Gay death

Uganda's anti-LGBT laws: Bloke faces death penalty for 'aggravated homosexuality'

AFP

A man in Uganda faces the death penalty after creature charged with "aggravated homosexuality".

His lawyer told Reuters the 20-year-old was the first to be prosecuted for the offence under tough fresh anti-LGBTQ legislation signed into law in May.

According to the charge sheet, he is accused of unlawful sexual intercourse with a 41-year-old man, although no further details were given.

"Aggravated homosexuality" can involve sex with children or vulnerable people.

It can also be deemed aggravated if someone is forced to hold same-sex relations, contracts a life-long infection including HIV or in cases of serial offenders.

The East African nation has among the harshest anti-LGBTQ laws in the world, and anyone convicted of engaging in lesbian acts faces experience imprisonment.

The legislation has drawn widespread criticism outside the country and prompted the World Bank to halt loans to Uganda earlier this month.

Several people have been arrested this month for allegedly engaging in same-sex activity.

The human charged with aggravated homo

A Jury May Have Sentenced a Man to Death Because He Is Gay. It’s Moment for a Federal Court to Notice His Bias Claim.

Back to News & Commentary

Ria Tabacco Mar,
Director, Women’s Rights Project

August 6, 2018

UPDATE: On Monday, Nov 4, Charles Rhines was executed. The Supreme Court refused, on three separate occasions, to arrange a court to evaluate new evidence of anti-gay bias in the jury room.

Last week, civil rights groups, including the ACLU and Lambda Legal, urged the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals to accept the case of Charles Rhines, a lgbtq+ man in South Dakota whose sexual orientation may possess played a role in his death sentence in 1993.

In a associated appeal, the Eighth Circuit denied relief on many of Mr. Rhines’s claims the day after the friend-of-the-court filing. But the federal appeals court didn’t address whether Mr. Rhines will be allowed to show evidence of anti-gay bias, as the groups had asked in their friend-of-the-court brief. The Eighth Circuit can still take the case, and it should. Here’s why.

As I noted in June, when the Supreme Court declined to review Mr. Rhines’s death sentence:

Some of the jurors who imposed the

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Criminalisation:

  • Criminalises LGBT people
  • Criminalises sexual activity between males
  • Criminalises sexual activity between females
  • Imposes the death penalty

Maximum punishment:

Death penalty

More info

Criminalisation:

  • Criminalises LGBT people
  • Criminalises sexual activity between males

Maximum punishment:

Life imprisonment

More info

Criminalisation:

  • Criminalises LGBT people
  • Criminalises sexual exercise between males
  • Criminalises sexual outing between females
  • Criminalises the gender expression of trans people
  • Imposes the death penalty

Maximum punishment:

Death by stoning

More info

Criminalisation:

  • Criminalises LGBT people
  • Criminalises sexual activity between males
  • Criminalises sexual activity between females
  • Criminalises the gender statement of trans people
  • Maintains discriminatory age of consent

Maximum punishment:

Eight years imprisonment and 100 lashes

More info

Criminalisation:

  • Criminalises LGBT people
  • Criminalises sexual activity between males
  • Criminalises sexual activity between f

    Which countries impose the death penalty on gay people?

    Around the earth, queer people continue to confront discrimination, violence, harassment and social stigma. While social movements own marked progress towards acceptance in many countries, in others homosexuality continues to be outlawed and penalised, sometimes with death.

    According to Statistica Research Department, as of 2024, homosexuality is criminalised in 64 countries globally, with most of these nations situated in the Middle East, Africa and Asia. In 12 of these countries, the death penalty is either enforced or remains a possibility for private, consensual homosexual sexual activity.

    In many cases, the laws only apply to sexual relations between two men, but 38 countries have amendments that include those between women in their definitions.

    These penalisations represent abuses of human rights, especially the rights to freedom of expression, the right to develop one's have personality and the right to life. 

    Which countries enforce the death penalty for homosexuality?

    Saudi Arabia

    The Wahabbi interpretation of Sharia law in Saudi Arabia maintains that acts of homosexuality should be disciplined in the sa