Ugandan
President Yoweri Museveni views gays as “sick” but does not believe they should
be jailed or executed and will block a push by parliament to impose tough
penalties, his spokesman said Friday.
“He
does not approve of homosexuality but he believes that these people have a
right to exist,” presidential spokesman Tamale Mirudi told AFP.
“The
president says that these people are sick, you cannot kill a sick person. A
person that has been found guilty of homosexual practices cannot be imprisoned
for life.”
The
spokesman confirmed a report in the independent Daily Monitor newspaper that
Museveni had refused to approve a controversial bill passed by parliament last
month that would have seen homosexuals jailed for life.
He
also insisted that the president was not backing down in the face of widespread
international condemnation of the bill.
“What
the President has being saying is that we shall not persecute these homosexuals
and lesbians. That is the point. That is the message. Maybe society can resent
them but they cannot be persecuted because of their problem,” Mirudi said.
“It
was not because of a lobby. Nobody has influenced the president. The
president’s position has been the same for a long time, nothing has changed,”
he added.
“The
president has repeatedly said that we always have been having homosexuals in
Africa and they never have been persecuted. But we shall not allow them to
marry in public, to organise a demonstration in Kampala,” the spokesman said.
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