Audio By Carbonatix
The World Bank says it is lifting a ban on loans to Uganda that it had put in place two years ago when the country passed a draconian new law against LGBTQ people.
In 2023, Uganda voted in some of the world's harshest anti-homosexual legislation, meaning that anybody engaging in certain same-sex acts can be sentenced to death.
Since then, hundreds of people have been evicted from their homes, subjected to violence or arrested because of their sexuality, according to Uganda's Human Rights Awareness and Promotion Forum.
But the World Bank says it is confident that new "mitigation measures" will allow it to roll out funding in such a way that does not harm or discriminate against LGBTQ people.
The BBC has asked the Ugandan government and the World Bank for further comment.
"The World Bank cannot deliver on its mission to end poverty and boost shared prosperity on a liveable planet unless all people can participate in, and benefit from, the projects we finance, " a spokesman told the AFP news agency on Thursday, adding that the organisation had "worked with the [Ugandan] government and other stakeholders in the country to introduce, implement and test" anti-discrimination measures.
New projects in "social protection, education, and forced displacement and refugees" have also been approved, an unnamed World Bank spokesperson told the Reuters news agency.
Analysts say the World Bank is one of Uganda's biggest sources of external financing, playing an important role in infrastructure development. Road upgrades and widened electricity access are among the projects the organisation is backing in the East African country.
But some economists criticise the funding model used by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund in general, saying it perpetuates dependency and undermines sustainable growth in the world's poorest nations by tying them to restrictive loan conditions.
Uganda is among several African nations - including Ghana and Kenya - that in recent years have witnessed moves to curtail the rights of LGBTQ people.
News of Uganda's draconian Anti-Homosexuality Act in 2023 prompted international condemnation.
It cost the country somewhere between $470m and $1.7bn (£347m and £1.2bn) in the year that followed, mainly because of frozen financing, according to estimates by the UK-based charity Open for Business.
Uganda's government says its anti-gay law reflects the conservative values of its people, but its critics say the law is little more than a distraction from real issues such as high unemployment and ongoing attacks on the opposition.
"It's low-hanging fruit," Oryem Nyeko, a researcher working at Human Rights Watch in Uganda, told CBC at the time.
"It's being framed as something that's foreign and threatening to people's children."
Victims of beatings, evictions and worse say that Uganda's new law has emboldened people to attack them based on their perceived sexuality.
The fact that the law also stipulates a 20-year prison sentence for "promoting" homosexuality has also been seen as an attack on anybody who defends LGBTQ rights, but the government denies this.
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