We'll cut your aid if you persecute gays, Britain warns African nations

Poor African countries which persecute homos*xuals will have their aid slashed by the Government in a bid by David Cameron to take his gay rights crusade to the Third World.

International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell has already cut aid to Malawi by £19 million after two gay men were sentenced to 14 years hard labour. And he has warned the country's leaders to scrap plans to introduce draconian new anti-lesbian laws. 

Mr Mitchell, one of Mr Cameron's closest allies, is also threatening to impose further aid 'fines' against Uganda and Ghana for hardline anti-gay and lesbian measures. The policy was disclosed after Mr Cameron defended his decision to legalise gay weddings when he addressed last week's Conservative Party conference. 

Now he wants to persuade those countries where homos*xuality is still taboo to follow his lead – and he is ready to reduce aid to some of the world's poorest people to do so. The cut in aid to Malawi came after two gay men were convicted last year under the country's rigidly imposed ban on homos*xuality. Pop stars Elton John and Madonna joined an international outcry when Tiwonge Chimbalanga, 26, and Steven Monjeza, 20, received a 14-year sentence for getting engaged. 

A judge in Malawi told them: 'I will give you a scaring sentence so that the public will be protected from people like you, so that we are not tempted to emulate this horrendous example. 'Malawi is not ready to see its sons getting married to its sons.' The British Government described their jailing as 'shocking and disturbing'. 

The two men were later freed, but Malawi's defiant President Bingu wa Mutharika went ahead with new anti-lesbian laws, prompting a sharp rebuke from Mr Mitchell. It is not the first time Britain has punished President Mutharika. The Labour Government reduced aid to Malawi by £3 million after he spent £8 million on a presidential jet. 

However, Malawi has still received more than £200 million from Britain in the past three years. Uganda faces the threat of an aid 'fine' by the UK unless it abandons plans to extend the death penalty to homos*xuality. Three weeks ago, Mr Mitchell protested to Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni, who has claimed 'European homos*xuals are recruiting in Africa' and who believes gay relationships are 'against God's will'. 

Uganda is due to receive £70 million from British taxpayers in 2011. During a visit to Ghana earlier this year, Stephen O'Brien – Mr Mitchell's deputy – told President John Evans Atta Mills that Britain would cut its aid unless he stopped persecuting gays.

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