Friday, August 1, 2014
ADKAMPALA, Friday
Uganda's
constitutional court has overturned the anti-gay law that had been
branded draconian by rights groups, saying it was wrongly passed by
Parliament.
The law is "null and void," the presiding
judge told the court, saying the process contravened the constitution,
as it had been passed in December without the necessary quorum of
lawmakers.
"Justice
prevailed, we won," said lawyer Nicholas Opiyo, who led the challenge
in the constitutional court. The law's supporters said they would appeal
the ruling at the Supreme Court.
"The retrogressive anti-homosexuality act of Uganda has been struck down by the constitutional court — it's now dead as a door nail," said Andrew Mwenda, one of 10 petitioners.
JAILED FOR LIFE
The
law, signed by Uganda's veteran President Yoweri Museveni in February,
said that homosexuals should be jailed for life, outlawed the promotion
of homosexuality and obliged Ugandans to report gays to the authorities.
But
homosexuality remains illegal and punishable by jail sentences under
previous legislation, which is expected to be returned after the court's
decision.
Lawmakers could also seek to reintroduce a
Bill back into parliament, a potentially lengthy process, with the last
such Bill taking four years from introduction to the final vote.
But gay rights activists were celebrating on Friday. "I am no longer criminal,
today we have made history for generations to come," said Kasha
Jacqueline, another petitioner and a prominent gay rights activist.
APPEAL THE RULING
Outspoken
anti-gay preacher Pastor Martin Ssempa led prayers before the hearing
inside the tightly packed courtroom calling for the judges to uphold the
law.
Ssempa had already warned he feared the "judicial
abortion of our Bill" due to international pressure, and said
immediately he would appeal the ruling.
"We are
determined to appeal this case at the Supreme Court," he said. US
Secretary of State John Kerry has likened the law to anti-Semitic
legislation in Nazi Germany.
Critics have said Museveni
signed the law to win domestic support ahead of a presidential election
scheduled for 2016, which will be his 30th year in power.
But Western nations made a raft of aid cuts to Uganda's government in protest since the law was passed.
Rights
groups say the law triggered a sharp increase in arrests and assaults
of members of the country's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
(LGBT) community.
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