Uganda has been fighting homosexuality since 1904, making it illegal for men to share a surname, but has not given specific views on lesbianism. The now-infamous "kill gays" bill was introduced in Uganda's parliament between October 2009 and May 2011. Under the guise of "protecting the traditional family", the bill advocates the death penalty for "aggravated homosexuality" and imprisonment for anyone who "incites" or fails to report homosexuality. Although the bill expired before the end of the eighth session in 2011, seven Ugandan lawmakers have vowed to reintroduce the bill or a similar version in the ninth parliament. Although the death penalty was removed from the 2009 version, the bill was signed into law in 2014 as an Anti-Homosexuality Act. Six months later, under widespread international pressure, Uganda's Constitutional Court ruled on procedural grounds that the anti-homosexuality Law was invalid. But even if the law itself is repealed, the spirit lives on because the bill enjoys widespread support in Uganda, where 93 percent of people oppose homosexuality.