Ever since the anti-homosexuality bill was annulled due to technicalities of the sitting quorum, members of parliament have always vowed to retable it again.
On the 11th of April 2018 members of parliament commended speaker
Rebecca Kadaga for protecting Uganda cultural values against same sex marriage at the Inter parliamentary union assembly in Geneva Switzerland in late March.
This prompted Pr. Solomon Male of anti-homosexuality coalition in Uganda to refuel his efforts in cracking down sodomy suspects in the country and drag them to courts.
Male recently successfully delivered justice to many victims including former Uganda cranes manager Christopher Mubiru who was sentenced to ten years in Luzira prison and a victim compensated 50 million in
September 2015.
Mr. Male says the bill must be passed which will empower him to go on with the other suspects who are not yet prosecuted.”
The new act will enable the courts to give a deserved sentence to these homosexuals” Male says.
The celebrated anti-homosexuality pastor says that some of the suspects on his list are Julian Nakabugo and a one Mariam Nagawa aka Boncy both residents of Bwebajja accused carrying out recruitment for girls into this unholy act.
“I have people willing to testify against Nagawa in courts, she is a part of an LGBTI group we believe receives funding from USA and Canada to run its operations in Uganda.” He added
Parents of Nagawa a former Ndejje university basket baller and residents are currently baying for her blood for engaging in what they term as unnatural acts which they say are contradicting Islamic beliefs and punishable by death.
Male says he will not allow these sodomy criminals to go away with impunity. He also thanked the speaker Rebecca Alitwala Kadaga for staying firm before the international community in Geneva last month for upholding the core values of our mother Uganda.
Existing laws in Uganda criminalize homosexual behavior are remnants of British colonialism designed to punish what colonial authorities deemed “unnatural sex” among local Ugandan people This means that if Nagawa is pursued and arrested, she is likely to face 14 years in prison in Uganda.