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Uganda to open third refugee camp for fleeing Congolese

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Uganda is to set up a new camp to cope with a influx of refugees from eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the government has said.

At least 100 people a day are now crossing the border to escape an upsurge in violence, Uganda's refugee minister told the BBC. Women said they had been raped by armed militias, who broke into their homes at night and stole food and property.

Up to 3,000 people have fled since DR Congo's chaotic elections in November.

Several rebel groups still operate in eastern DR Congo, which is rich in minerals, despite the end of the five-year civil war in 2003.

Voting questions

Stephen Malinga, Uganda's refugee minister, says a new refugee camp is needed because the settlements of Nakivale and Oruchinga, near the town of Mbarara in western Uganda, are "over stretched".

Tens of thousands of Congolese have fled over the years - and the country is struggling to recover from the civil conflict that claimed an estimated three million lives.

The BBC's Ignatius Bahizi visited the camps where 6,000 people have arrived since July. Recent arrivals told him of killings, abductions and rape by unknown armed men. Some of the refugees, who had fled from areas around the towns of Goma, Masisi and Rutshuru, said the armed men questioned them about how they had voted in last year's contested polls.

The elections, the first Congolese-organised polls since the end of the war, were won by incumbent President Joseph Kabila, but rejected by veteran opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi.

Mr Malinga, who visited the refugees last week, believes the rise in violence is unlikely to be related to politics or how people voted. "It doesn't matter what answer people gave, they [armed groups] would mistreat the women and they would rob families of food," he told the BBC's Network Africa programme.

"It is difficult to tell who they support and I think they are just being opportunistic to get food supplies," the minister said.

The UN's refugee agency says the recent movement of people is "not a massive flight yet".  "It is not so much the number but the fact that they are not safe in their country and that they need assistance," UNHCR's Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba told the BBC.

DR Congo is rich in minerals such as gold, diamond and coltan, which is used in mobile phones.

But years of conflict and mismanagement mean it recently came bottom of a survey of living standards around the world.

Source: BBC News Africa

Uganda: Amnesty Condemns Government raid on LGBT-rights workshop

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The minister also attempted to order the arrest of Kasha Jacqueline Nabagasera, a prominent LGBT activistA Ugandan cabinet minister on Tuesday raided a workshop run by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) activists in Entebbe, prompting Amnesty International to call on the government to end its outrageous harassment of people involved in lawful activities.

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Ugandan official says ‘kill the gays’ bill ‘not being reconsidered’

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Uganda’s ambassador to the United States blasted the head of the United Negro College Fund for sending him an “incendiary” letter last week asking him to discuss an anti-homosexuality bill introduced in the Uganda Parliament in his scheduled speech at a Martin Luther King Day event sponsored by the Fund.

Ambassador Perezi K. Kamunanwire responded to that letter by withdrawing as keynote speaker at the King Day event, held Monday morning in Greenbelt, Md. In his own letter, he said United Negro College Fund president and CEO, Michael L. Lomax, “blindsided and startled” him with Lomax’s Jan. 12 letter raising the issue of the anti-homosexuality bill.

In addition, Kamunanwire claims in the letter that the Ugandan Parliament is not planning to reconsider a bill that would impose the death penalty for homosexual acts.

The ambassador, a former college professor who has taught at U.S. universities, said in his letter that he had been invited to speak on education-related issues at the King Day event.

Lomax said in his letter to Kamunanwire that he raised the issue of reports of anti-gay persecution in Uganda after receiving an inquiry from the Washington Blade and others asking why his organization invited a Ugandan official to speak at a King Day commemoration.

“Following a brief telephone conversation with Dr. Lomax in which I expressed concern that changing the topic would distract from our shared commitment to honor Dr. King’s legacy and advance the discussion of education equality, it was clear from his discourteous and insulting tone that I was no longer welcome,” Kamunanwire said in a Jan. 15 letter to William F. Stasior, chairman of the board of directors of the United Negro College Fund.

Kamunanwire sent a copy of his letter to Stasior to the Blade along with an email message expressing concern about the Blade’s story reporting he had withdrawn abruptly as a speaker for the King Day event. The Blade story cited a press release from the United Negro College Fund announcing Kamunanwire’s withdrawal as speaker.

“My staff at the Embassy of the Republic of Uganda, and members of the Ugandan American community, brought your article to my attention,” he said in his email to the Blade. “In an effort to clarify my decision to withdraw as keynote speaker from the UNCF’s 29th Anniversary Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. breakfast fundraiser, I am sharing a letter which was sent to the chair of the UNCF board,” he said.

“This will be my only statement on the matter, as I withdrew my name so as not to distract from the importance of the King holiday and education equality,” he said. “It is my hope that the Washington Blade will report this matter fairly.”

Lomax and a spokesperson for the United Negro College Fund didn’t immediately respond to calls from the Blade seeking their response to Kamunanwire’s criticism of Lomax.

In his Jan. 12 letter to Kamunanwire, Lomax said, “We are dismayed at present polices in Uganda (and in many other African nations) criminalizing sexual orientation, and we view with alarm the draconian penalties, including the death penalty, that the Ugandan anti-homosexuality bill would impose if passed.”

Kamunanwire replied in his letter to UNCF board chair Stasior that Lomax’s assumptions that Uganda’s existing laws and policies result in anti-gay persecution were false.

“It is important to note that Uganda does not have such policies,” he said, adding that the bill in question was introduced by a single member of the Uganda Parliament and was never officially debated or passed.

“[A]nd contrary to popular belief, it is not being reconsidered,” Kamunanwire said in his letter. “This has been explained to the U.S. government, Department of State, and several other concerned parties to their satisfaction,” he said.

The New York Times and international human rights activists reported in October that the Uganda Parliament voted to reopen a debate on the anti-homosexuality bill, which was first introduced in 2009. Some of the activists cited a report by Uganda’s Daily Mail newspaper as saying that Parliament Speaker Rebecca Kadaga confirmed that the bill had been sent to several committees for consideration last October and could be brought to a vote.

A spokesperson for the State Department couldn’t be reached for comment early Monday to verify Kamunanwire’s assertion that U.S. officials were satisfied that the anti-homosexuality bill was not being taken up again. President Obama and Secretary of State Hilary Clinton expressed concern last year over reports of anti-gay persecution in Uganda following the murder of a prominent Ugandan gay rights activist in the activist’s home.

“As is the case with several members of the British Commonwealth, the outdated anti-sodomy laws in the Ugandan penal code were inherited from our British colonizers,” Kamunanwire said in his letter, in referring to existing law in Uganda.

“Quite similarly, there are dormant anti-sodomy laws on the books in fourteen U.S. states, including Virginia where the UNCF makes its home,” he said.

Kamunanwire was referring to a decision by legislatures in some states to leave their sodomy laws on the books following the 2003 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Lawrence vs. Texas, which overturned state sodomy laws that criminalized sodomy between consenting adults in private. Legal experts have said the state sodomy laws remaining on the books cannot be enforced under the Supreme Court ruling.

Source: www.washingtonblade.com

By Lou Chibbaro Jr. on January 17, 2012

Rwandan Editor brutally murdered in Uganda

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Rwanda Peoples Party Press Release

Kopenhagen, Danmark,  02/12/2011

Ref: RPP/7002/01-CIA/12-2/MNK/11-UG/KD

Ref: Condemnation of the cold and well calculated brutal murder of the late Charles Ingabire

On behalf of the Rwanda People’s Party, we wish to condemn, in the most strongly worded manner, the cold and well calculated brutal murder of the late Charles Ingabire, editor of the Inyenyeri News and member of the Rwanda Peoples Party, who was shot in the Thorax at Mulago Roundabout, in Kampala, Uganda.

The RPP believes that President Kagame, has deluded himself that he could crush the spirit of the Rwandan people through the bloody murders of his own Rwandan people. This is quite the opposite, it’s recruiting more and more ant-regime, and motivating and encouraging a peaceful and  popular struggle of the Rwandan people who are unafraid to die for the cause they believe in.

The people of Rwanda have broken their fears and barriers of President  Kagame’s dictatorial regime in their quest for the right to express their freedom of expression and to assemble.

It is speculated that the Kagame regime has killed Charles Ingabire, but the spirit of Rwanda remains united and strong.

We are appealing to the Ugandan authorities to do everything possible to arrest the culprits.

The struggle continues.

May his soul rest in Internal Peace

Thanks

Rwanda People’s Party

J V KARURANGA

F MARIYAMUNGU

J BANYIGINYA

R  Serwadda

CHILD SACRIFICE FOR WEALTH

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By: Arina Richard

Of recent, the mainstream media has been awash with reports of a gruesome wave of pagan impunity sweeping across the East African sub-region. Every country has had their unique cases, some of which are as peculiar as they are harrowing.

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