AEGiS-AFROL: Uganda police torture gay rights activist afrol.comImportant note: Information in this article was accurate in 2008. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
Click here to return to Afrol.com main menu
Print this Article


Uganda police torture gay rights activist

afrol News - July 28, 2008


afrol News, 28 July - One of Uganda's key gay rights activists who had led demonstration at an AIDS international conference in the country was arrested, tortured and dumped with bruises on his body in the capital Kampala on Saturday.

Usaam Auf Mukwaya was among the three activists arrested at the HIV/AIDS Implementers' Meeting last month for protesting against comments by Uganda's AIDS commission that the gay community was shooting up the number of infections in the country, but would not have access to HIV services.

The activist was arrested by the police while on his way back from Friday prayers. He was reportedly driven to a building where he was led through a dark hall to an interrogation room, and aggressively question about Ugandan LGBT movement.

Mukwaaya was cut around the hands and tortured with a machine that applies extreme pressure to the body, preventing breathing and causing severe pain before being driven out of the building and dumped. He boarded a motorbike taxi to the city center and telephone his colleagues from Shaken and bruised, he boarded a motorbike taxi to the city center and telephoned colleagues from Sexual Minorities Uganda who found him weak, filthy and without shoes and some of his clothing.

Another protester who is currently being tried on charges of criminal tress pass alongside the disappeared activists explained how Makwaaya was arrested. Julian Onziema said he was with Mukwaya when police pounced on three of them in Nakasero.

Gay rights activists have been disturbed by the "unhealthy development", with International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) dispatching a petition to the Ugandan government authorities condemning the "illegal detention and torture of Mukwaaya."

"These actions by the police are a violation of numerous human rights promised to the people of Uganda under the African Charter of Human and Peoples' Rights and other international treaties to which your country is a signatory," writes IGLHRC Executive Director, Paula Ettelbrick.

"These treaties, as well as your constitution, guarantee the right to physical integrity, freedom from torture, and freedom from discrimination based on sex or other status," Ettelbrick said, requesting the government to fulfill its "international responsibilities by undertaking a thorough and transparent investigation into the illegal detention and torture of of Usaam Mukwaaya and that those responsible be brought to justice."

The Kampala government was also urged to "immediately halt" human rights violations targeting lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Ugandans.

Last year, the East African country's Attorney General Fred Ruhindi called for the imposition of criminal law against lesbians and gays.


080728
AO080706


Copyright © 2008 - afrol News. All rights reserved. Reproducing or buying afrol News' articles.

AEGiS is made possible through unrestricted funding from Boehringer Ingelheim, Bridgestone/Firestone Charitable Trust, Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Elton John AIDS Foundation, the National Library of Medicine, and donations from users like you. Always watch for outdated information. This article first appeared in 2008. This material is designed to support, not replace, the relationship that exists between you and your doctor.

AEGiS presents published material, reprinted with permission and neither endorses nor opposes any material. All information contained on this website, including information relating to health conditions, products, and treatments, is for informational purposes only. It is often presented in summary or aggregate form. It is not meant to be a substitute for the advice provided by your own physician or other medical professionals. Always discuss treatment options with a doctor who specializes in treating HIV.

Copyright ©1980, 2008. AEGiS. All materials appearing on AEGiS are protected by copyright as a collective work or compilation under U.S. copyright and other laws and are the property of AEGiS, or the party credited as the provider of the content. .