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Story Updated : January 27, 2011 07:05:00 PM

Ugandan Gay Activist Murdered


DavidKatox390 (Screengrab) | Advocate.com

David Kato, a prominent Ugandan gay rights activist in threatened in October with hanging on the front page of a Kampala newspaper, was found brutally beaten to death Wednesday at his home.

Kato was the advocacy officer for Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG), which confirmed his murder in a news release. He was one of the plaintiffs who won a case against the Rolling Stone newspaper earlier this month (despite a shared title, the Uganda publication has no affiliation with the American magazine).

“David has been receiving death threats since his face was put on the front page of Rolling Stone Magazine, which called for his death and the death of all homosexuals,” said SMUG. “David’s death comes directly after the Supreme Court of Uganda ruled that people must stop inciting violence against homosexuals and must respect the right to privacy and human dignity.”

Mark Bromley of the Council for Global Equality said concerns remain for the safety of the other litigants in the case, who sued the newspaper after it posted "100 Pictures of Uganda's Top Homos," accompanied by the words "Hang Them."

"Our mandate and focus is to make sure that the U.S. government, our State Department, our embassy, and our leaders in Congress to understand and respond to this human rights tragedy," Bromley said.

According to Bromley, State Department officials have been watching the case closely. "Clearly it's a high priority for them," Bromley said.   

The Guardianreports that Kato was bludgeoned to death at his home in the town of Mukono in the afternoon. Witnesses saw a man fleeing the scene in a car.

SMUG called for the police and government to investigate the murder seriously and for religious leaders, politicians, and media to stop demonizing LGBT people. David Bahati, a member of parliament with close connections to American evangelicals, continues to push for a bill that would impose the death penalty on gay people in some circumstances.

Val Kalende, the board chair at Freedom and Roam Uganda, said in the news release,“David’s death is a result of the hatred planted in Uganda by U.S Evangelicals in 2009. The Ugandan Government and the so-called U.S Evangelicals must take responsibility for David’s blood!”

SMUG executive director Frank Mugisha said, “No form of intimidation will stop our cause. The death of David will only be honored when the struggle for justice and equality is won. David is gone and many of us will follow, but the struggle will be won. David wanted to see a Uganda where all people will be treated equally despite their sexual orientation.”

Burial arrangements for Kato are under way for Friday afternoon at his ancestral home in Namataba, Mukono District.

The BBC offers an obituary. Kato was a primary school teacher turned activist who proudly claimed the label of the first out gay Ugandan.

Read Jeff Sharlet's October cover story for The Advocate on the deadly consequences of antigay rhetoric in Uganda.

Update:

U.K. human rights activist Peter Tatchell released the following statement on Kato's murder: 

"David will live on in our memories. He will also live on through the rights and equalities that LGBTI Ugandans will win eventually thanks to his many years of tireless groundwork and campaigning. I express my admiration and appreciation to all the members of SMUG who are battling for LGBTI freedom in conditions of great adversity and danger. Their courage and tenacity is awesome.

"This savage killing will, I hope, finally prompt Uganda's political, religious and media leaders to cease their homophobic witch-hunts. Their hatred helps create the bigoted atmosphere that leads to queer-bashing violence."

The U.S. embassy in Kampala has also issued a statement on Kato's death:

"The U.S. extends its sympathies to David's family, friends and human rights colleagues. David's courageous devotion to promoting the universal human rights of members of Uganda's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community improved the lives of minority populations in Uganda and throughout Africa, and his selfless dedication to defending human rights and speaking out against injustice served as inspiration to human rights defenders around the world."

The White House issued this statement from President Obama:

"I am deeply saddened to learn of the murder of David Kato. In Uganda, David showed tremendous courage in speaking out against hate. He was a powerful advocate for fairness and freedom. The United States mourns his murder, and we recommit ourselves to David’s work.

"At home and around the world, LGBT persons continue to be subjected to unconscionable bullying, discrimination, and hate. In the weeks preceding David Kato’s murder in Uganda, five members of the LGBT community in Honduras were also murdered. It is essential that the Governments of Uganda and Honduras investigate these killings and hold the perpetrators accountable.

"LGBT rights are not special rights; they are human rights. My Administration will continue to strongly support human rights and assistance work on behalf of LGBT persons abroad. We do this because we recognize the threat faced by leaders like David Kato, and we share their commitment to advancing freedom, fairness, and equality for all."

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Kathleen
    Date posted: 1/29/2011 11:44:41 AM
    Hometown: O.C

    Comment:

    Hate is Hate no matter how you put it. This is the year 2011 we have wars, child molesters everywhere, goverment is stick it to everybody. This is not about relegion it's just about HATE. And the world is infected.

  • Name: John Jones
    Date posted: 1/27/2011 10:56:35 PM
    Hometown: Baltimore Maryland

    Comment:

    Goodbye David Kato Though I never knew you at all You had the grace to hold yourself While those around you sucked They crawled out of the bathhouses And they whispered into your brain They set you on the treadmill And they made you change your name And it seems to me you lived your life Like a gay in the wind Never knowing who to cling to When aids set in And I would have liked to have known you But I was just a kid Your candle has now burned out long before Your legend ever did

  • Name: Bloodhound
    Date posted: 1/27/2011 8:44:22 PM
    Hometown: USA

    Comment:

    @Mark: The moderate Christians are the ones who snivel and say, "Oh! Isn't that just awful," and then stick their heads back in the sand so that nothing ever changes. There are amazing parallels between the public appearance of the outspokenly homophobic American religious right from 1980 to the present and their subsequent complete takeover of the Republican Party and the rise of the outspokenly anti-Semitic Nazi Party in Germany during the 1930's and their takeover of the German government. Continue to say nothing against religion and the hatreds that it teaches and things can and will only get worse. Religion is protected in this country by the First Amendment, but so is free speech against it. Stick your head in the sand and continue tolerating this sort of thing and you may be safe for the moment . . . until one dark night they come for you too.

  • Name: Grand
    Date posted: 1/27/2011 6:44:42 PM
    Hometown: Oakland

    Comment:

    Religion SUCKS!

  • Name: Ray
    Date posted: 1/27/2011 3:40:41 PM
    Hometown: Jackson, MS

    Comment:

    Members of the US Congress were part of the team of christian terrorists that traveled to Uganda to start this genocide. They must be held accountable for this death even if we have to seek justice through the UN. The US government will never prosecute these criminals so international justice is our only hope.

  • Name: concerned citizen
    Date posted: 1/27/2011 2:49:49 PM
    Hometown: earth

    Comment:

    So sad and senseless. Mr. Kato's courage in the face of almost certain death was inspirational. What can we outsiders do to help the Ugandan LGBT community? Does anyone have any bright ideas?

  • Name: Mark
    Date posted: 1/27/2011 1:39:47 PM
    Hometown: Sacramento

    Comment:

    @Religion Infects. Amen. However, whenever a radical Muslim says or does something radical, the Christians keep asking where the moderate Muslims are (implying there are none). I am wondering where the moderate Christians are, knowing that there are fewer all the time.

  • Name: Sean Robertson
    Date posted: 1/27/2011 1:39:33 PM
    Hometown: Washington, DC

    Comment:

    The Rolling Stone mentioned in this article (and the various others about Uganda) is a local Ugandan publication and is not in any way related to the U. S. magazine of the same name.

  • Name: Kath
    Date posted: 1/27/2011 12:58:34 PM
    Hometown: Akron OH

    Comment:

    So I looked at the Rolling Stone web site No mention no remorse I am sory this man di the Rolling stone interview where he e=wa outed to locals Hmmm May his soul rest in peace!!!

  • Name: Bloodhound
    Date posted: 1/27/2011 12:55:29 PM
    Hometown: USA

    Comment:

    @Religion infects: I couldn't agree with you more. It seems these days that America has very little left to export beyond religious hatred and military weapons, the only economy in the world dependant on God and Christmas. The rational world is leaving us behind in the dust because of our insane religions. If we are ever going to solve our nation's problems, we need to get those God monkeys off our backs and start thinking rationally. As long as we as individuals put up with religion, this sort of thing is going to keep happening. We need to grow up as a people and come home to reality. Please, please, people, don't be a part of the problem. Be a part of the solution.



 
 
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