"Please do not use this to bug the users of Vrchat. The law has drawn strong international criticism and calls for a boycott of the Sochi Games from gay activists and others.On January 7th, DeviantArtist tidiestflyer updated the 3D model page with a disclaimer urging viewers to "not use this to bug the users of VRChat." Whether it's Brian Brown advocating for anti-LGBT laws in Russia or Scott Lively calling for the further criminalization of LGBT people in Uganda, anti-LGBT Americans must stop exporting their hate abroad."īrown is president of the National Organization for Marriage, a Washington-based group that opposes same-sex marriage.Ī Russian law, signed by President Vladimir Putin in June, bans gay "propaganda" from reaching minors. He said, "Anti-LGBT Americans advocated for laws further criminalizing LGBT people in Uganda, and it looks like they are now getting their wish. Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin said, "Unless this bill is stopped from becoming law, lives will be destroyed and countless people will be punished for an immutable characteristic." Robyn Lieberman of Human Rights First said, "There should be no doubt that Museveni's latest words on the subject have been influenced by the reaction to similar legislation in Nigeria, Russia and elsewhere." On Friday, the watchdog group Human Rights First expressed "deep concern" over news that the bill will be signed into law, saying it "will have severely adverse consequences for the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people as well as other Ugandans."
The bill also would make conducting a same-sex marriage ceremony punishable by seven years in prison.
The bill before Museveni would allow life imprisonment for acts of "aggravated homosexuality," 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. Lively denied he wanted severe punishment for gays, and he has previously told The Associated Press he never advocated violence against gays but advised therapy for them. Rejecting Lively's request to dismiss the lawsuit, a federal judge ruled in August that the case could proceed, saying systematic persecution on the basis of sexual orientation violates international norms. if there is an alleged violation of international law. Ugandan gay activists have accused some of their country's political and religious leaders of being influenced of American evangelicals who want to spread their anti-gay campaign in Africa.Ī prominent Ugandan gay group singled out Scott Lively, a Massachusetts evangelical, and sued him in March 2012 under the Alien Tort Statute, which allows non-citizens to file suit in the U.S. Since then Museveni has been under pressure within his own party to sign the legislation, which has wide support among Christian clerics and lawmakers who say it is needed to deter Western homosexuals from "recruiting" Ugandan children.
Museveni, who has criticized gays as "abnormal" people who should be "rehabilitated," had previously called the bill too harsh. Their report led Museveni to believe homosexuality should be punished, she said. A new law in Nigeria last month increased penalties against gays.Īfter the Ugandan bill was passed late last year, Museveni said he wanted his governing party to reach what he called a "scientifically correct" position on homosexuality, ordering the team of government scientists to investigate whether homosexuality is a lifestyle, according to Anite. Amnesty International has described it as draconian, repeatedly urging Museveni not to sign it into law.īut the bill is popular in Uganda, one of many sub-Saharan African countries where homosexuals face severe discrimination if not jail terms. Although that provision was later removed amid international pressure, rights groups want the whole bill jettisoned. Homosexuality already is illegal in Uganda under a colonial-era law that criminalizes sex acts "against the order of nature."Īn earlier version of the bill, first introduced in 2009, proposed the death penalty for some homosexual acts. Opondo and Anite both said the president did not indicate when he will sign the legislation into law.