By Rodney Muhumuza, KAMPALA
Uganda
The World Bank said it will not consider new loans to Uganda after the East African country earlier this year enacted an anti-gay bill that rights groups and others have condemned.
The World Bank had deployed a
team to Uganda after the law was enacted in May and determined that additional
measures were necessary to ensure projects align with the bank’s environmental
and social standards.
“No new public financing to
Uganda will be presented to our Board of Executive Directors until the efficacy
of the additional measures has been tested,” the World Bank Group said in a statement on Tuesday.
“Our goal is to protect sexual
and gender minorities from discrimination and exclusion in the projects we
finance. These measures are currently under discussion with the authorities,”
it added.
The anti-gay legislation, which prescribes
the death penalty for some homosexual acts, was signed into law
in May. It has widespread support at home, and Ugandan officials have been
defiant amid concern that partners such as the World Bank and others might
withdraw resources over the legislation. Some officials have suggested that the
funding threats are inappropriate.
It was not immediately possible to get a comment from Ugandan finance authorities, who for months have been trying to secure new funding from the country’s top multilateral lender.
The World Bank statement noted
that despite the latest decision it remains “committed to helping all Ugandans
— without exception — escape poverty, access vital services, and improve their
lives.”
The U.N. Human Rights Office has said the Ugandan law
is “draconian and discriminatory,” describing it as ”a recipe for systematic
violations of the rights” of LGBTQ+ people and others. The U.S. has warned of economic consequences.
Activists and some academics
have challenged the law in court, but it remains unclear when hearings will
begin.
Homosexuality is criminalized
in more than 30 of Africa’s 54 countries.
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