African Bishops: Western Regimes "Send Us Missionaries of Evil"
Across Africa, Western officials and tourists are promoting a wrong view of sexuality and the human person.
NGOs and the recruitment of young people for sex parties are among the ways Western regimes impose homosexual propaganda on Africa.
"It is just like the missionaries who went everywhere to evangelise," said Archbishop Renatus Leonard Nkwande of Mwanza, Tanzania. Only now, he said, "the West is sending us missionaries of evil".
Archbishop Charles Palmer-Buckle of Cape Coast, Ghana, says white tourists come to Ghana and "mess with our little boys on the beach and sexually abuse them for a little money".
Monsignor Palmer-Buckle added that he has often dealt with "foreign aid workers" who promote homosexual sin in schools.
Archbishop Renatus Leonard Nkwande of Mwanza, Tanzania, says that fears of Westerners promoting sexual sins are so widespread that "the first time you meet someone from Europe", whether a tourist or an NGO worker, "you are just afraid, you try to run away".
Monsignor Nkwande denounces Western NGOs that distribute lubricants used in homosexual sins in his archdiocese.
In Kenya, NGOs promote sin in the classroom and pay young people to engage in homosexual sin.
In Uganda, the government ordered an investigation in 2023 into NGO-run schools that were "recruitment centres" for homosexual propaganda.
In 2017, activists from a South African initiative funded by Western organisations such as the Ford Foundation, which promotes homosexual sins through 'strategic litigation', were arrested and deported in Tanzania's capital, Dar es Salam.
Sexual propaganda is also imported into Africa via social media, particularly in Kenya, where more than 60% of the population has a smartphone, a much higher rate than the average for sub-Saharan countries.
In Obala, Cameroon, Bishop Sosthène Léopold Bayemi Matjei said social media content from France, the former coloniser, was influencing Cameroonian youth.
This has led to changes in language and dress, and young boys are organising sex groups after being exposed to porn through online videos.
Abortion is illegal in Cameroon, but Bishop Bayemi said the French embassy actively promoted it in March after France enshrined abortion as a 'guaranteed freedom' in its constitution.
Western NGOs reportedly give grants to facilities in Cameroon to perform free abortions, which are tolerated by the local government.
The US regime has sanctioned Uganda for outlawing homosexual sins.
There is speculation that Ghana's legislation restricting the spread of homosexual activism could cost the African country $3.8 billion from the International Monetary Fund.
African bishops have slammed Francis for claiming their fight against homosexual sin is 'merely to protect cultural values'.
Archbishop Andrew Nkea Fuanya of the Archdiocese of Bamenda in Cameroon said that when he was ordained he took an oath to defend the Catholic faith, not African culture.
"African bishops don't defend African culture. We defend the Catholic faith.
In Tanzania, Archbishop Nkwande points to the witness of St Charles Lwanga, who was martyred in 1886 after resisting a king's homosexual advances.
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