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Saturday, 1 March 2014

[RwandaLibre] Rwanda: Peacekeeping heroics could be misleading about the role of RDF

 


Peacekeeping heroics could be misleading about the role of RDF

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Frank Kagabo

Frank Kagabo  

By Frank Kagabo

Posted  Friday, February 14  2014 at  21:12
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A contingent of Rwanda Defence Forces (RDF) currently stationed in the Central African Republic (CAR) has received plaudits for standing out among the peacekeepers there.

A prominent blogger attributed some rare heroics to the soldiers. The blogger claimed that the French troops, also stationed in the CAR, were hogging most of the limelight on some missions largely carried out by the RDF contingent. It is well known that the RDF ranks have had a historical loathing of the French military and political establishment.

When this information was coming out, the RDF was also, according to some reports, being praised by a US military official as being the most competent peacekeeping force in the world.

Yes, the whole world! Cynics will, of course, dismiss this, saying that it's the usual diplomatic speak of US officials bent on promoting their nations influence by massaging some egos here and there.

Since 2004, peacekeeping has become an integral part of the RDF and also the Rwanda National Police (RNP). Participating in these well funded missions in Darfur, South Sudan, Haiti and now CAR, has paid off in a manner that would not have been imagined a decade ago.

Getting selected for a tour of duty in Darfur or South Sudan is, for a member of the forces, a prestigious achievement worth eagerly looking forward to.

A good number who have been in these missions have transformed their circumstances significantly. Junior officers have been able to construct homes, in part because of participating in these missions, and also by taking advantage of their credit scheme.

Many can attest to the fact that it has always been an uphill task for people working in government as civil servants, teachers, police officers and soldiers to own houses.

At the time of the end of the genocide, we are told that soldiers had celebrity status and took the hottest girls and had street credentials with the most respect in drinking joints.

As things settled down and the economy got going again, their paltry salaries could not match the high expectations that go with being popular. And the spell they had over the rest of society, thanks to their bravery and war tales, waned as the realities of a cash economy set in.

Then came the UN peacekeeping missions and those who participated in them had their social glory restored.

If the heroics of the RDF that have been described are anything to go by, it goes without saying that they are a highly motivated lot that looks forward to these missions.

On another level, the RDF apparently remains a coherent force that is led by a homogeneous elite of officers that has a shared world view and experiences.

These are men who participated in the 1990-94 campaign for power and a handful of mid-level officers that joined after the struggle. Many observers had expected to see a fissure in the RDF when a number of its historical first- and second-tier commanders were demobilised or fled to exile. However, this never materialised, showing that it largely remains united behind its leadership.

Although the RDF comes across as a highly professional and disciplined force, many critics of the current establishment continue to point out that the homogeneity of its leadership, and their shared life experiences as returnees of '94, is its major weakness.

That, as such, it does not, at least at the leadership level, reflect the social composition of the country.

Civil authority

More so, it is noted that RDF is loyal to the ruling party and its leadership first, with some of its senior leaders participating in meetings at the RPF Secretariat. And that this prevents it from being a truly national army. However, this would be to ignore the historical evolution of the RDF.

Therefore, looking at the heroics observed abroad, there would be temptation to think that this is an army with a long and established culture of being subordinate to civil authority and committed to keeping the peace and in barracks.

But it is likely that the RDF will still be highly involved in deciding who runs the country. Even more likely is that a person without a history from this army stands a very slim chance of taking the reigns of this nation in the near future.

Frank Kagabo is an Erasmus Mundus graduate student of journalism, media and globalisation at Aarhus University, Denmark, and Swansea University, the UK, specialising in war and conflict reporting. E-mail: frank2kagabo@yahoo.com; Twitter: @kagabo


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[RwandaLibre] Rwanda: Politics of convenience and hardball political games live in harmony

 


Politics of convenience and hardball political games live in harmony

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By Frank Kagabo

Posted  Friday, February 21  2014 at  16:55
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BBC Gahuza Miryango, the Kinyarwanda- Kirundi service of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), has a popular Saturday morning programme known as Imvo n'Imvano.

Certainly, to any Rwandan interested in the current affairs of his country, it needs no introduction. It is informative, entertaining and its host Ally Yusuf Mugenzi, an old hand in Rwandan journalism, adds to the flavour of the popular show.

Those who have tuned into the programme regularly over the past four years should know the name Evode Uwizeyimana. In a way, he had become the go-to legal expert for the programme hosts on a number of cases — ranging from genocide trials, issues of genocide denial and the many cases involving journalists, military men and political activists who have fallen foul of the laws of Rwanda.

His legal interpretation of many such cases, to my layman's understanding of the law, have been over the years scathing and an indictment of the Rwandan government's alleged use or "misuse" of the law to curtail civil rights and freedoms in the country.

To cement his anti-establishment credentials, Uwizeyimana had joined the Rwanda Dream Initiative, a political organisation led by veteran politician Faustin Twagiramungu, the former prime minister.

Apparently, Uwizeyimana, a former judge, had fled to Canada after allegedly being too vocal in his opinions about alleged interference by the Executive in judicial matters.

While in exile, he upped his rhetoric, railing against the government in power in many of the legal issues it has been involved in over time, even outside the country, like in cases of French and Spanish indictments of top military officials.

So when a few days ago the same gentleman showed up in Rwanda, now speaking in defence of Kigali and also as a consultant in the Ministry of Justice, those not accustomed to the speed at which some people change sides or their views in this country's politics were surprised.

However, for many accustomed to the politics of the country, there is a crop of political actors who are willing to switch sides at any time provided there is enough incentive. Before Uwizeyimana, there was former premier Pierre Celestine Rwigema, who returned to Rwanda singing praises for the same government from which he had fled a decade before.

Occupy visible position

We have also witnessed a number of politicians who were vocal members of the discredited government of the period before and during the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi come to occupy visible positions in the current order, even displacing some who had fought against them in the bitter civil war! Though their actual ability to have real influence in the current system is open to debate, they at least occupy important formal positions in government!

Recently, we have seen an increase in the mobilisation by foreign-based exile groups. An unusual momentum seems to have risen. People close to the ruling party in Kigali have, in fact, accused a neighbouring country of being behind activities aimed at bringing together the exiled groups in order to cause a regime change!

The defections in some of the political groupings in exile back to Kigali is evidence that the authorities are also on a charm offensive aimed at, apparently, isolating the highly determined former members of the ruling party from the wider exiled community. Some have been lured back home and rewarded with political and civil service appointments.

Distinctions in exiled community

Among Rwanda's exiled community, there are some distinctions. There are those who fled Rwanda for the first time after 1994. Then there are those who returned in 1994 following RPF's victory and then fled again after falling out with their former allies in the party. The fact that we see almost none in the latter group returning home while those in the former continue to head back is telling.

Clearly, Kigali has devised different approaches for neutralising these categories of oppositionists. Certainly, those who previously were inner-circle members of the ruling elite in Kigali cannot be treated in the same way as the likes of Uwizeyimana and ex-PM Rwigema. For theirs was, and still is, a bitter divorce — and the rhetoric from both the exiled former RPF members and the Kigali elite tells it all.

Frank Kagabo is an Erasmus Mundus graduate student of journalism, media and globalisation at Aarhus University, Denmark, and Swansea University, the UK, specialising in war and conflict reporting. E-mail: frank2kagabo@yahoo.com; Twitter: @kagabo

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[RwandaLibre] Fw: *DHR* Rwanda: l'opposition en exil se réunit à Bruxelles

 



Subject: *DHR* Rwanda: l'opposition en exil se réunit à Bruxelles

 

RFI
Plusieurs partis d'opposition rwandais se réunissent ce samedi à Bruxelles. Une initiative lancée par l'ancien Premier ministre Faustin Twagiramungu. Les 7 partis concernés pourraient décider ou non de s'unir et si oui, déterminer quelle forme pourrait prendre cette union. Leur objectif: obtenir des négociations avec Kigali pour le retour de tous les réfugiés rwandais et l'instauration d'une véritable démocratie dans le pays. Ce n'est pas la première fois que l'opposition rwandaise en exil envisage de s'unir. Il y a déjà eu plusieurs tentatives dans le passé, en vain. Pourquoi une nouvelle tentative maintenant ?
 
A écouter les responsables des différents partis politiques en exil, il y aurait urgence.
D'abord parce que - expliquent certains de ces opposants - le président rwandais Paul Kagame ne peut pas se représenter en 2017, à moins de modifier la Constitution. Ce qu'il fera, assurent-ils, tout en ajoutant que cela pourrait finir de le « décrédibiliser » aux yeux de la communauté internationale.
Plusieurs de ces dirigeants évoquent aussi le discours de Paul Kagame le 12 janvier dernier. Quelques jours après l'assassinat de Patrick Karegeya, son ancien chef des renseignements extérieurs. Paul Kagame avait mis en garde contre « les conséquences de la trahison ».
Des propos qui, selon ces opposants en exil, constitueraient une nouvelle dérive du pouvoir. « C'est de notre responsabilité de proposer une alternative crédible », explique l'un d'eux, qui souligne également que les déclarations très dures des Etats-Unis contre Kigali sur la question du soutien au M23 et sur la succession d'assassinats d'exilés rwandais constituaient « un tournant diplomatique ».
Troisième facteur de poids. Sous pression militaire de la Monusco, les FDLR, les rebelles hutus rwandais, sont à la recherche d'une solution politique. En contact avec plusieurs partis, ils ont finalement choisi de s'allier à l'ancien Premier ministre Faustin Twagiramungu.
Pour rappel, la Tanzanie avait incité Kigali à négocier avec ce groupe rebelle au grand dam du gouvernement rwandais qui l'accuse d'être dirigé par des génocidaires. Mais cette prise de position inédite a donné de l'espoir à bon nombre d'opposants rwandais d'un soutien régional à leur demander de dialogue politique avec le Rwanda.
Cette initiative de Faustin Twagiramungu a-t-elle plus de chance de réussir ?
Ce qui caractérise l'opposition rwandaise en exil, c'est la méfiance des partis politiques les uns envers les autres. 
Méfiance d'abord envers les FDLR, les rebelles hutus rwandais dont les dirigeants sont accusés par Kigali d'avoir participé au génocide. Faustin Twagiramungu a choisi malgré tout en janvier de s'allier avec eux. Il souhaiterait que d'autres partis s'associent à leurs démarches pour obtenir un dialogue avec Kigali.
Si parmi les dirigeants qui envisagent aujourd'hui rejoindre l'initiative de l'ancien premier ministre rwandais, il n'y a pas d'opposition de principe aux FDLR, à leurs droits de rentrer au pays ou de s'exprimer politiquement, beaucoup s'interrogent sur la capacité de Faustin Twagiramungu ou toute entité politique à les contrôler. Ont-ils déposé les armes? Que se passerait-il s'ils décidaient à nouveau d'attaquer le Rwanda ou de commettre des exactions contre la population congolaise ?
Méfiance également concernant les modalités de ce rapprochement entre partis d'opposition. Faustin Twagiramungu deviendrait-il de fait le leader de l'opposition ? Faut-il une simple plateforme à la structure légère ou une alliance aux règles bien établies ? Comment conserver l'identité de chaque parti ou encore éviter l'ingérence de Kigali dans les affaires de l'opposition ?
Face à la question d'une simple participation à cette initiative, deux partis ont déjà connu des dissensions. Les FDU (Forces démocratiques unifiées) de Victoire Ingabire. Et le RNC (Congrès national rwandais) du général Kayumba Nyamwasa.
Méfiance enfin qui - de l'avis de tous les partis - est surtout liée à l'histoire violente du Rwanda. « Quand on s'est entretué comme on l'a fait, il n'y a rien de plus normal », s'accordent à dire plusieurs responsables politiques en exil. 
 
http://www.rfi.fr/afrique/20140228-rwanda-opposition-reunit-bruxelles-faustin-twagiramungu/







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[RwandaLibre] Hollywood star Affleck urges US investment in DR Congo

 

Hollywood star Affleck urges US investment in DR Congo

By: Agence France-Presse
February 27, 2014 7:50 AM


Ben Affleck. AFP FILE PHOTO
InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5

WASHINGTON DC - Hollywood star Ben Affleck called Wednesday for
targeted investment in the private sector in eastern Democratic
Republic of Congo, where he sees a window of opportunity to end a
cycle of unrest.

The A-list actor and director, who has founded a non-profit group
called the Eastern Congo Initiative and has made repeated trips to the
region, advocated the United States shift its priorities in delivering
aid, in a hearing at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

"People would rather be invested in than accept aid, would rather have
a job than live in a camp," he said.

Specific, small-scale investments are sometimes better than massive
projects because they can be monitored more closely, Affleck argued,
plugging his organization's involvement in building a partnership
between local cocoa growers and organic chocolate company Theo.

"It's good business for the Congolese and it's paying off for this
American company," which will buy 640 tons of cocoa from Congolese
growers this year, he said, emphasizing "economic development is the
key for sustainable growth."

The "Argo" star testified alongside Roger Meece, former US ambassador
to Kinshasa, and conflict economy expert Raymond Gilpin, from the
Africa Center for Strategic Studies of the National Defense
University.

Along with former Senator Russ Feingold, President Barack Obama's
envoy to the region, all four expressed optimism about progress in the
conflict-torn, but resource-rich DRC, where they said a recent peace
deal that ended hostilities with the M23 rebel group was a major step
forward.

They praised the UN's "intervention brigade," whose mandate was
extended beyond peacekeeping, as being pivotal in bringing about the
peace deal.

But they said signficant reforms to the security sector are needed, as
well as elections.

Feingold noted that Washington has set aside $3.7 million to support
the DRC's next elections -- a "paltry sum."

"I think this is something we should heavily engage in," he urged.

Affleck, who also met US Secretary of State John Kerry, said the
troubled 2011 election, following a mostly well-regarded 2006
presidential vote, demonstrated the need for continued international
involvement.

"This is a region that's suffered enormous damage and trauma. And this
fire is now abating a little bit, and we have a window where
engagement on the part of secretary, the president, the Congress all
collectively can make a real difference," he said at the State
Department.

"And I think historically, there's an instinct to sort of put out one
fire and go to the next fire. And this is a point where we can act to
prevent the fire from igniting again."

http://www.google.ca/gwt/x?gl=CA&hl=en-CA&u=http://www.interaksyon.com/article/81635/hollywood-star-affleck-urges-us-investment-in-dr-congo&q=Affleck+urges+U.S.+investment+in+DR+Congo

--
SIBOMANA Jean Bosco
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[RwandaLibre] Probable offensive against FDLR in DRC next month raises risks to cargo and individuals

 

Terrorism & Insurgency
Probable offensive against FDLR in DRC next month raises risks to
cargo and individuals

IHS Jane's Country Risk Daily Report
27 February 2014

EVENT
Local civil society associations of the villages of Itala and Tama in
Lubero territory, North Kivu, on 26 February handed in a memorandum to
the local base of the United Nations Organisation Stabilisation
Mission for the DR Congo (Mission de l'Organisation des Nations Unies
pour la Stabilisation en RD Congo: MONUSCO), denouncing constant
intimidation and attacks by the rebels from the Democratic Forces for
the Liberation of Rwanda (Forces Démocratiques de Libération du
Rwanda: FDLR).

Local residents complained especially about the theft of food aid and
demanded that the government and MONUSCO address the "intolerable
situation". The spokesperson of the armed forces of the Democratic
Republic of Congo (Forces Armées de la République Démocratique du
Congo: FARDC), Lieutenant-Colonel Olivier Hamuli, stated that the
FARDC would soon "launch tracking operations" against the rebel groups
in the area, namely the FDLR.

Client log in to read more
(140 of 355 words)

Recruitment drive - Islamist groups urge India's Muslims to join jihad

Islamist militant groups such as Al-Qaeda have made a number of recent
appeals to India's Muslim population to join the global jihad. Animesh
Roul examines whether these attempts will prove successful or falter
as they have in the past.

http://www.google.ca/gwt/x?gl=CA&hl=en-CA&u=http://www.janes.com/article/34739/probable-offensive-against-fdlr-in-drc-next-month-raises-risks-to-cargo-and-individuals&q=Probable+offensive+against+FDLR+in+DRC+next+month+raises+risks.&sa=X&ei=yCYRU42yJsHP0wHH_oGwBA&ved=0CCEQFjAA

--
SIBOMANA Jean Bosco
Google+: https://plus.google.com/110493390983174363421/posts
YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9B4024D0AE764F3D
http://www.youtube.com/user/sibomanaxyz999
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[RwandaLibre] Amnesty International: The anti-gay law: Uganda's shame

 

The anti-gay law: Uganda's shame

(c) Pete Muller
'the homosexuals have lost the argument in Uganda. They should
rehabilitate themselves and society should assist them to do so.'
President Museveni

At the start of this week Uganda's President heralded a new low for
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) people in the
country by passing the Anti-Homosexuality Bill.

The repugnant discriminatory law that's hung around on the sidelines
of Uganda's parliament for the last five years has been tweaked -
death sentences 'softened' to life sentences for the most serious
'offences' of homosexuality - but it is now law.

Prior to this week, it was already illegal to be LGBTI in Uganda, but
this law extends sentences for gay marriage, 'promoting
homosexuality', 'aiding and abetting homosexuality' - and more.

LGBTI individuals deemed to be 'serial offenders' (ie. frequently
convicted of having sex with someone of the same sex or 'related
convictions') face a lifetime behind bars, as do those with HIV who
have consensual same-sex relations. If you host two people who engage
in same-sex relations in your house, you could be found to be running
a brothel and dealt a seven-year prison sentence.

The Anti-Homosexuality Act's many victims

My heart goes out to so many people in Uganda. To the LGBTI activists
I met at London's Gay Pride last summer, who danced and cheered at an
event that welcomed them. To the individuals all over Uganda who will
live their lives being told their feelings are abhorrent and abnormal,
who face criminal punishment if they even hint at revealing a sexual
orientation or gender identity that 'deviates' from heterosexuality,
who live in a society that will 'assist' in 'rehabilitating' them. To
the health workers, police officers, aid workers and so on who now
face ethical dilemmas around reporting or not reporting suspected
same-sex conduct of individuals seeking their help.

Despite approving a law that actively discriminates based on sexual
orientation and gender identity, Uganda's Health Minster claims that
LGBTI people won't face discrimination when accessing healthcare.
Right.

The financial implications of the law are already being felt, with the
withdrawal of international funds to Uganda. Last week, Obama warned
Museveni of the negative consequences of signing the Bill on US
relations with Uganda. Today, the World Bank halted a $90 billion loan
set to fund healthcare services in the country. Norway, Denmark and
the Netherlands have cut aid intended for services including Uganda's
legal system on the back of this new law. Others will follow. The
value of the Ugandan shilling has dropped in the last couple of days.

With fewer rights and resources pulled from legal and health services
within days of the law's existence, it's ordinary Ugandans who lose
out - regardless of their sexual orientation and gender identity.
There's no discrimination there.

Nature or nurture? African or Western?

In the last few weeks President Museveni appeared to conduct a bit of
a public sweepstake to help him unravel the cultural and scientific
evidence behind this 'being gay' thing. He settled on the decision
that same-sex relations are a social aberration, and while people may
be born gay, the state can cure them of it.

In response to Obama's warning, Museveni did, in a slight to 'Western
intervention in African matters', remind him the law's colonial
origins: 'homosexuality...should continue to be criminalised because the
British had already done it [in Uganda]'. He's not wrong. As with many
African states, same-sex relations were not illegal until European
colonisation.

However, by questioning whether one is born or created LGBTI, whether
homosexuality is a Western concept and social import, Museveni merely
created distractions from the real issue.

The debate he should have engaged with is whether he wanted to
guarantee his citizens human rights or not. It's that simple. Instead,
he chose to arbitrarily curtail basic rights for a chunk of the
population based on allegations about one aspect of an individual's
identity.

The witch-hunt begins

Last month Nigeria strengthened its anti-gay laws and immediately set
about rounding up and punishing those suspected of same-sex
relationships.

The day after Museveni passed Uganda's equivalent law, Ugandan tabloid
paper Red Pepper recklessly published a list of the 'top 200 gays' in
Uganda. Many of them were being outed for the first time.

A few years ago, the now-defunct Rolling Stone paper published its own
list of purported gay Ugandans. Months later, gay rights activist
David Kato was murdered in his home. This is no coincidence.

Kato did successfully bring charges against Rolling Stone, but by then
it was too late. This was before the Anti-Homosexuality Bill became
law; those named have fewer rights now. Red Pepper should also face
charges - the law cites the duty of editors and broadcasters to
protect confidentiality, but the maximum fine for outing someone in a
newspaper is only around £59.

One of the men outed in the Red Pepper spoke to the BBC about how he
can no longer speak to his family or return to Uganda after his name
appeared on the list. LGBTI activist Frank Mugisha appealed to the
police for protection:

Uganda Police Do some thing about the press on gay people in uganda,I
plead please you know our society it's like throwing them to wolves

-- Dr. Frank Mugisha (@frankmugisha) February 26, 2014

Meanwhile, in Zambia...

On the day that Red Pepper was endangering the lives of 200 Ugandans,
there was some good news as a leading gay rights activist was
acquitted of 'promoting homosexuality' after defending gay rights in a
TV debate.

Next week, the same court is due to deliver a verdict to Philip
Mubiana and James Mwape, both 22, and both accused of homosexual
relations. If found guilty, they could serve 14 years behind bars.
Since they were detained last May, Philip and James have been forced
to undergo anal examinations without their consent to 'prove' the
charges - scientifically pointless while invasive and cruel.

I hope that on Thursday, if the verdict is delivered it is a positive
one. The LGBTI community in sub-Saharan Africa desperately needs some
good news right now.

About Amnesty UK Blogs
Our blogs are written by Amnesty International staff, volunteers and
other interested individuals, to encourage debate around human rights
issues. They do not necessarily represent the views of Amnesty
International.

http://www.amnesty.org.uk/blogs/campaigns/uganda-zambia-anti-gay-law-homosexuality-bill-lgbt

--
SIBOMANA Jean Bosco
Google+: https://plus.google.com/110493390983174363421/posts
YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9B4024D0AE764F3D
http://www.youtube.com/user/sibomanaxyz999
***Online Time:15H30-20H30, heure de Montréal.***Fuseau horaire
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[RwandaLibre] Uganda Foreign Affairs Minister Sam Kutesa met several ambassadors

 

Uganda Foreign Affairs Minister Sam Kutesa met several ambassadors

Minister Kutesa and Ambassador Alphons Hennekens of the Netherlands

newvision
By Vision reporter

Foreign Affairs Minister Sam Kutesa Thursday met several ambassadors
accredited to Uganda with whom they discussed the Anti-homosexuality
law recently assented to by the President.

According to a press release from the ministry, Kutesa's visitors
included Alain Hanssen (Belgium), ambassador Urban Andersson (Sweden),
ambassador Scott DeLisi (US), Thorbjørn Gaustadsæther of Norway,
ambassador Alphons Hennekens (Netherlands) and Dan Frederiksen
(Denmark).

The press release about the meeting reads: "The Minister of Foreign
Affairs today met Ambassadors of Belgium, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and
the US to discuss the anti-homosexuality law recently assented by His
Excellency the President.

"They all expressed their governments' objection of the passing of the Bill.

"However, there was consensus from the ambassadors that they continue
to value the partnership with Uganda and far-reaching decisions will
not be taken in haste as they continue to engage the Ugandan
Government on the issue.

"The ambassadors were mindful that they do not want ordinary people to
suffer as a result development assistance cuts, as they are closely
observing the implications of the Law.

"Kutesa reiterated the President's position on the law but emphasized
that its intention is not to discriminate, harass or witch-hunt
homosexuals but prohibit the promotion and exhibition of homosexuality
in Uganda. The minister added that "we should examine this issue in a
cool and rational manner", with continued engagement as a way
forward."

http://www.newvision.co.ug/news/653065-minister-kutesa-meets-foreign-enyoys.html

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“Uwigize agatebo ayora ivi”. Ubutegetsi bukugira agatebo ukariyora uko bukeye n’uko bwije.

"Ce dont j’ai le plus peur, c’est des gens qui croient que, du jour au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre."

“The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.”

“The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.”

“I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile."

KOMEZA USOME AMAKURU N'IBITEKEREZO BYA VUBA BYAGUCITSE:

RECOMMENCE

RECOMMENCE

1.Kumenya Amakuru n’amateka atabogamye ndetse n’Ibishobora Kukugiraho Ingaruka ni Uburenganzira Bwawe.

2.Kwisanzura mu Gutanga Ibitekerezo, Kurwanya Ubusumbane, Akarengane n’Ibindi Byose Bikubangamiye ni Uburenganzira Bwawe.