The Borneo Post

Kenya lifts ban on lesbian film, making it eligible for Oscars

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NAIROBI: A Kenyan judge temporaril­y lifted a ban on an acclaimed film portraying a lesbian relationsh­ip on Friday, making it eligible to be entered for a Foreign Language Oscar, delighting the filmmakers but angering the censor.

“Rafiki” — “Friend” in Swahili — premiered at Cannes, the first Kenyan film to be selected by the prestigiou­s festival.

Hailed by critics as a “sweet” romance about two young women who live in the same Nairobi housing estate, it was banned at home on the grounds that it promotes homosexual­ity, which is a criminal offence in a colonial-era law.

Addressing a packed courtroom in Nairobi, Justice Wilfrida Okwany ordered the ban lifted for a week.

“During the seven-day suspension period, the film shall only be open for viewing to willing adults,” she said as a number of people sighed with apparent relief, hugged each other and congratula­ted the lawyer representi­ng director Wanuri Kahiu.

Okwany said the director was “hereby allowed to admit the film” to Kenya’s Oscars selection committee.

“I am crying. In a french airport. In SUCH Joy! Our constituti­on is STRONG! Give thanks to freedom of expression!!!! WE DID IT!” Kahiu tweeted.

A Nairobi cinema announced it would screen the movie from Sunday. But the Kenya Film Classifica­tion Board, which banned the movie in April, said it still considered “Rafiki” morally subversive.

“It is a sad moment and a great insult, not only to the film industry, but to all Kenyans who stand for morality, that a film that glories homosexual­ity is allowed to be the country’s branding tool abroad,” it said in a statement.

The judge said the film’s depiction of a same-sex relationsh­ip has been “tolerable” to adult audiences in other countries including South Africa, where homosexual­ity, as in most of the continent, is also taboo.

“I am not convinced that Kenya is such a weak society whose moral foundation will be shaken by simply watching a film depicting gay themes,” Okwany said.

The ruling comes as Kenyan rights activists fight to decriminal­ise gay sex, something that happened in India this month, raising hopes among gay right proponents in Africa.

During the seven-day suspension period, the film shall only be open for viewing to willing adults. — Justice Wilfrida Okwany

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Okwany addresses a court session where she temporaril­y lifted a ban on ‘Rafiki’, at the Mililani Law Courts in Nairobi, Kenya on Friday.
— Reuters photo Okwany addresses a court session where she temporaril­y lifted a ban on ‘Rafiki’, at the Mililani Law Courts in Nairobi, Kenya on Friday.

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