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Uganda is in the top 10 of countries with the highest HIV prevalence rates. [15] Sex workers are a high risk group. In 2013 they had a 34.2 percent prevalence rate. [7] Even in Kampala, where HIV infection is the highest in the country, clients are reluctant to use condoms and will offer many times the usual rate for unprotected sex.
United Nations officials have urged Uganda to investigate allegations of human trafficking and corruption in the refugee camps. [7] The UN resident in Uganda, Rosa Malango, claimed that she had written to the government about allegations including corruption, fraud, trafficking of women and girls, intimidation and harassment of UN personnel. [7]
Nudity, protest and the law in Uganda [40] Paradoxes of sex work and sexuality in modern-day Uganda [41] Bitches at the academy: Gender and academic freedom at the African university [42] Introducing quotas: discourse and legal reform in Uganda [43] Profile:'keep your eyes off my thighs': a feminist analysis of Uganda's 'miniskirt law' [44]
In 2001, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni introduced his official program for sex education for the youth of Uganda, Presidential Initiative on AIDS Strategy for Communication to Youth, abbreviated as PIASCY. PIASCY mainly targets primary schools, secondary schools and after school youth rallies with materials and instruction (HRW, 29).
The first major corruption scandal in Japan was the Nitto case, which transpired in 1909. Representatives of the Nitto company bribed politicians in order to influence legislation covering the sugar industry. [7] This resulted in the successful passage of laws involving tax on sugar products.
Morality plays and money matters: toward a situated understanding of the politics of homosexuality in Uganda – academic analysis of the politics of homosexuality in Uganda and support for the Anti-Homosexuality bill, by Joanna Sadgrove, Robert Vanderbeck, Gill Valentine, Johan Andersson, and Kevin Ward at the University of Leeds.
In 1988, Koji Kita [], a former member of Four Leaves, published a series of diaries under the title Hikaru Genji e (光Genjiへ, Dear Hikaru Genji). [7] Kita wrote that Johnny Kitagawa had used his position of influence over the group to make unwanted sexual advances towards the boys under contract to him.
When ranked by score, Uganda ranked 141st among the 180 countries in the Index, where the country ranked first is perceived to have the most honest public sector. [6] For comparison with worldwide scores, the best score was 90 (ranked 1), the average score was 43, and the worst score was 11 (ranked 180). [ 7 ]