SA urged not to deport Ugandan gay rights activist

ugandan protestersJOHANNESBURG. – Rights groups urged South Africa’s government yesterday to urgently halt the deportation of a Ugandan doctor and gay rights activist over fears that he will be in danger if sent home.
Paul Semugoma, a medical doctor who has lobbied against Kampala’s tough pending anti-homosexuality legislation, was detained in South Africa on Monday by immigration officials.

He was detained at OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg while returning from a trip to Zimbabwe on Monday.

Lawyers fighting for his release say they won a court injunction to prevent his deportation back to Uganda yesterday, but that authorities had ignored the order and tried to usher him on to a flight.

Immigration officials denied the claim and said they had appealed the injunction.

“We’ve been refused contact with him so we don’t know how he is physically,” Ayanda Khumalo, a lawyer acting for Semugoma, told AFP.

“But from speaking to him over the phone, he’s not well at all, he’s a bit distraught and he’s losing hope I guess at this stage.”

Semugoma telephoned his lawyers on yesterday afternoon, saying that officials were trying to put him on a flight to Uganda.

He reportedly refused to get onto the airplane.

Six rights groups issued a statement calling on South Africa’s government not to expel Semugoma, saying he was “wanted in Uganda for his activism” around gay issues.

“The human rights situation in Uganda has deteriorated, and the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) community is particularly vulnerable at this time,” they said.

“Paul is at risk should he be deported to Uganda.”

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has announced he will sign into law a controversial anti-gay Bill, passed by parliament in December, that will see homosexuals jailed for life. – AFP.

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