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Appeal to World Bank: Cut funding to Uganda until it withdraws new anti-gay law

Appeal to World Bank: Cut funding to Uganda until it withdraws new anti-gay law

International rights advocates launch appeal in response to LGBTQ Ugandans’ request


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World Bank President Ajay Banga (Photo courtesy of AP)
World Bank President Ajay Banga (Photo courtesy of AP)

In response to LGBTQ activists in Uganda, international human rights organizations are urging the World Bank to halt loans to the government of Uganda until the nation’s new, cruel Anti-Homosexuality Law is withdrawn.

Both large and small organizations have joined the appeal to the World Bank — from large, well-funded Outright International to the small St. Paul’s Foundation for International Reconciliation, which sponsors this news site.

Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera (Photo courtesy of Twitter)
Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera (Photo courtesy of Twitter)

Explaining the focus on the World Bank, Ugandan human rights defender Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera stated:

“The World Bank should be a source of dignity, not danger. Queer people are going into hiding and fleeing Uganda to avoid the threat posed by the Ugandan government, much of which is financed by the World Bank.”

Shortly after the Anti-Homosexuality Law was signed, Ugandan human rights activists wrote to the World Bank, asking it to suspend all payments and new projects in Uganda pending a Constitutional Court decision on challenges seeking to overturn the law.

Some LGBTQ rights activists disagree with the tactic.

Scott Long, founder of the LGBT Rights Program at Human Rights Watch, said a halt to funding would be a “grotesque, callous policy error”. He tweeted:

“In 2014 the @WorldBank ‘punished’ Uganda for a draconian anti-LGBT bill–by suspending aid to end maternal mortality. It played into homophobes’ hands: a blow to human rights & to LGBT rights across Africa.  …

“You cannot tweet that you are ‘committed to HIV/AIDS survivors & their needs, issues, and stories’; then turn around and advocate cutting HIV funding for #Uganda. Even given Washington’s vast tolerance for hypocrisy, platitudes, and lying, this is a lie too far. @Global_Equality”

The Council on Global Equality tweeted:

“Last year, @PEPFAR [the huge U.S. anti-AIDS program] ’s Uganda funding included $16 million that went directly to the government. We don’t believe this should all be cut — ‘but it’s an important place to reassess government support’.” That quote is from Beirne Roose-Snyder, senior policy fellow at the council.

This is the Outright International announcement of its appeal to the World Bank:

Outright International Calls Upon the World Bank to Suspend Loans to the Ugandan Government:

See Also

Outright International supports the call of Ugandan LGBTQ advocates who have asked the World Bank to stop current and future loan payments to the Ugandan government in the wake of the adoption of Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality Act of 2023, a piece of legislation that seeks to eradicate LGBTQ people. World Bank financing supports government poverty alleviation programs, including health care, education, housing, jobs, and economic infrastructure projects. The new law undermines these programs by mandating discrimination against LGBTQ people in all sectors of Uganda’s economy.

Logo of Outright International
Logo of Outright International

Under the Anti-Homosexuality Act, LGBTQ people in Uganda risk exclusion, imprisonment, and execution simply by seeking services from projects financed by the World Bank. The law mandates that all people in Uganda “shall report the matter to police for appropriate action” if any person is reasonably suspected of engaging in the “offense of homosexuality” or “promoting” homosexuality and if any organization is suspected of “normalizing” homosexuality. This mandate applies to all people involved in World Bank projects. Any attempt by an LGBTQ person to access services or benefits of these projects carries the risk of prosecution and sentencing under the act. Penalties for offense of homosexuality range from twenty years to execution.

The law also precludes LGBTQ people from accessing the basic necessities of life. All landlords, including those in World Bank-funded housing programs, are required to evict LGBTQ tenants. Doctors, nurses, and teachers in government programs are prohibited from providing social support, affirming care, and information. LGBTQ people are barred from certain types of employment. Outright has described the law as rooted in genocidal ideology, as it attempts to eradicate LGBTQ people from existence.

“There is no way around it: World Bank staff are now required by law to be complicit in the persecution of queer Ugandans,” said Maria Sjödin, executive director of Outright International. “Worse, World Bank-financed programs will now contribute to poverty among LGBTQ Ugandans, not alleviate it, as the law excludes people from the benefits of development on the basis of their sexual orientation and gender identity.”

Jim Yong Kim, president of the World Bank (Photo via Wikimedia Commons)
Jim Yong Kim, former president of the World Bank (Photo via Wikimedia Commons)

The World Bank currently provides $US 5.5 Billion in multi-year financing to the Ugandan government, whose total annual expenditure budget is $US 13 Billion. World Bank policy dictates that financed projects must distribute benefits equally, without discrimination against vulnerable groups. Ugandan advocates have asked the World Bank to comply with its own policies by suspending loan payments. Outright International has called on the World Bank to prohibit its staff from reporting people to the police. The World Bank’s only public response thus far to the world’s worst anti-LGBTQ law has been a brief statement expressing concern.

The World Bank has been explicit about the importance of the inclusion of LGBTQ people to fight poverty in the past, when former World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim spoke out against discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, emphasizing “how crucial it is to fight prejudice and knock down barriers to education, jobs, social protection and good health faced by many people in the LGBTI community.” Also, in 2017, the World Bank suspended all visiting missions to Tanzania due to state-sponsored harassment of and discrimination against LGBTQ people.

“The World Bank should be a source of dignity, not danger,” said Ugandan human rights defender Kasha Nabagesera. “Queer people are going into hiding and fleeing Uganda to avoid the threat posed by the Ugandan government, much of which is financed by the World Bank.”

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