The US President’s letter to his Ugandan counterpart was
the trigger that could have forced Museveni into singing the anti gay
bill
On February 24, 2014, President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda signed into
law a bill mandating gays to be sentenced to life in prison for being
who they are. It was a tragic but equally illuminating moment for Uganda
and its relations with its Western “allies”. Museveni had been
reluctant to sign the bill until US President Barak Obama sent him a
toughly worded letter literally ordering him not to and even threatening
consequences if he did. Watching Museveni speak to the press before a
publically televised signing of the Anti Homosexuality Bill (AHB), I
felt sympathetic to him even though I disagreed with his action. I have
since joined other Ugandans in petitioning against this law in the
Constitutional Court. However, I also felt that if I was in his shoes, I
would also have probably acted as he did.
Although by Western standards Museveni’s view on homosexuals is
retrogressive, he is actually quite progressive compared to many of his
contemporaries in Uganda and Africa. For example, while virtually every
anti gay politician or activist in Uganda (and Africa generally) argues
that homosexuality is a Western imposition on African culture, Museveni
has consistently argued that gays existed in pre-colonial Africa. He has
also argued consistently that pre-colonial African societies were aware
of the existence of gays but did not persecute them. At the press
conference he held before signing the AHB, Museveni said the
criminalization and persecution of gays was introduced in Uganda by
European Christian missionaries and the British colonial state.
So what made him change and sign a bill he had opposed in an open
letter to the speaker of parliament in December 2013? Museveni is a
president with a reputation as a strong and powerful leader. He is seen
by the Ugandan public as the man who issues commands and others obey.
This brand identity has given him the myth of invincibility that has
been essential to his politics. When Obama asked him not to sign the
bill in a public letter that even threatened consequences, he boxed
Museveni into a corner.
If Museveni declined to sign the bill, people would interpret it as a
result of Obama’s threats, a factor that would have made the Ugandan
president look weak and cowardly. This is an impression Museveni cannot
afford to have Ugandans hold of him. This is especially so given that
Museveni is a president of a country over 90 percent of whose citizens
are homophobic according to the World Values Survey. And if he was
perceived of bending to Obama’s threats, Museveni knows that he would
have lost face, his honor and his reputation as a powerful leader. This
would have been politically devastating for a politician with a warrior
brand like Museveni.
I have consistently argued that Western interference in the internal
affairs of poor countries – even when well intentioned – often works to
the detriment of the ends sought. Whether it is foreign financial or
technical aid, human rights advocacy or humanitarian intervention, it
tends to distort incentives of actors. Western nations carry unbearable
cultural hubris thinking that their ways are universal human standards
that should be accepted by diktat by other nations and societies. Even
if this was correct, Western zealots ignore the protracted political and
civic struggles in their own countries that brought about the current
legal and human rights standards.
For example, the vast majority of Ugandans think homosexuals are
perverts threatening the moral and natural order of our societies. This
bigotry is born of religious conservatism, ignorance resulting from
limited exposure. These weird views against gays are not any different
from those of most Americans or Europeans two generations ago. The
tolerance of homosexuality in the West is a development of the 1960s and
70s. It evolved out of internal civic struggle by gay groups supported
by progressive intellectuals backed by expanding scientific knowledge
and growing liberalism.
Therefore, to expect that African societies can change their deeply
held dogmas and prejudices overnight is to demand the impossible. Any
foreign intervention that seeks to advance gay rights has to approach
the problem with caution and subtlety and avoid being seen as forcing
the issue. In any case, the biggest threat to homosexuals in Uganda is
not state law, however draconian, but rather social stigma. Homosexuals
in Uganda are alienated from their parents, siblings and other relatives
and have to live in fear of exposure to public ridicule and cultural
alienation.
The law may be an added a burden but is highly improbable, that the
Uganda Police, whose traffic officers watch idly as motorists violate
traffic rules and public officials loot the state, will not be visiting
people’s bedrooms to find out which man is sleeping with another man. It
seems to me that the law was passed to whet public animosity and help
our politicians score political points. It will most likely be used
against political rivals (many of whom may not even be gay) than to
punish homosexuality.
I am aware that in issuing his threat, Obama was addressing himself
to his constituency at home. May be he needed to show them that he has
done something tough to threaten the Ugandan leader into not signing the
bill. However, this action was not helpful to the LGBT cause in Uganda.
It has stimulated heated passions in this homophobic society with many
activists claiming America wants to impose homosexuality on our society.
Obama and other Western leaders need to use quiet diplomacy to try to
change the actions of African leaders. Public threats achieve the exact
opposite.
amwenda@independent.co.ug
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
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