Sunday, August 18, 2024

Pope Francis meets LGBTQ activist: Discrimination is a sin

Pope Francis has once again condemned discrimination and violence against LGBTQ people. 

At a meeting with Ugandan LGBTQ activist Clare Byarugaba, the head of the Church said that "discrimination against LGBTQ people" is a "sin", the activist herself announced on the X platform (formerly Twitter) on Wednesday.

It was an honour for her to meet the pontiff, Byarugaba continued. "I informed him about the devastating effects of the two anti-LGBTQ laws that were passed in Uganda within a decade and the associated human rights violations." 

In response, the Pope repeated that discrimination is "a sin" and that "violence against LGBTQ communities" is unacceptable.

HTML-Elemente (z.B. Videos) sind ausgeblendet. Zum Einblenden der Elemente aktivieren Sie hier die entsprechenden Cookies.

Byarugaba is an activist in the civil rights group "Chapter Four". Her tweet referred to the country's anti-homosexuality law from 2023. 

Although homosexuality was already a criminal offence in Uganda, the new law tightened the penalties. 

Thus, the anti-LGBTQ law provides for prison sentences for homosexual acts. In some cases, such as "aggravated forms of homosexuality", there is even a threat of the death penalty

Among other things, the law also targets people who merely "promote" homosexuality, which according to a report by New Ways Ministry", this not only severely impairs work for LGBTQ rights, but also HIV/AIDS education. 

Following the enactment of the law, the Ugandan bishops considered in 2023 homosexuality as an "evil", they criticised the penalties.