International Ugandan Bank Denies Account to Trans Activist 
 
Uganda's ban on homosexuality is playing out in the private sector, with a
local branch of the U.K.-based Standard Chartered Bank denying account
access to a trans activist. 
 
By Frankie Edozien

Imagine walking into any major commercial bank, opening a checking or
savings account, and then days later being told that your account has been
frozen. And oh, by the way, since you're gay and you work for a gay
organization, our bank has a problem with you, and you will not be getting
your paychecks deposited into that account. 

An unlikely scenario? For most people in the West, yes, but that's exactly
what Juliet Victor Mukasa, a female-to-male transgender activist, says
happened to him at a Kampala, Uganda, bank in March. 

For all its breathtaking natural beauty and delightfully hospitable and
charming citizenry, Uganda is still a place where being openly gay can turn
this East African equator nation from paradise into a nightmare. 

Homosexuality is criminal in this pearl of Africa. It's been on the books
for ages, with the penal code stipulating that "any person who has carnal
knowledge of any person against the order of nature" to being hauled into
prison. It dates back to the penal provisions imposed during the era of
British colonialism and was strengthened in 1990 to increase the penalty
from 14 years to life. 

Yet while these laws remain in force, Uganda has introduced democratic
reforms and improved its human rights record since Yoweri Museveni became
president in 1986. 

Mukasa, 32, a research and policy analyst for the International Gay and
Lesbian Human Rights Commission, was born female but now identifies and
expresses himself as a male, routinely eschewing skirts for pants. He is
cofounder and first chairperson of the Sexual Minorities Uganda group. 

In 2005 his home was raided and he went into hiding. Then he did an
about-face and sued the government for trampling on his rights by raiding
his home without a search warrant and arresting his guests. A judgment is
expected in that case soon. 

But years after the incident, Mukasa went to Standard Chartered Bank -- an
international bank based in London but with branches and subsidiaries all
over Africa and Asia -- to open an account. 

As at most banks, staff members greeted him courteously and said there would
be no problems when he told them where he worked. The account application
required him to mention both his current and previous employers. 

"I work for the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission. Could
I still have an account here?" Mukasa recounted to The Advocate. "'Of
course, this is an international bank and we don't discriminate. Just write
it,' was the bank's officials response." 

Mukasa said he wrote his current employer, IGLHRC, in the blank space and
for the question that required his previous employer followed, he wrote,
"Sexual Minorities Uganda." 

The adviser made a copy of Mukasa's passport, took photographs, and asked
him to sign a document, then told him to return the following day, a
Saturday, with passport photos and the money to be deposited. 

The next day, Mukasa recalled, "The adviser took my photos and told me to go
pick a deposit slip, fill it and deposit the money that I had. At the top of
my completed slip he wrote something like 'Account open.' and signed it." 

An elated Mukasa skipped out of the Kampala branch, located in one of the
city center skyscrapers, dancing for joy. 

The following day he went back and deposited 500,000 Ugandan shillings
(about $302) and was asked to come back the following week to apply for a
Visa debit/ATM card. 

"I told a couple of friends about it, how great SCB is, and I even showed
them the deposit slip. They were all happy for me," he recalls. 

But the joy was short-lived. When Mukasa went in to complete the Visa
application process, a bank officer took him aside with the original officer
who helped open the account and told him there was a problem. 

He recalls an official saying, "The account opening process goes through so
many hands. Your application form got to some bosses who were not OK with
it." Mukasa asked what was wrong with his application and at first the
official failed to explain. "I helped him by asking, 'Is it because of the
fact that I work with the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights
Commission and am a gay person myself?' He answered in the affirmative." 

Mukasa took his case up the chain even asking for a meeting with the local
CEO but the account remained closed. 

SCB Uganda's corporate affairs manager, Herbert Zake, in an April interview
in his sky-high office overlooking the Kampala metropolis, stressed the
bank's community involvement over the past year: schools built in rural
areas; the commitment to ending blindness by paying for cataract surgeries
at $277 a pop; drilling boreholes for rural communities at a cost of $80,000
-- some people have to walk 10-15 kilometers to get water and it may still
be contaminated; and large-scale refurbishments of high school facilities in
the capital city. 

The company is even leading an effort to end stigma among those affected by
HIV or AIDS by offering complimentary voluntary testing and providing a
supportive environment to HIV positive employees. 

But when asked about why a company that was such an outstanding corporate
citizen in many ways for Ugandans and Africans at large, was denying an
account to a lesbian, Zake appeared stunned by the question for a moment. 

And then says, "She indicated that the money was coming from a gay and
lesbian human rights organization ... it [homosexuality] is illegal here." 

When pressed on whether national statute against gay actions affected
whether gays could have bank accounts, Zake's response was that the matter
"is open to interpretation." The executive then insisted that he would get
clarity on the matter and forward a response to this reporter. 

In May, when The Advocate contacted SCB's parent company, officials in the
United Kingdom declined to speak publicly about that one case, but insiders
pointed out that the bank has a history of opening in culturally challenging
locations. 

While the mammoth $50 billion bank has branches in 13 African countries, it
also operates in the Middle East, including Iraq, and in Afghanistan. In
Middle Eastern locations where it might be difficult for both sexes to
mingle openly, it has had to open banks primarily for women. 

"We have a very strong ethos of diversity and inclusion in the bank and do
not discriminate against customers on the grounds of sexual orientation, or
gender or race, for that matter," insists Tim Baxter, Standard Chartered's
London-based head of external communications. 

The problem wasn't SCB's, but local law that officials feel they must comply
with. Since IGLHRC promotes equality for sexual minorities, and activities
of such minorities are illegal in Uganda, that puts SCB in an untenable
position, insiders say. 

"We operate in more than 70 countries with many different cultures and fully
comply with all local laws and regulations," Baxter says. 

SCB officials say they have many senior gay and lesbian employees and try to
work within the restrictions of local governments to provide retail
financial services for all. 

In the meantime, Mukasa has to make do with having friends who can lend a
hand -- or a bank account. 

"IGLHRC wires my salary to a friend's account. This is not comfortable for
me. This makes me feel horrible . I am very frustrated. This place is
becoming a stranger land for me every day."  

 

I am Peter-Rhaina Gwokto and I approve this message. 

  _____  

Remember: "Even a small dog can piss on a tall building" Jim Hightower
http://lakitgum.wordpress.com <http://lakitgum.wordpress.com/> 


 

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