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CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) โ€” Conservative U.S. Christian groups are setting up fronts in Africa to fight for anti-gay and anti-abortion legislation to promote their convictions, a report by a Boston-based think tank said Tuesday.

It accuses evangelical stars such as Pat Robertson and Rick Warren as well as Catholic and Mormon groups of setting up institutions and campaigns in Africa that are โ€œfanning the flames of the culture wars over homosexuality and abortion by backing prominent African campaigners and political leaders.โ€

The report โ€” โ€œColonizing African Values: How the U.S. Christian Right is Transforming Sexual Politics in Africaโ€ โ€” was presented by the Political Research Associates of Boston, a think tank that describes itself as โ€œprogressiveโ€ and focusing on what it calls attacks on civil liberties by the political and Christian right.

Some of the Africans cited in the report as heading African organizations set up by the U.S. religious right maintain that they are just using funds from foreign friends who share similar beliefs.

Among them is Joseph Okia, nephew of President Yoweri Museveni in Uganda, where proposed legislation would invoke the death penalty for โ€œaggravated homosexuality.โ€

โ€œDefinitely there is a link between conservative Christians in America and conservative Christian leaders in Uganda,โ€ Okia confirmed to the reportโ€™s researchers. Okia spoke of โ€œa close intellectual and mentoring relationship.โ€

Several Africans and Americans named in the report could not immediately be reached for comment. A spokesman for Pastor Rick Warren said he was too busy to comment.

The reportโ€™s main author, the Rev. Kapya Kaoma, said that while such evangelical groups are in the minority in the United States, they are able to punch way above their weight in Africa, where many oppose homosexuality. Here, many believe the religious rightโ€™s contentions that gay men are โ€œrecruitingโ€ in schools, Kaoma said.

โ€œThose kind of lies, when presented in Africa, become factual, so we need to worry that they are misleading people with these lies,โ€ Kaoma, an Anglican priest from Zambia, said in a telephone interview from Boston.

And conservative groups have access to powerful politicians, including the presidents of many countries.

Kaomaโ€™s report identifies groups belonging to a loose network of right-wing charismatic Christians. They include Pat Robertsonโ€™s American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), the Catholic Churchโ€™s Human Life International (HLI) and the Mormon-led Family Watch International. All have launched or expanded offices in Africa over the past five years.

Robertsonโ€™s organization has spawned the Zimbabwe-based African Center for Law and Justice and the East African Center for Law and Justice in Kenya.

โ€œBy hiring locals as office staff, ACLJ and HLI in particular hide an American-based agenda behind African faces, giving the Christian Right room to attack gender justice and (the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual people) as a neocolonial enterprise imposed on Africans and obstructing meaningful critique of the U.S. rightโ€™s activities,โ€ the report said.

Anti-gay laws passed in Burundi in 2009, Malawi in 2010 and Nigeria in 2011.

Ugandaโ€™s so-called โ€œKill the Gaysโ€ law, which would levy the death penalty for โ€œaggravated homosexuality,โ€ was thought to have been defeated after Kaoma and Political Research Associates exposed the legislationโ€™s American instigators in 2009. But it was reintroduced in Ugandaโ€™s Parliament this February.

That was a year after the killing of David Kato, of Sexual Minorities Uganda, who was found bludgeoned to death in his Kampala home.

Amnesty International has reported an increasing intolerance in Africa that has resulted in โ€œharassment, discrimination, persecution, violence and murdersโ€ against homosexuals in Africa. The report said the new campaigns also have caused more oppression of women by restricting their reproductive freedoms.

The Christian groupsโ€™ efforts have found fertile ground among many homophobic Africans, but they have not been as successful in pushing anti-abortion legislation, the report said.

Illegal abortions are performed without hindrance across most of sub-Saharan Africa, and no efforts are made to prosecute those involved, the report found.

Efforts by the U.S. and EU governments and the United Nations to promote anti-discriminatory stances have backfired.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clintonโ€™s threatened last year to withhold aid from countries that persecute sexual minorities, but it was later followed by a reversal to say U.S. policy is to empower sexual minority groups with funding.

Previous Comments

All, with the accusations that the Cathy family of Chick Fil A are against effort to *stop* persecution of gays in Uganda — which I have not personally confirmed yet — take a look at the above AP article that we ran last week about the U.S. religious right’s efforts against gays in Africa.


Here’s the report: http://www.publiceye.org/Reports/Colonizing_African_Values/Colonizing_African_Values.html

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The Mississippi Free Press produced this story through the MFP Solutions Lab, supported by the Solutions Journalism Network. This series digs into Mississippiโ€™s systemic issues and sheds light on responses to them in other communities. Beyond just reporting on problems, these stories interrogate their causes and inspect potential solutions.

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