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Serra Sippel

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Ugandan Tragedy, Human Rights, and US Foreign Aid

Posted: 01/27/11 07:57 PM ET

There are times when the words are hard to find, because the action they are needed to describe is so repugnant that any language in its entirety is insufficient.

A Ugandan gay rights activist, David Kato, was beaten to death with a hammer in his home yesterday, the result of a staggering climate of intolerance that has been fueled by local media, religious leaders and politicians, and in part by discriminatory U.S.-funded programs. There are other theories behind the murder: robbery and a personal dispute to name two. However, it is irresponsible and ignorant to exonerate from guilt the violent rhetoric towards homosexuals, and particularly David Kato, that has been running rampant in Uganda. While the U.S. has condemned egregious examples of rights-violating policies in Uganda, it still funds HIV interventions that are inherently anti-LGBT (lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender) and anti-woman. They assume and reinforce the idea that everyone is heterosexual, everyone is going to get married, and everyone has control over when and with whom they and their partner have sex; ideas that are flat-out wrong and result in useless HIV interventions and rancid discrimination. There is no justification; personal belief and morality are not excuses for perpetuating HIV infection and stigma that leads to slaughter. It stops now.

There are a number of things that need to happen to address this, and they need to happen immediately.

The United States must stop funding Abstinence-Be Faithful focused (AB) HIV interventions right now. U.S. foreign assistance to Uganda reached 5.5 million people in Uganda with AB-focused programs in 2009 alone. Yet these programs have proven to have zero effect on HIV infection rates and are inherently anti-LGBT, anti-woman, and put married women and marginalized persons at risk. Not everyone is heterosexual. Not everyone is going to get married. Many women and girls in developing countries have little to no control over who they have sex with and when; or the faithfulness of their partner. We have a choice: We either continue wasting scarce resources on useless programs or we address discrimination and HIV head-on. Right now, we're perpetuating both.

In addition, the United States must stop funding faith-based organizations that insist on expressions of religion that reinforce societal structures and norms that perpetuate homophobia and women's inequality and discrimination, vulnerabilities to HIV infection, violence, stigmatization, subordination, and abuse.

Religions and traditions are not monolithic, nor are faith-based organizations. Religion can be a positive, liberating force that seeks to ensure that individual human rights are guaranteed and that issues around LGBT rights and women's equality, violence against women and girls, and HIV prevention are addressed. Funding faith-based organizations can be effective. The United States needs to review which faith-based organization it funds, and only fund those that consistently condemn violence and anti-LGBT, anti-woman ideas and programs.

The new chair of the House of Foreign Affairs Committee has called for increased "efficiency" in foreign aid. Here's where we start. AB-focused programs don't work and are inherently discriminatory. So stop funding them. While the words are indeed difficult to find, there are only two that we really need for funding that goes to programs and organizations that promote stigma and discrimination:

Stop. Now. For the sake of David Kato and others who are brave enough not to hide.

 

Follow Serra Sippel on Twitter: www.twitter.com/genderhealth

There are times when the words are hard to find, because the action they are needed to describe is so repugnant that any language in its entirety is insufficient. A Ugandan gay rights activist, Davi...
There are times when the words are hard to find, because the action they are needed to describe is so repugnant that any language in its entirety is insufficient. A Ugandan gay rights activist, Davi...
 
 
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05:49 AM on 03/01/2011
This article could easily be expanded into a series with all of the issues you touch on. The left/right social battles in the U.S. are absolutely being waged here in Uganda, with the Christian right funding much of the expanding hatred towards homosexuals. US aid money could certainly be used to make a statement, but first the US needs to deal with its own rampant homophobia or any change will be blocked by social conservatives. I have also written about these issues on my blog (http://wildugandablog.com).
07:40 PM on 02/28/2011
Quoting you, this does not appear to make sense "The United States must stop funding Abstinence-Be Faithful focused (AB) HIV interventions right now. U.S. foreign assistance to Uganda reached 5.5 million people in Uganda with AB-focused programs in 2009 alone." In other words all the people of Uganda should be collectively punished because of the gay rights situation? They are all guilty? Are there any figures or studies available to convince one that ".... these programs have proven to have zero effect on HIV infection rates.."? They should have been at least mentioned in this article.
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F K 2
12:22 PM on 01/28/2011
No mention of US evangelicals, their impact on anti-homosexual legislation in Uganda as well as their disproportionate role in advocating death for homosexuals in the country as well? There fund raising is active in the US and their anti-gay activities are getting people killed in Africa. I believe this aspect must be examined more.
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oblogdeeoblogda
www.visualcv.com/melnathan
08:29 PM on 02/02/2011
Try reading this and the other 10 articles I have written after speaking directly with bahati
http://lezgetreal.com/2011/02/the-confession-of-a-patsy-to-uganda-gay-activists-murder-amounts-to-a-hit/
08:30 AM on 01/28/2011
STAND WITH BRENDA

Brenda Namigadde, a Ugandan lesbian in the UK, faces deportation TODAY back to the life-threatening persecution she fled eight years ago.

We just found out that one of the leading figures in the LGBT movement in Uganda, David Kato, was murdered yesterday in his home. This awful tragedy makes clear what's at stake for Brenda if she is forced to return.

Will you join more than 25,000 people in 85 countries and sign this urgent letter pressuring U.K. Home Secretary Theresa May to stop Brenda’s deportation?


Link to the letter here:
http://www.allout.org/brenda/getequal
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Bubba Gump
Christian, Liberal, Former NCO -- US Army Reserve
02:24 AM on 01/28/2011
I am so sad to hear of the tragic murder of David Kato.  He was a human being!  I hope the efforts to bring his murderer(s) to justice are successful.
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09:48 PM on 01/27/2011
This carry over from the outgoing dministration should be brought to the Administration's attention immediately. All the abstinence based programs have been a failure, nationally and internationally.

I grieve with you on the loss of one single life in the name of violence or bias.
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TheBestPatriot
CEO's aren't job creators, consumers are!
08:51 PM on 01/27/2011
OMG! I just saw a documentary that this guy was in.
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Robert Galyean
Do I Wake or Do I Sleep?
09:15 PM on 01/27/2011
Could you please tell me the name of the documentary so I can watch it?
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TheBestPatriot
CEO's aren't job creators, consumers are!
09:23 PM on 01/27/2011
I don't remember the name of it. It was on Current TV. I will check.
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TheBestPatriot
CEO's aren't job creators, consumers are!
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Wanjiru
Debatably relatable ...
08:17 PM on 01/27/2011
"In addition, the United States must stop funding faith-based organizations that insist on expressions of religion that reinforce societal structures and norms that perpetuate homophobia and women's inequality and discrimination, vulnerabilities to HIV infection, violence, stigmatization, subordination, and abuse."
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Absolutely on point. Great article.
Thank you for getting out this poignant message.
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