosexuality Bill in Uganda, once law, will be
more than an affront and a danger to the gay community in Uganda. It
will be a step backward for all Ugandans and reflect poorly on Uganda's
commitment to protecting the human rights of its people. It also will
mark a serious setback for all those around the world who share a
commitment to freedom, justice and equal rights."
"Enacting
this legislation will complicate our valued relationship with Uganda,"
he said, adding that the U.S. has conveyed that message to Museveni.
Homosexuality already is illegal in Uganda under a colonial-era law that criminalizes sex acts "against the order of nature."
Museveni said last week that
he plans to sign the new legislation, which has alarmed rights
activists because it prescribes life imprisonment for acts of
"aggravated homosexuality." Those acts are defined as sex acts where one
of the partners is infected with HIV, sex with minors or the disabled
and repeated sexual offenses among consenting adults.
It
was unclear when Museveni will sign the bill. Ugandan lawmakers passed
it in December and Museveni since has been under heavy pressure to enact
it. The measure enjoys broad support among Christian clerics and
lawmakers who say it is needed to deter Western homosexuals from
"recruiting" Ugandan children.
Susan
Rice, the U.S. national security adviser, said Sunday on Twitter that
she spoke "at length" with Museveni on Saturday night and urged him not
to sign the bill.
The United
States is Uganda's largest donor, sending more than $400 million in aid
annually in recent years. If Museveni signs the bill, the U.S. is
expected to review its relationship with the country with an eye on
finding ways to register disappointment over the law.
Uganda
is one of many sub-Saharan African countries where homosexuals face
severe discrimination, if not jail terms. Nigeria last month increased
penalties against gays there.
Obama has made support for gay rights a hallmark of his presidency.
He supports same-sex marriage and his administration eliminated the Clinton-era ban on openly gay service in the military.
For
his State of the Union address last month, Obama included basketball
player Jason Collins, the first male athlete on a major U.S. sports team
to announce that he is gay, among guests chosen to sit with first lady
Michelle Obama. Obama has said Collins' announcement marked a moment of
progress for gays.
Obama also welcomed last week's announcement by a University of Missouri football player and NFL hopeful that he is gay.
The
president also has spoken out against a Russian law banning gay
propaganda, and included prominent gay athletes on the U.S. delegations
to the opening and closing ceremonies at the Sochi Olympics.
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