Police in Uganda have raided the offices of a US-funded project which provides health advice to homosexuals.
The move came after a controversial law, condemned as draconian by the West, threatened those engaging in gay sex with life imprisonment.
The bill passed through the Ugandan parliament in December after its architects agreed to drop a death penalty clause.
The Makerere University Walter Reed Project in the capital Kampala announced it had suspended its operations after one of its Ugandan staff was briefly held by police.
In a statement it said: "We are working with police to understand the circumstances under which this person was detained.
"Until we have greater clarity as to the legal basis for the police action, the operations of the programme are temporarily suspended to ensure the safety of staff and the integrity of the programme."
Anti-gay activists in Kampala march in support of the harsh new measuresPolice said they had been following the suspect after receiving reports he was involved in "gay-related activities".
Spokesman Ibn Ssekumbi said: "For some time we have been following an individual whom we learnt has been conducting promotion and training activities related to homosexuality."
A US State Department official said the health project conducts important research into Ebola, Marburg disease and HIV. One of the project's aims is to develop vaccines for these diseases.
Ugandan gay activists say many homosexuals have been forced to flee their homes in the weeks since the law came into force, apparently to escape angry mobs.
Some are reported to have been evicted by landlords who found out they were gay.
Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni says homosexuality is "criminal"In response, the US, one of the country's biggest sources of aid and other Western donors have halted or redirected around $118m (£71m) in aid .
Despite the criticism and calls for the law to be scrapped, it is popular among many Ugandans.
President Yoweri Museveni has accused the West of seeking to impose "social imperialism" on Africa and told a rally that Uganda could live without humanitarian aid.
He said gay people deserved to be severely punished as homosexuality was "criminal" and "cruel".
Uganda now has some of the toughest anti-gay laws on a continent where 37 states ban homosexuality.
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