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  • Lil Nas X Slammed for tweeting about ‘gays in Africa’ after Uganda introduces death penalty for ‘aggravated homosexuality’

Lil Nas X Slammed for tweeting about ‘gays in Africa’ after Uganda introduces death penalty for ‘aggravated homosexuality’

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(DAILY MAIL) — Lil Nas X has received criticism for tweeting about ‘gays in Africa’ and wanting to go there after Uganda introduced the death penalty for ‘aggravated homosexuality’ as it passed bill to jail all gay people.

The 23-year-old Montero hitmaker was at the center of social media furor for his post on Twitter on Wednesday which was just a day after that Ugandan parliament passed the brutal bill.

The singer – born Montero Lamar Hill – wrote: ‘where do the gays be in africa I wanna come there.’

DailyMail.com has reached out to reps for the artist and has yet to hear back.

Lil Nas X was then bombarded with several comments of people who were upset at the timing and message of the post.

One replied: ‘Nah bro, stay home.’

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Another said: ‘The Uganda gays need love and solidarity today [heartbreak emoji]’

One of the wildest responses read ‘the gays in africa’ with a photo of two skeletons in bags with the skulls on top with wigs on.

On Tuesday, yhe Ugandan parliament has passed a bill to make it a crime to identify as LGBT, punishable with up a prison sentence and even the death penalty for what lawmakers called ‘aggravated homosexuality’, forcing rights groups to condemn the legislation as ‘appalling’.

Ugandans will be banned from ‘promoting and abetting’ homosexuality as well as from conspiring to engage in same-sex relationships under the new law.

Member of Parliament John Musira dressed in a gown reading ‘say no to homosexuality, lesbianism, gay’ as he left the Ugandan parliament following the debating of the bill

Among the severe penalties outlined in the bill is the death penalty for so-called ‘aggravated homosexuality’ as well as a sentence of life in prison for having gay sex.

The law classes ‘aggravated homosexuality’ as having gay sex with someone under the age of 18 or with someone being HIV positive, among other categories.

The Bill was passed late on Tuesday inside a packed parliamentary chamber in the capital Kampala.

A roll call was ordered by the House speaker who had repeatedly warned it was necessary to identify those who might oppose the legislation. It was supported by nearly all of the 389 legislators present.

Speaker Anita Among said: ‘Congratulations. Whatever we are doing, we are doing it for the people of Uganda.’

Supporters of the new law say a broader range of LGBT activities need to be punished, claiming they threaten traditional values.

An earlier version of the Bill enacted in 2014 was later nullified by a court on procedural grounds. The east African country is notorious for its intolerance of homosexuality – which was criminalised under colonial-era laws.

Amnesty International subsequently urged Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni to veto the anti-gay bill, warning it was ‘a grave assault’ on LGBTQ people. But he suggested in a recent speech that he supported the Bill, accusing unnamed western nations of ‘trying to impose their practices on other people’.

The Bill was introduced last month by an opposition lawmaker who said his goal was to punish ‘promotion, recruitment and funding’ related to LGBTQ activities.

It creates the offence of ‘aggravated homosexuality’, which applies in cases of sex relations involving those infected with HIV as well as minors and other categories of vulnerable people.

The Bill also creates the offence of ‘attempted homosexuality’, punishable with up to 10 years in jail.

Same-sex activity is already punishable with life imprisonment under a colonial-era law targeting ‘carnal knowledge against the order of nature’, partly the basis of a report by dissenters on the parliamentary committee that vetted the Bill before Tuesday’s vote.

‘This ambiguous, vaguely worded law even criminalises those who ‘promote’ homosexuality,’ Amnesty’s east and southern Africa director, Tigere Chagutah, said.

Lawmakers amended significant portions of the original draft legislation with all but one speaking in favor of the bill.

MP Fox Odoi-Oywelowo, a member of Museveni’s National Resistance Movement party who spoke against the bill, told AFP that offenders would face life imprisonment or even the death penalty for ‘aggravated’ offences.

Amnesty said Museveni ‘must urgently veto this appalling legislation’, adding that it would ‘institutionalize discrimination, hatred, and prejudice’ against the LGBTQ community.

Likewise, Human Rights Watch has described the legislation as ‘a more egregious version’ of the 2014 law, which drew widespread international concern and was struck down amid pressure from Uganda’s development partners.

‘One of the most extreme features of this new Bill is that it criminalizes people simply for being who they are as well as further infringing on the rights to privacy, and freedoms of expression and association that are already compromised in Uganda,’ the Human Rights Watch’s Oryem Nyeko said in a statement earlier this month.

Revealing: Lil Nas X is seen in a recent shirtless selfie

‘Ugandan politicians should focus on passing laws that protect vulnerable minorities and affirm fundamental rights and stop targeting LGBT people for political capital.’

The discussion about the bill in parliament has been laced with homophobic language and Museveni himself last week referred to gay people as ‘these deviants’.

Nevertheless, the 78-year-old leader has consistently signaled he does not view the issue as a priority, and would prefer to maintain good relations with Western donors and investors.

Uganda is notorious for its intolerance of homosexuality – which was criminalized under colonial-era laws.

But since independence from Britain in 1962 there has never been a conviction for consensual same-sex activity.

Uganda’s LGBTQ community has faced pressure from civilian authorities in recent years who wanted a tough new law punishing same-sex activity.

The Ugandan agency overseeing the work of NGOs last year stopped the operations of Sexual Minorities Uganda, the most prominent LGBTQ organization in the country, accusing it of failing to register legally. But the group’s leader stated that his organisation had been rejected by the registrar of companies as undesirable.

Member of Parliament from Bubulo contituency John Musira dressed in an anti gay gown attends the debate of the Anti-Homosexuality bill inside the chambers in Kampala yesterday

The recent decision of the Church of England to bless civil marriages of same-sex couples also has inflamed many, including some who see homosexuality as imported from abroad.

‘The Church of England has departed from the Anglican faith and are now false teachers,’ Ugandan Archbishop Stephen Kaziimba said in a statement last month that described ‘a crisis at hand’.

In 2014, Ugandan lawmakers passed a bill that called for life in prison for people caught having gay sex.

A court later struck down the law on a technicality, but it had already sparked international condemnation, with some Western nations freezing or redirecting millions of dollars of government aid in response.

Last week, police said they had arrested six men for ‘practising homosexuality’ in the southern lakeside town of Jinja.

Another six men were arrested on the same charge on Sunday, according to police.

Homosexuality is criminalised in more than 30 of Africa’s 54 countries.

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One response to “Lil Nas X Slammed for tweeting about ‘gays in Africa’ after Uganda introduces death penalty for ‘aggravated homosexuality’”

  1. It’s not to difficult to pick up on the author’s biases. When the majority of a people in a sovereign land come together to make laws on how to run their country what right does the international community has to interfere. All laws affect different demographics of people differently some more than outers. Laws against driving dangerous does not invoke violence against offenders. Laws against thievery does not invite violence against thieves. Yes there are thieves who when caught resist been arrested and put them self at risk of violence. However if you commit a crime and surrender peacefully no violence should be fall you or that person commits a crime. Each country has their own laws that governs crimes against the person. What the author forgot to mention other Africa other countries are also passing similar laws to protect themselves from problems seen in western countries. Protection of ones culture from influences that threaten distract and destroy the development of a people is important. Not because something is culturally acceptable in one place means it most everywhere. It’s not culturally or lawfully acceptable in western countries to have multiple wives but they push same sex agenda make it make sense

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Email: [email protected]                                          [email protected]