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Video: LGBTI Ugandans under siege in pandemic

Video: LGBTI Ugandans under siege in pandemic

Get ready for “In the Eyes of a Pandemic”, a documentary about how the Ugandan LGBTI and sex workers communities are coping with Covid-19. See the trailer below.


From the African Human Rights Media Network


Residents of the Children of the Sun Foundation LGBT homeless shelter are abused during their arrest on charges — later dismissed — of violating Covid-19 lockdown orders. (Screen shot from the documentary “In the Eyes of a Pandemic”)
Residents of the Children of the Sun Foundation LGBT homeless shelter are abused during their arrest on charges — later dismissed — of violating Covid-19 lockdown orders. (Image from the documentary “In the Eyes of a Pandemic”)

East African Visual Artists, a gay-led arts organization working for the rights of sexual and gender minorities, is developing a documentary about how Ugandan LGBT and sex workers communities are coping with the Covid-19 pandemic, including their strategies for the future.

The documentary includes interviews with well-known Ugandan activists such as Sam Ganafa of Spectrum Uganda Initiatives, Richard Lusimbo from Pan-Africa ILGA, Kyomya Macklean from Alliance of Women Advocating for Change and others.  They discuss the effects of the  Covid-19 pandemic, how Ugandan politicians are using it to oppress LGBTI Ugandans, and the community’s strategies for continuing their struggle for justice and human rights.

The video is a project of the Uganda-based human rights organization East African Visual Artists, which uses visual arts to advocate for social change.

Harsh enforcement of Uganda’s Covid-19 lockdown rules. (Image from “In the Eyes of a Pandemic”)

“We saw, from the very start of the lockdown, government officials, politicians — they used Covid on presidential directives … to attack the LGBTI community” Lusimbo states in the trailer.

He adds, “Again the world is making a mistake whereby they are always finding a reason to blame or create a situation that it’s due to LGBTI that something is happening.”

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Describing the plight of sex workers who are dying with nothing to eat,  Macklean states, “So they decided not to take their drugs any more. So people are taking risks [saying] ‘I would rather go and try my luck out there than to stay home and see my children cry for me’.”

View the trailer below.

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Correction: This article was revised on Oct. 10, 2020, to describe East African Visual Artists as a gay-led organization, which is more accurate than calling it a gay-friendly organization.

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