We Sanctioned Speaker Anita Among over her stand against Homosèxuality! US Secretary of State- Blinkens lets the cat out of the basket!

This is the first time a high ranking U.S. government official is admitting that the recent sanctions against Ugandan government officials were a penalty for passing the Anti-homosexuality law which criminalises homosexuality, its recognition, promotion, financing and normalisation

United States Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, has said Washington slapped sanctions on Ugandan officials over the Anti-Homosexuality law.

“Where human rights abuses are carried out against LGBTQI+ persons, we hold the perpetrators accountable,” said Blinken at the 2024 Pride Month Convening on U.S. Foreign Policy in Washington, DC this pastThursday.

This is the first time a high ranking U.S. government official is admitting that the recent sanctions against Ugandan government officials were a penalty for passing the Anti-homosexuality law which criminalises homosexuality, its recognition, promotion, financing and normalisation.

In May, 2024, the U.S. government said it sanctioned several senior Ugandan officials including Speaker of Parliament Anita Among and other lawmakers over corruption.

However, Blinken said, “We sanctioned Ugandan officials who were involved in gross human rights violations. We ended Uganda’s eligibility for beneficial trade status under the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act until – until – it repeals the legislation and addresses its human rights situation.”

He added: “When Uganda enacted its Anti-Homosexuality Act, we redirected U.S. Government assistance so that it doesn’t go to those carrying out this abusive policy, while at the same time increasing aid to Ugandan people who need it more than ever before in the LGBTQI+ community.”

The U.S. Mission had earlier cancelled Among’s visa over the anti-gay law. Several MPs said they had also been blocked by the U.S. Mission from traveling to United States.

In response, Among said she was happy that President Museveni signed the bill into law and that Parliament would continue to protect the family, the rights of children and Uganda.

“We don’t regret passing this law… My Visa was cancelled, have I died? As I have said, so long as you don’t cancel the visa to Bukedea and Buyende, I have my home. I will go there,” she said.

The event in Washington was held under the theme, ‘National Security, Inclusive Development, and the Human Rights of LGBTQI+ Persons.’

Blinken said United States remained “committed to partnering with the people of Ugandan, as we’ve done for years with investments in improving healthcare and education, expanding economic opportunity, strengthening accountability and the rule of law.”


He said Washington would “make sure that our resources continue to lift up the Ugandan people – not enable their repression.”

Tough law

In 2023, the Parliament of Uganda passed the Anti-Homosexuality Act following what Parliament described as a public outcry, social and broadcast media discussions and homosexuality victims’ ‘painful and gruelling stories’ of children and families that were ‘dying in silence’ from the psychological trauma of forced recruitment of children into homosexual acts.

The law was challenged in the Constitutional Court by activist and lobby groups, saying it violated the rights of the homosexuality community.

The Constitutional Court maintained the provision for the death penalty for a person who commits the offence of aggravated homosexuality especially if the act is performed against a child or a person who is disabled, mentally ill, of advanced age or under influence of medicine, drugs and alcohol.

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