Posts

Showing posts from April, 2023

Anti-Gay Bill, 2023: A Boy Can Throw Like A Girl, But in Uganda This Will Be Criminalised

Image
Gender is fluid. Gender is dramatic. Society is to a tide what gender is to an ocean. Society and gender draw determination from each other. To legislate gender is likely to lead to censoring social roles which may nip genres, innovation, agency, determination, autonomy and productivity in the bud. Dress, prayer, song, recreation, drama, dance, prose, interaction, political dispensation, service delivery, scripture, religiosity, normativity, feminism, masculinity, education, knowledge and skills transfer, parenting, trade, speech, liberty, happiness, socialisation, ritual, rites of passage, gender reveal events, nurturing and lifestyle will be affected in a post Anti-Gay Act 2023 Uganda. Anti-Gay is a regime that fuels negative gender stereotyping, upholds misandryist and misogynistic tendencies including sardonic, innuendo-laced and suggestive remarks sexually objectifying bodies. A male whose voice never breaks and a female who grows beards will be stigmatised. Uganda is to be ...

The Anti-Gay Bill, 2023, If Assented To By The President Of The Republic of Uganda, Will Reverse The Good HIV/TB/Malaria-related Public Health Outcomes: Lessons Informing Bio-behavioural Risks for HIV/TB/Malaria, April 2023

Image
The Anti-Gay Bill, 2023 was tabled on the 21st/March 2023. Among many of its blows, is criminalising any form of Public Health service targeting the LGBTIQ+ including the right to associate. This report was produced to highlight the Public Health and Legal Services that may be inaccessible if the law comes into force.  The Anti-Gay Bill, will violate the rights to liberty, freedom from fear of one’s life, freedom of pursuance of happiness, freedom of expression and association, liberty, privacy, equality, freedom from discrimination, inhumane and degrading treatment, and a fair hearing – all of which are guaranteed under Ugandan and international law – for all Ugandans and persons in Uganda. From a Strategic Public Health view point CBOs/CSOs, whether led by cis-persons, Sex-workers, Persons who use drugs, or LGBTIQ+, are expert peer networks that demonstrate superior public health benefits and outcomes for HIV, TB and Malaria prevention in cisgender males, persons who use drugs, p...