Uganda Fails Its People With Queerphobic Bans

Raafeke
2 min readMar 27, 2023
Photo by Random Institute on Unsplash

On Tuesday, March 21, 2023, Uganda made headlines after passing laws that deemed identifying as LGBT+ punishable by 20 years in prison. While 36 out of Africa’s 54 countries have long-standing laws that criminilize homosexuality, none have ever been as strict as Uganda’s. Western nations have been quick to condemn the country’s new ruling, as have human rights and LGBT organizations across the African continent. When I saw this news on my own instagram feed, I was disheartened.

Before I continue, I want to start by saying that as queer advocates in the West, whether we are black or not, we should be careful about our criticisms of events in the Global South. I say this because the societies of the countries we inhabit, through no fault of our own as members of the African diaspora, benefit, unfortunately, from the turmoil that rages across these countries.

Uganda has had a host of issues since the British’s involvement within the old kingdom of Buganda, and likely before that, but this legislative movement has been on the horizon since 2014 with the original “Kill the Gays” bill. Uganda’s most recent law has broadened the criminalization of queerness beyond anything seen before.

As I read more stories about homophobia in Uganda, I can’t help but wonder, why? Why perpetuate so many laws despite decades of existence…

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Raafeke

West Indian 🇬🇾🇬🇩. New Yorker. I write when I feel called to do so. Check out my book, “Radiance Lost” on Amazon and my podcast, "Parrotbeetie".