Kenya Could Follow Uganda as East African Nations Wage War on LGBT Rights

Kenya Could Follow Uganda as East African Nations Wage War on LGBT Rights


Mohamed Ali doesn’t believe gay Africans exist. He says homosexuality is a Western invention imposed on the continent. Openly gay Africans are liars seeking visas to the West or money from rights groups, he adds. Ali is a member of Kenya‘s parliament. He is desperate to follow neighbor Uganda by unleashing a sweeping legislative crackdown on LGBTQ people. Even if he happened to be sick in intensive care, he would ask to be dragged to parliament to approve it.

“I will ask them to take me to vote for that, to kick them out, kick LGBT people out of Kenya completely,” he said.

Weeks after Uganda enacted one of the most draconian anti-LGBT laws on Earth, Kenya could be poised to follow suit with a similarly formulated bill that punishes gay sex with prison or even death in some cases, according to a draft of the law and two lawmakers backing it in parliament.

Similar moves are also afoot in Tanzania and South Sudan, parliamentarians in those nations told Reuters, revealing for the first time a broad anti-LGBT legislative drive across East Africa. Some regional lawmakers frame the issue as an almost existential battle to save African values and sovereignty, which they say have been battered by Western pressure to capitulate on gay rights.

The draft of Kenya‘s Family Protection Bill, seen by Reuters, mirrors many aspects of the Ugandan law, which was signed by President Yoweri Museveni at the end of May to the dismay of the LGBT community, human rights campaigners and Western capitals.

Gay sex is punishable by at least 10 years in jail under the proposed Kenyan law, while “aggravated homosexuality”, which includes gay sex with a minor or disabled person or when a terminal disease is passed on, brings the death penalty.

“It is a hateful piece of legislation that will truly make the lives of queerKenyans unbearable if passed,” said Annette Atieno of the National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission campaign group.

Spokespeople for the Kenyan presidency and government didn’t respond to requests for comment about the proposed bill.

In South Sudan, parliamentary spokesperson John Agany told Reuters that an anti-LGBT law with the same content as the Ugandan legislation was being drafted and would be put to a vote “very soon”. He didn’t elaborate on the bill, and the Juba government didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Meanwhile, Tanzanian lawmaker Jacqueline Ngonyani said she planned to introduce a private motion in parliament later this year to clamp down on gay activity in an attempt to “control the ongoing moral decay”.

“If these (gay) people increase, this will be the end of generation,” she added. “This is the same as drugs do to our youth.”

Asked whether she had specific punishments in mind, Ngonyani said she would not share anything until she was advised by legal experts.

Tanzania’s minister of constitutional and legal affairs, Damas Ndumbaro, said there was little room to tighten existing colonial-era laws against homosexuality, though.

“Do they want 100 years in prison while we already have a life sentence?” he told Reuters. “Let us review why the problem is persisting,” he said, referring to gay activity. “The government is still collecting opinions on how to solve the problem.”

‘PROMOTING’ HOMOSEXUALITY: 5 YEARS

The Kenyan anti-gay bill is being vetted by a parliamentary committee, which can then refer it to the full chamber for a vote. Officials have given no indication of the possible timeline.

The LGBT community fears the worst, three rights groups told Reuters.

In a debate in parliament initiated by Ali in March about whether to ban speech or publications that promote same-sex relations, more than 20 lawmakers spoke out against LGBT rights and none in support. Several called for legislation to strengthen penalties for same-sex acts, including the deputy majority leader, who said gay sex could be punished by hanging.

President William Ruto, an evangelical Christian, has criticized a February supreme court decision allowing an LGBT rights group to register as a non-governmental organization. “We cannot travel the road of women marrying their fellow women and men marrying their fellow men,” he said at the time.

The proposed Kenyan law reflects a significant degree of agreement and coordination on anti-gay policies between lawmakers across the region, according to the draft of the bill as well as Reuters interviews with the Kenyan MPs and activists.

Several new crimes appear in both Uganda‘s law and the proposed Kenyan one, including the aggravated homosexuality offence, “promoting” homosexuality and allowing gay sex on your property, which affects landlords. The latter two carry prison terms of at least 10 and five years respectively, the draft shows.

The Kenyan bill’s author, lawmaker Peter Kaluma, said the push to pass similar legislation to Uganda‘s was in part motivated by solidarity with its smaller neighbour, which has faced Western criticism over its law and seen the United States impose visa restrictions on some officials.

“Across the continent we want to have these laws,” Kaluma added. “If they were to sanction Uganda, let them sanction the entirety of Africa.”

He said the proposed law was influenced by discussions at a conference organized by Ugandan lawmakers in March in the city of Entebbe where he said parliamentarians from several African nations discussed strengthening anti-LGBT laws.

The conference, about African family values and sovereignty, was attended by around 80 lawmakers from 14 countries, according to a communique issued afterwards. Uganda was best represented, contributing over half of the delegates, followed by South Sudan.

The delegates called for action on issues ranging from the sexual exploitation of children to pornography. They urged nations to ban “transgender medical interventions” and make foreign donors pledge that none of their funding would go to “abortion, comprehensive sexuality education and/or the LGBTQ agenda”.

A U.S. State Department spokesperson said Washington opposes any law that curtails a vulnerable group’s human rights and said governments should work to ensure all individuals can enjoy fundamental freedoms.

“The United States  advances efforts around the globe to protect LGBTQI+ persons from violence  and abuse, criminalization, discrimination, and stigma, and to empower local  LGBTQI+  movements and  persons,” the spokesperson said in response to questions about this story.

FEAR REIGNS AT NAIROBI PRIDE

The Kenyan bill would toughen up a colonial-era statute under which gay sex was already illegal, though the older, less detailed law was rarely enforced.

The proposed law would signal the death knell for Kenya‘s status as a place of relative refuge for gay people in East Africa as the only country in the region to host refugees fleeing persecution because they are LGBT.

The draft bill stipulates that no one should be granted asylum on grounds of persecution linked to sexual orientation.

Anticipation of the new legislation, and the anti-gay rhetoric in politics and the media from public figures such as Ali and Kaluma that has accompanied it, is already casting a chill over the LGBT community, according to organizers of the Pride event in Nairobi this month.

Stella Kachina, one of the organizers, said that unlike in previous years the location was not disclosed in advance out of fear that anti-gay activists would target the event. Instead, participants were picked up and brought to the venue.

Attendee Marylize Biubwa said the current climate was frightening for gay people. “Kenya as a country doesn’t feel like home anymore,” she said.

Both advocates and opponents of the Family Protection Bill say it has a good chance of becoming law, boosted by the enactment of the Ugandan law and well-organized and financed anti-LGBT political campaigners.

Lorna Dias, executive director of the Gay and Lesbian Coalition of Kenya, also cited last year’s election of Ruto.

“The mere fact that we have a religious-leaning president who has openly declared his stand … people have been emboldened by his religious proclamations,” Dias said.

Killer Mike’s Stance On Gun Control: ‘New Laws Affect Blacks Worst And First’


Because mass shootings have increased, Atlanta has decided to implement a curfew for children. Rapper and activist Killer Mike recently caught up with TMZ to discuss the curfew as well as newly proposed gun laws in his hometown of Atlanta. He voiced his concerns, saying the latter will end up hurting Black people, and insisted on other alternatives that could curb gun violence.

During the interview, Killer Mike said he came up during the era where Black boys were being killed in the 1980s; because of that, he is not opposed to a curfew.

While acknowledging the need of a solution to the mass shootings and illegal guns being bought, he is opposed to any new gun laws, saying that “new laws affect Blacks worst and first.”

Killer Mike thinks there are enough gun laws on the books and would prefer that Black people take courses like the Stop the Bleed and enlist in an organization such as the National African American Gun Association. He stressed the importance of becoming educated about firearms use and believes knowing the laws is more beneficial than trying to implement new ones, especially where Black people are concerned.

However, he also emphasized his belief in the Second Amendment (the right to bear arms). Before ending the discussion, the ATL native also stated he feels every Black family should have a revolver, a semiautomatic pistol, a shotgun, and a semiautomatic rifle, and know how to use them all.

His reasoning involves the founding fathers, who believed that citizens should be ready to fight against tyranny, and by having access to those weapons to do the job if necessary.

RELATED CONTENT: Enough Is Enough: President Biden Announces Executive Order Boosting Background Checks With Gun Sales

‘Shoplifting Though?’ Bed Bath & Beyond Under Fire For Racial Profiling Of Black Couple

‘Shoplifting Though?’ Bed Bath & Beyond Under Fire For Racial Profiling Of Black Couple


Before going bankrupt, Bed Bath & Beyond was a first stop for people looking to spruce up and bring comfort to their homes. But for for a Black couple in Toledo, Ohio, the experience was less than plush.

According to Newsweek, Lamar Richards and his partner, who’d recently bought a house, were shopping for a at the big-box retailer when they were approached by a store employee who proceeded to take more than $200 worth of items from their cart and store them behind the counter until after the pair had finished shopping. Police officers later revealed to Richards that they had been called to the store by staff who suspected the two had been shoplifting.

Richards shared his experience on Twitter with a photo of him and his partner in front of their home. “Imagine that. Purchasing your first home. Excited to begin building generational wealth,” he wrote. “And then you visit a @BedBathBeyond store and you’re accused of shoplifting because you ‘had too many high ticket items in your cart.’” Richards, an incoming Johns Hopkins University graduate and director of advocacy at the Coalition for Nonprofit Housing and Economic Development, was even more shocked to find himself profiled during both Juneteenth weekend and Pride Month as a Black gay man. “We had no idea the police were there because they were called for us,” Richards tweeted. “I have a Johns Hopkins T-shirt and my boyfriend has on a Michigan College of Pharmacy T-shirt. We literally just wanted to buy some stuff for our new house and THIS is the welcome we get to the area.”

In a statement, Bed Bath & Beyond rebuked the behavior of its staff. “We are deeply concerned about the reported incident and are actively looking into the matter, as we do with any incidents described that are inconsistent with our policies and procedures,” the statement read.

‘Batter Up’ Rosters Announced For Inaugural HBCU Swingman Classic Baseball Game


Fifty HBCU student-athletes have been selected to make up the rosters for the inaugural HBCU Swingman Classicbaseball game set for July 7 during MLB All-Star Week at T-Mobile Park.

The game will be presented by T-Mobile, powered by the MLB-MLBPA Youth Development Foundation, and air on MLB Network. The players for this game were chosen by a committee that includes Hall of Famer and MLB-MLBPA Youth Development Foundation Ambassador Ken Griffey Jr., as well as representatives from MLB, the MLBPA, and the baseball scouting community.

Tickets for the HBCU Swingman Classic presented by T-Mobile, which includes a post-game firework show at T-Mobile Park, are now on-sale at AllStarGame.com. Proceeds from each $10 ticket sale for GA seating will benefit the MLB-MLBPA Youth Development Foundation.

The teams for the HBCU Swingman Classic will be managed by former MLB managers Jerry Manuel and Bo Porter and their coaching staffs will include MLB Hall-of-Famer and Florida A&M Alum Andre “The Hawk” Dawson, two-time World Series Champion Manager Cito Gaston as well as former MLB players and HBCU alumni Rickie Weeks Jr., Marquis Grissom, Marvin Freeman, Vince Coleman, Lenny Webster, and Trenidad Hubbard.

Players selected for theHBCU Swingman Classic will represent 17 HBCU schools, including Alabama A&M University, Alabama State University, Alcorn State University, University of Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Bethune Cookman University, Coppin State University, Delaware State University, Florida A&M University, Grambling State University, Jackson State University, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Mississippi Valley State University, Norfolk State University, North Carolina A&T University, Prairie View A&M University, Southern University and Texas Southern University.

Team Manuel will include Mike Dorcean (CSU), Irvin Escobar (BCK), Manny Jackson (NSU), Keylon Mack (NSU), O’Neill Burgos (SU), Randy Flores (ASU), Kyle Walker (GSU), Jalen Niles (FAMU), Ty Hill (JSU), Daalen Adderley (TXSO), Ian Matos (ASU), Hylan Hall (BCK), Narvin Booker (MSVU), Khyle Radcliffe (SU) and Noble Lawrence (UAPB).

Team Porter will include Ty Hanchey (FAMU), Gustavo Sanchez (SU), Jamal George (ASU), Alexander Olivo (TXSO), Victor Figueroa (MSVU), Keanu-Jacobs Guishard, C.J. Castillo (TXSO), Tommy Easley (AAMU), Cameron Bufford (GSU), Ali LaPread (ASU), Jordan Hamberg (CSU), Jatavis Melton (JSU), Jaylen Armstrong (SU), Camden Jackson (NCAT) and Trevor Hatton (GSU)

Shannon Sharpe In A Hairy Predicament After Twitter Post That Flexed On Daughter’s Long Hair


Shannon Sharpe is facing heat after sharing a father-daughter post where he seemingly bragged about his daughter’s long mane of hair being “real.”

The former “Undisputed” host took to Twitter on Tuesday, June 20 to share two photos he took alongside his daughter for Father’s Day. While the photos were wholesome and highlighted how much the father and daughter look alike, it was the latter half of Sharpe’s caption that rubbed many the wrong way.

“This weekend was full of much-needed Daddy Daughter time ❤️. With all my accomplishments, being a Father is Top 2, and not the 2.🏆,” he tweeted.

“Yes my daughters hair is REAL 😂! Ya boi did a good job stop playing! #girldad.”

https://twitter.com/shannonsharpe/status/1671234847485079554?s=46&t=qmzb_I2N1DzN_GymACe90A

With Sharpe’s note about his daughter’s hair seemingly highlighting the age-old debate around colorism and Eurocentric beauty standards, many onlookers wasted no time questioning Sharpe’s motive in the comment about his daughter’s hair.

“What do you mean that you did a good job bc her hair is real???” one user asked.

“Who gives a fuck if her hair is real?” wrote someone else.

Another user asked the former NFL player, “why bring up the hair again? i doubt anyone was reallying wondering if it was or not.”

Sharpe has three children, two daughters named Kayla and Kaley, both age 30, and a son named Kiari, Sports Lulu reports. He has never married and welcomed his children with different women during separate relationships.

The “Club Shay Shay” host has yet to respond to the backlash he’s receiving for commenting on his daughter’s hair. But he did seemingly use the post as a way to promote the merch for his podcast.

He and his daughter were both sporting “Club Shay Shay” hoodies that many of his followers expressed interest in purchasing. Maybe Sharpe made the “real hair” reference to garner more attention around his promotional post.

RELATED CONTENT: Shannon Sharpe Makes Tearful Exit During His Last On-Air Appearance For ‘Undisputed’

Woody McClain Signs Publishing Deal with Black-Owned Godhood Comics for ‘The Brotherhood’ Comic Series


Woody McClain has gained some “Power” after signing a publishing deal with Godhood Comics, a Black-owned comic book publisher, for his newly created comic book series, The Brotherhood, with DC Comics Milestone Initiative breakout writer Dorado Quick.

The Power Book II: Ghost actor said, “I’m excited to work with Godhood Comics and bring The Brotherhood to life.” “It’s an honor to work on a project that showcases the strength and resilience of the Black community. I can’t wait for readers to see what we have in store,” he said in a statement. 

The upcoming project will be edited by Nicholas Maye, the producer of the Oscar-winning short film Two Distant Strangers. He will do this alongside Godhood Comics founder, publisher, and writer Tyler F. Martin and the artwork is slated to be done by llustrabox Studio.

The storyline for the comic book series is of a young man who accidentally finds himself involved in a secret organization of Black men. These men have been protecting and helping Black Americans for generations. According to a statement, it has been widely described as The Kingsman meets James Bond and is a spy thriller full of action. 

Godhood Comics Founder Tyler F. Martin said, “We are thrilled to partner with Woody McClain on The Brotherhood. Given his star power, he could have taken this idea to any major comic publication, but his passion for storytelling and commitment to uplifting Black voices once again proves his dedication to the betterment of Black creatives. We can’t wait to share this series with the world.”

Although no date has been revealed, The Brotherhood is scheduled to be released by the end of 2023. 

McClain, who played “King of Stage” Bobby Brown in the BET docuseries “The New Edition Story” and “The Bobby Brown Story,” is currently starring as the volatile Cane Tejada in the Starz network series Power Book II: Ghost. He is also a proud HBCU alumnus of Florida Agricultural & Mechanical University (FAMU).

RELATED CONTENT: Comics Feature U.S. Supreme Court’s Newest Women Appointees

Mathew Knowles Collaborates with Dr. Jacqueline King, Rishi Sood, and Cathleen Trigg-Jones to Launch Black Women Empowered Business Network

Mathew Knowles Collaborates with Dr. Jacqueline King, Rishi Sood, and Cathleen Trigg-Jones to Launch Black Women Empowered Business Network


Black Women Empowered, a global platform inspiring millions of women of color, proudly announces the launch of the Black Women Empowered Business Network. This groundbreaking platform unites leading business, inspirational, and motivational leaders, sharing their roadmap to success!

Established in 2012 by visionary Dr. Jacqueline King, Black Women Empowered originated on Facebook, gathering African-American women who shared common values. Over the past decade, the platform has rapidly expanded, attracting an engaged community of over 3 million primarily Black female followers, with an annual reach across social media platforms exceeding 100 million impressions.

The Black Women Empowered Business Network is a membership-based platform that provides an enriching space for learning, networking, and daily inspiration, fostering personal and professional growth. Boasting a roster of accomplished experts, the network offers insights in wealth creation, entrepreneurship, marketing and business development, real estate investment, mindset, and more. New content is continually added to facilitate members’ learning.

Dr. Jacqueline King shared her vision, “I wanted to create a positive and empowering space on the internet for my Black and Brown sisters. Black Women Empowered dedicates its social media to positivity and empowerment. We are thrilled about this next business-focused step dedicated to professional growth.”

Leading the charge alongside Dr. Jacqueline King, the network is also headed by Mathew Knowles of Music World Entertainment—iconic business and music executive, who’s generated over $5 billionacross multiple industries, and the brand architect of acts like Destiny’s Child, Beyoncé, and Solange. Also at the helm is Cathleen Trigg-Jones, an Emmy-award-winning journalist and actress, and founder of media empire iWomanTV, along with Rishi Sood, a marketing consultant whose work has been featured by major media outlets.

To celebrate the launch, Black Women Empowered Business Network is available for a limited time to try out for only $7.

Social Media Makes A Mockery Of Titanic Submersible Being Lost At Sea

Social Media Makes A Mockery Of Titanic Submersible Being Lost At Sea


The Titan submersible passengers who spent days presumably lost under the sea have received an outcry of concern and support from many. But the same can’t be said for most social media users who have seemingly made a mockery out of the underwater tragedy.

On Thursday, June 22, the five passengers aboard the submersible that went missing while attempting to explore the Titanic wreckage in the Atlantic Ocean were presumed dead by the expedition company, TMZ reports. OceanGate Inc. released a statement saying those aboard the Titan vessel “have sadly been lost.”

The passengers on the 21-foot sub were British businessman Hamish Harding; Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood and his teenage son, Suleman Dawood; French explorer Paul-Henri Nargeolet and Stockton Rush, the CEO of OceanGate Inc.

“These men true explorers who shared a distinct spirit of adventure, and a deep passion for exploring and protecting the world’s oceans,” OceanGate said in a statement about its now-deceased CEO and the other four passengers.

The statement came after officials located a debris field that they believe indicates the vessel imploded while en route to the Titanic wreckage. However, even before the deaths were confirmed, social media was already busy responding to made-up scenarios that seemingly made light of the tragic incident.

One Twitter user kicked off the series of insensitive tweets among Black Twitter users by asking what they would do if aboard the submarine in the event it got saved.

https://twitter.com/RobIsRandomAF_6/status/1671265823468695553

Many responded with comical memes, video clips, and quotes that showed just how desensitized we have become in today’s social media-driven era.

https://twitter.com/CJOHSOA1/status/1671324877461020673?s=20

https://twitter.com/Dro2H/status/1671724819476537344?s=20

https://twitter.com/d_1andonly_/status/1671308217274494976?s=46&t=qmzb_I2N1DzN_GymACe90A

https://twitter.com/jellybean_bryan/status/1671345251485913089?s=46&t=qmzb_I2N1DzN_GymACe90A

There were others who made sarcastic remarks about the irony of the passengers in the Titanic subversive and those who died on the actual Titanic back in 1912.

“They went down there to see the Titanic and ended up creating the sequel,” one Twitter user wrote along with a video of Soulja Boy laughing.

Another Twitter went more in depth with their shady response to the passengers being presumed dead after days lost underwater.

“Dying in an ocean as deep as your pockets…in a vessel as tiny as the shanty houses you turned your noses up at….In a darkness as expansive as your ego…going to see the final resting place of the souls whom you disturbed with your curiosity, but they still eagerly welcomed you,” they wrote.

One user sent out a tweet the week prior asking a general question about the “greatest comeback of all time.” But another Twitter user used the tweet as an opportunity to make fun of the submersible passengers saying that the greatest comeback would be, “The Titanic claiming lives 111 years after people thought it was done.”

As morbid and disturbing as many of the social media responses have been, and continue to be, it highlights an even bigger issue around how desensitized society has become in the wake of a global pandemic, two recessions, inflation, controversial political plights and the list goes on. After making it through 2020, it looks like social media doesn’t even take death seriously.

Georgia Teacher To Receive $250K House Under New Public Service Housing Program

Georgia Teacher To Receive $250K House Under New Public Service Housing Program


Social-emotional learning teacher Methany Thornton will be the first to receive housing from Marietta’s new Public Service Housing Program.

The teacher shared how she relied on her faith despite the rising cost of living. Thornton told Fox 5, “I’ve been praying, and I was like, this just sounds like it’s for my family, and I’m going to trust God, and I’m going to apply.”

Thornton is even helping with construction. The program requires future residents to contribute 200 hours of building. According to Fox 5, the teacher said, “Hammering in that first nail, it was unreal. I was shaking that whole time.”

Her disabled husband is contributing to building their home alongside a team from Habitat for Humanity. Thornton said, “My husband used to build before he had a stroke and became disabled, he’s been getting to help, and he’s in his element.” Felicia Alingu from Habitat for Humanity told Fox 5 earlier this year, “They [future residents] have to be out there. They’re hammering the nails in the home. They’re putting in the insulation, the siding, laying sod, they’re participating in all aspects of the construction of their home.”

Marietta’s Community Development Manager Kelsey Thomson-White, told Fox 5 in January 2023, “We will be building six new houses that are exclusively available to public service workers. We’re donating $500,000 directly to Habitat [Habitat for Humanity], and we’ve donated the lots to them as well.”

A total of six homes will be built by the end of 2024. Marietta City Schools said in a statement the homes will be zero-interest. The prices of homes will be at most $250,000, and funds for the one- and two-story homes will come from the American Rescue Plan. There will also be three bedrooms and two bathrooms homes available.

Thornton is the only person who works in her home. She lives with her husband, daughter, and two grandsons.

Black Tech Talent Is Often Discriminated Against Long Before Interview Process

Black Tech Talent Is Often Discriminated Against Long Before Interview Process


According to recent findings, Black people and women are excluded from tech job interviews.

In 2022, 38% of tech job opportunities sent invitations for interviews to men only, according to a study by Hired. Moreover, TechTarget reported that 12% of jobs sent invitations to white people only.

The obvious bias in the low number of invitations sent to Black and women candidates is reflected in the small population of each group in the tech industry. In 2021, Black people made up just 7.4% of tech employees, and Black women accounted for 1.7%, CNBC reported. Although diversity in the tech industry still seems discouraging, some progress has been made. In 2018, interview figures were even worse, with 45% of tech job interview invitations being sent to men only and 26% to whites, according to TechTarget.

Josh Brenner, CEO of Hired, said, “There has been a more dedicated focus between 2018 and now toward including a more representative set across races.” However, he also noted that “representation still remains an issue for women and nonwhite individuals,” TechTarget reported.

If a Black person or woman breaks through all obstacles and lands a tech job, there is still a difference in pay. According to the Hired study, Black men make $0.93 for every $1 a White man makes, and Black women make $0.90.

BLACK ENTERPRISE previously reported how Black women have dealt with underrepresentation in tech. The co-founders of Black Women Talk Tech told Built In in an email last year, “It is our mission to close the gap between Black women and their peers who are in the same workspace, yet do not have equal playing field in terms of wages earned and received.”

Some organizations are trying to diversify the tech industry. In June 2023, BE reported that the Indianapolis African American Quality of Life Initiative (IAAQLI) committed to supporting Blacks in tech with $300,000 in grants.

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