By Justin Snow on June 3, 2014 @JustinCSnow

The nation’s largest LGBT-rights organization urged President Barack Obama to take immediate and concrete steps to hold Uganda accountable for the enactment of an anti-LGBT law earlier this year.
In a June 2 letter to Obama, HRC President Chad Griffin wrote that to delay an “immediate demonstration of significant consequences” puts the lives of LGBT Ugandans at risk.
“President Museveni must understand that there will be continuing and long term political and economic consequences to state-driven homophobia,” Griffin wrote. “An immediate demonstration of significant consequences, moreover, will put other leaders who are considering similar bills on notice that enacting anti-LGBT laws will effect their country’s relationship with the United States. A further review that incorporates Nigeria, Russia, and Brunei – countries that recently passed heinous anti-LGBT laws – is also imperative to signal to the world that these consequences are not directed solely towards Africa.”
Earlier this year, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni signed the Anti-Homosexuality Act further enhancing penalties against homosexuality, prompting international condemnation and criticism from Obama himself. Violators of the law face a 14-year prison sentence for a second conviction, and up to life in prison for repeat offenses. Obama had encouraged Museveni not to sign the bill, and White House press secretary Jay Carney described to the day the bill was signed as a “sad day for Uganda.”
In March, the Obama administration confirmed a series of cuts in aid to Uganda in response to law. The announcement came one month after Secretary of State John Kerry said Museveni’s signing of the law had prompted an “internal review of our relationship with the Government of Uganda to ensure that all dimensions of our engagement, including assistance programs, uphold our anti-discrimination policies and principles and reflect our values.”
Despite those cuts, HRC believes more must be done and argues the Obama administration’s response to this law will set the precedent for how the U.S. responds to anti-LGBT legislation in other nations.
“The issues of governance, food security, humanitarian assistance, and the precedent that this review sets are intertwined and complicated,” Griffin wrote. “Nevertheless, more than three months since the enactment of this law, I respectfully ask that you direct the Administration’s interagency review to begin issuing immediate, concrete results that will illustrate the United States’s commitment to protecting human rights in Uganda.”
As noted by Griffin, a recent report published by Ugandan activists details an increase in violence against LGBT Ugandans as well as loses of property, homes and income.
“LGBT Ugandans are forced to once again live in the shadows,” Griffin wrote. “We must give brave LGBT Ugandans hope.”
In a presidential proclamation released by the White House last week declaring June LGBT Pride month, Obama stated that America’s commitment to advancing LGBT equality extends to other nations.
“In many places around the globe, LGBT people face persecution, arrest, or even state-sponsored execution. This is unacceptable,” Obama stated. “The United States calls on every nation to join us in defending the universal human rights of our LGBT brothers and sisters.”
UPDATE: In a statement to Metro Weekly, White House National Security Council Spokesperson Patrick Ventrell responded to the letter from HRC, stating that additional steps will be taken:
Uganda’s decision to enact the Anti-Homosexuality Act runs counter to universal human rights and to human dignity. In response to President Museveni’s decision to assent to the Anti-Homosexuality Act, the United States took immediate steps to demonstrate our support for the LGBT community in Uganda, deter other countries from enacting similar laws, and reinforce our commitment to the promotion and defense of human rights for all people – including LGBT individuals. Among other things we took steps to redirect funding away from program implementers whose actions do not reflect our values, to shift military and intelligence exercises to other locations, and to suspend certain near-term invitational travel for Ugandan military and police officials.
We are also mindful, as the letter indicates, of the wide range of issues encompassed by our relationship with Uganda–including our humanitarian support for the Ugandan people, our efforts to counter the murderous Lord’s Resistance Army, and our security interests in the region.
As we move forward, we will take additional steps to demonstrate our opposition to the Act and our support for LGBT persons in Uganda and around the world—recognizing that the struggle to end discrimination against LGBT persons is a global challenge, and one that is central to the United States commitment to promoting human rights.
By John Riley on March 12, 2026 @JRileyMW
Two men in Kenya have been sentenced to 15 years in prison for attacking and robbing two gay men -- a rare instance of accountability in a country where homosexuality remains criminalized.
The defendants -- referred to in court proceedings as "Abel Meli & Another" -- were sentenced on a charge of robbery with violence on March 3 at the Milimani Law Courts in Kenya's capital, Nairobi.
The attack occurred in April 2023, when the victims -- identified by the British newspaper The Guardian using the pseudonyms Eric Anyango and Joe Ochieng, both in their mid-20s -- arranged to meet a man with whom Ochieng had been communicating on Facebook. Shortly after arriving at the man's home, three other men appeared and began attacking them.
By John Riley on April 12, 2026 @JRileyMW
A Christian father who appeared on a court TV show sued his 18-year-old son for $6,000, claiming he was owed reimbursement after the teen failed to complete a summer conversion therapy program his parents had enrolled him in.
The dispute played out on a recently recirculated episode of Equal Justice with Judge Eboni K. Williams, which debuted in 2023. It’s unclear when the episode originally aired, but it was uploaded to YouTube on March 26, 2026.
As noted by LGBTQ Nation, courtroom television shows are not actual courts and don’t have to follow the same rules. Equal Justice bills itself as a "small claims court arbitration" show, meaning a neutral third party -- in this case, Williams -- hears both sides of a dispute and issues a decision that may be binding if the parties agree in advance to accept it. Arbitration is not the same as civil litigation.
By John Riley on March 16, 2026 @JRileyMW
Arizona Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs recently vetoed a bill to create a specialty license plate honoring the late conservative activist Charlie Kirk, with proceeds from its sale benefiting the anti-LGBTQ organization Turning Point USA, which he co-founded.
Kirk was shot and killed last year while speaking on a Utah college campus as part of Turning Point's "American Comeback Tour," during which he traveled to universities holding debate-style events with politically liberal students.
"Charlie Kirk's assassination is tragic and a horrifying act of violence," Hobbs wrote in her veto letter. "In America, we resolve our political differences at the ballot box. No matter who it targets, political violence puts us all in harm's way and damages our sacred democratic institutions."
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