Re-known Urban Farmer, Victoria On The Run over Homosexuality Cases.

 


A local Urban Farmer, commonly known as Nalunga Victoria is on the run after security organizations in Uganda staged an operation to crack down on LGBTQ members.

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: 

Nalunga Victoria is a Ugandan local Urban Farmer who has been featured on over 20 media houses in farming programs. 


According to police investigations, Victoria Nalunga (In the Picture above) has for a long time been disguising herself as an urban farmer while using her influence to introduce young girls and boys to LGBTQ acts.

It was discovered that In 2021, she traveled to Germany to take hide but she failed. 

Police said She had come back to Uganda and continued with her farm and spa however, they are tracing for her.

Victoria is not the only one, but several lesbians and gay activists live in hiding for their lives as they are not allowed in Uganda by law.

Victoria help rabbits feed.

HOW IT STARTED:

Recently, the police and the Criminal Investigation Department intercepted a wedding alleged to have been for Homosexuals in Nansana, a city suburb in Kampala.

were arrested for organizing and attending a same sex traditional marriage.

40 people arrested.

Spokesperson for the Kampala Metropolitan Police, Luke Owoyesigyire, who disclosed this in a statement on Monday, May 31 2021, said police received a tip off about a group of men suspected to be homosexuals conducting a wedding in 780 zone, Ochen ward in Nansana municipality.

Watch Video: Police arresting the LGBTQ members.

“At the same functions gifts were recovered, these included suitcases, a tv, assorted gifts like sugar, salt, pineapples and many other gifts normally given at traditional functions.” he added.

LGBTQ member helpless after an arrest.

The Kampala police spokesperson said that used and unused condoms were recovered at the scene whereas the suspects were not observing Covid SOPs like social distancing and wearing of masks. 

The spokesperson also revealed that the group was being funded by an urban farmer who was identified as Victoria 

He noted that they were arrested and detained at police as the continue to hunt for Victoria.

The Criminal Investigations Divisions spokesperson, Charles Twine later said the group would be charged for doing a ‘negligent act likely to spread an infectious disease.’

Exporting hate through evangelism.

The Anglican church has spearheaded the anti-LGBTQ movement in Uganda, where more than 80% of people are Christian and nearly 14.4% of people are Muslim -- with a heavy emphasis on "traditional family."
Pastor Simeon Kawiya leads a Christian church in Kampala and is a supporter of the new anti-homosexuality law. Kawiya believes that being gay is taught and not how people are born.

"It's not a human right to be gay. It's not," Kawaiya told Freeman News -UG 
"The Parliament of Uganda voted 100% in favor of anti-LGBT law. I mean, the whole country voted that way," Kawaiya continued.

Pastor Simeon Kawiya leads a Christian church in Kampala, Uganda, and is a supporter of the country's new anti-homosexuality law.

More than 30 African countries ban same-sex relations, according to Human Rights Watch.
But some people, including preacher Kapya Kaoma, claim anti-LGBTQ sentiment on the continent has been influenced from the outside.
"The whole idea of the persecution of African LGBTQ people did not come from Africa. American Christian rightists are behind it," Kaoma told ABC News.

While working as a preacher in Uganda, Kaoma took videos of American preachers speaking against homosexuality in the country that became part of the award-winning documentary, "God Loves Uganda."
Several media outlets, including Open Democracy, have reported that U.S.-based Christian groups -- known for fighting everything from access to abortion to limiting LGBTQ rights -- spent tens of millions of dollars across Africa over the last decade or more.

The origins of the new anti-LGBTQ law in Uganda can be traced back to 2009 when a bill nicknamed "Kill the Gays" was drafted in parliament. It finally passed in 2014, but was struck down before it went into effect.

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