• magazine
  • entertainment
  • news
  • South Africa
    • Global Edition
    • Australia
    • Belgique
    • Brasil
    • Canada (fr)
    • Canada (en)
    • Colombia
    • Deutschland
    • España
    • France
    • India
    • Ireland
    • Italia
    • Latino
    • México
    • Österreich
    • South Africa
    • Switzerland
    • United Kingdom
    • USA
Blog Title
  • Facebook
  • adsfasdf
  • YouTube

Uganda’s Constitutional Court declares colonial law criminalizing begging null and void

Daniel Stewart

2022-12-02
File
File – Girls sit in a school in Amudat district, Karamoja, Uganda, after escaping from home after their families tried to subject them to genital mutilation. – SALLY HAYDEN/SOPA IMAGES/ZUMA PRESS/CONTACTOPHOTO

The Constitutional Court of Uganda has declared null and void a Penal Code law that punishes begging on the grounds that it is ambiguous and violates freedom of movement and freedom of movement.

The court’s decision was unanimous, with all five judges voting to strike down the law, making any attempt to deprive a person of his or her right to move freely a criminal offense.

The judges upheld the Human Rights Awareness and Promotion Forum (HRAPF) of Uganda’s arguments against a rule that anyone found wandering in a public place could be punished and considered by the police as a «vagrant» or «rogue».

HRAPF director Adrian Jjuuko has argued that this British colonial rule was intended to group the poor in confined spaces. Nowadays it was a breeding ground for police abuse and extortion.

Punishments ranged from the payment of a financial penalty to prison sentences of six to 13 months, reports Ugandan radio station Capital FM.

Street vendors and other small traders, prostitutes, drug users and the homeless were often the groups that suffered most from this archaic legislation, Jjuuko said.

«Anyone found walking the streets could be rounded up and accused of being a vagrant,» the director of the human rights organization told the BBC.

Prostitution is illegal in Uganda, while street vending is not allowed in some areas of the capital, Kampala, so it is common for the police and municipal authorities to carry out massive raids against these people, who sometimes demand payment to avoid arrest.

  • Six seafarers kidnapped after raid on Danish cargo vessel in the Gulf of Guinea freed
    2023-05-08

    Six seafarers kidnapped after raid on Danish cargo vessel in the Gulf of Guinea freed

  • US.- Seven dead after car drives into crowd outside migrant center in Texas
    2023-05-07

    US.- Seven dead after car drives into crowd outside migrant center in Texas

  • Mozambican Army takes control of Lake Inguri area in Cabo Delgado
    2023-05-05

    Mozambican Army takes control of Lake Inguri area in Cabo Delgado

  • António Guterres calls on Sudanese Army and RSF for safe access to humanitarian aid
    2023-05-03

    António Guterres calls on Sudanese Army and RSF for safe access to humanitarian aid

  • 20 of the world’s most impressive forests to get lost in
    2025-01-30

    20 of the world’s most impressive forests to get lost in

  • Ona Carbonell’s retirement marks the end of a sports career of more than 20 years and two Olympic medals
    2023-05-19

    Ona Carbonell’s retirement marks the end of a sports career of more than 20 years and two Olympic medals

  • Francis Montesinos, renowned Spanish designer, accused of molesting 15-year-old girl
    2023-05-08

    Francis Montesinos, renowned Spanish designer, accused of molesting 15-year-old girl

  • Facebook
  • adsfasdf
  • YouTube
  • magazine
  • entertainment
  • news
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • © 2023 Copyright News 360 S.L.