Tag Archives: uganda

The American Architects of Uganda’s Anti-Gay Bill

Vanguard correspondent Mariana van Zeller travels to Uganda to trace the influence of American evangelical leaders on a proposed law that could make being gay punishable by death. The episode “Missionaries of Hate” premieres on Wednesday, May 26 at 10/9c. Vanguard, airing weekly on Current TV Wednesdays at 10/9c, is a no-limits documentary series whose award-winning correspondents put themselves in extraordinary situations to immerse viewers in global issues that have a large social significance. Unlike sound-bite driven reporting, the show's correspondents, Adam Yamaguchi, Kaj Larsen, Christof Putzel and Mariana van Zeller, serve as trusted guides who take viewers on in-depth real life adventures in pursuit of some of the world's most important stories. added by: MarianaVanZeller

Laura Ling, Euna Lee and the New Season of Vanguard

Last year, the Vanguard team was shaken when two of our colleagues and friends, Laura Ling and Euna Lee, were held against their will in North Korea for over four months. On May 19, their story will finally be told. The Vanguard team has continued to chase important stories, and in the new season we'll take you across the globe, investigating issues and telling stories in ways that no one else is telling them. We'll have exclusive sneak peeks online in the coming weeks. Then tune in to Current TV on Wednesday, May 19 for “Captive in North Korea.” Read the press release about our new season: http://current.com/s/news.htm Watch a sneak peek in which correspondent Mariana van Zeller investigates the rising influence of American evangelical groups on anti-gay laws and attitudes in Uganda: http://current.com/1h3ig4c added by: Adam_Yamaguchi

Banana Gin Has Killed 80 People in Uganda

After drinking an illegal home-made banana gin laced with methanol has killed about 80 people in Uganda. Patrick Tusiime said that many people had died because relatives denied that victims were drinking the gin, known waragi. Deaths occurred over the past three weeks in the south-western Kabale district. Authorities were conducting a house-to-house search for the gin. Waragi is a drink across Uganda; they use this as an alternative alcohol because most of them cannot afford to buy an industrialized one. Almost 120 jerry cans of waragi were seized. All alcohol found were confiscated but people were stubborn and have found ingenious ways to hide it. Affected individuals became blind and suffered liver and kidney failure before dying. Banana Gin Has Killed 80 People in Uganda is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

What 60 Minutes Missed in Uganda AIDS Story

This past weekend, 60 Minutes aired a story about the $15 billion anti-AIDS initiative known as PEPFAR, the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief, which was launched by President Bush in 2003. For the story, correspondent Bob Simon traveled to Uganda, a country that has lost more than a million lives to AIDS and has since benefited greatly from PEPFAR. But I noticed one glaring omission in the piece. When Simon interviewed Pastor Martin Ssempa, one of Uganda’s most well-known Christian ministers, he failed to mention Ssempa’s role in the country’s controversial anti-gay bill. It’s true that Ssempa has been one of Uganda’s leading HIV activists and that over the years his preaching of an abstinence-only approach has made him a darling of many US evangelicals. But more recently, Ssempa has become the Pied Piper of Uganda’s anti-gay campaign, leading rallies and protests to push the legislation through. We're in the process of editing the piece we shot on Uganda's anti-gay bill for the upcoming season of Vanguard. And where the two stories intersect is over the question of what effect anti-gay legislation might have on the fight against HIV/AIDS in Uganda. Many health care professionals we spoke to worry that the bill could have a very negative impact on whatever strides the country has made to combat HIV/AIDS. We’ll be exploring this question and more in the upcoming documentary. Follow the Vanguard team on Twitter. Also on the Vanguard blog: + Tutu: In Africa, Human Rights Moving “Backwards” + Ugandans Rally In Support Of Anti-Gay Legislation + Wrapping Up in Uganda + Uganda in Pictures added by: MarianaVanZeller

Tutu: In Africa, Human Rights Moving "Backward"

When we were in Uganda we often heard the refrain that it is “un-African” to be gay, and that homosexuality was an import from a Western world that had broken its covenant with God. These are the central arguments that religious and political leaders in Uganda are using to push through legislation that would make homosexuality illegal — presumably more illegal than it is under the long-existing legislation that already forbids it. But in Friday’s Washington Post, one of Africa’s leading religious leaders, Bishop Desmond Tutu, takes on both questions and what he says is “a wave of hate is spreading across my beloved continent.” “Gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people are part of so many families. They are part of the human family. They are part of God's family. And of course they are part of the African family.” There are many, including members of Tutu’s own denomination who we met in Uganda, who would take issue with him. But while arguing that it is un-Christian to persecute gays in his op-ed, Tutu raises an important point: Uganda is far from the only African country where it is dangerous to be openly gay or for that matter, where homosexuality is illegal. In fact, 40 of the 53 nations in Africa have laws on the books making homosexuality illegal. Tutu's home country of South Africa is the only one to allow any form of same-sex marriage. So while much talk has centered on the proposed “Anti-Homosexuality Bill” in Uganda, the entire continent of Africa is engrossed in the debate. And, as we see in examples like the Prop 8 controversy in my adopted home state of California, so are we. Read Tutu's full op-ed here, and learn more about the new gay rights battle ground in this piece from Foreign Policy. Follow my travels on Twitter and the full Vanguard team here. added by: MarianaVanZeller

Vanguard Update from Mariana: Wrapping up in Uganda

A few more photos from our last days in Uganda: Three mizungos in Uganda: @marianavz, @darren_foster and @arneuganda enjoy our safari van. Just noticed license plate. Did these guys drive like this all the way from Dubai to Kampala? A stork over Ugandan Parliament looking for a dead bill to eat. Final Uganda tape count=52. Follow Vanguard via our Twitter list. added by: MarianaVanZeller

Vanguard Update from Mariana: Uganda in pictures

Man on the street interviews in Kampala A few kids playing football here in Kampala Love the old Chinese bikes in Uganda. (Women aren't supposed to ride solo as it will take virginity.) Birds in Uganda are the size of a 6th grade bully. And they'll steal your lunch too. + Read more about Mariana's trip to Uganda and the anti-gay legislation currently being debated there. Follow Vanguard's Mariana van Zeller (@MarianaVZ), Darren Foster@fineyoungman) and Alex Simmons (@a_simmons) at Current's Twitter list. added by: MarianaVanZeller

Ugandans rally in support of anti-gay legislation

We’re here in Uganda tracking a story for the upcoming season of Vanguard.

John Edwards Tormented Man-Servant with Sex Tape, Hated ‘Fat Rednecks,’ Wanted Abortion: A Guide to the New Rumors

Someone finally read John Edwards aide Andrew Young ‘s forthcoming tell-all, putting a cherry on top of months of crazy Edwards rumors. He’s a wellspring of scandal—but is it all John’s fault

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John Edwards Tormented Man-Servant with Sex Tape, Hated ‘Fat Rednecks,’ Wanted Abortion: A Guide to the New Rumors

Huge in Africa: The American Evangelicals Goading Uganda to Kill Gays

Politicians in Uganda have been discussing the death penalty for gay people in their country. They have been emboldened by three American evangelicals who went to Africa to spout their hate. Let’s meet these men

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Huge in Africa: The American Evangelicals Goading Uganda to Kill Gays