Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Banned film gets acclaim after ruling

- By Tom Odula

NAIROBI, Kenya — The first Kenyan feature film to premiere at the Cannes Film Festival has received overwhelmi­ng audience support since a court temporaril­y lifted a ban imposed by censors over the film’s gay content, a lawyer said Friday.

“Rafiki” went from being screened once a day in one theater in Nairobi on Sept. 22 to three daily screenings at theaters in three of Kenya’s largest cities as of Friday, said Sofia Leteipan, who represents director Wanuri Kahiu.

The court ruled that the film, a love story featuring two women, could be viewed locally for one week to make it eligible for Oscar contention. The ban will resume after Sunday showings.

Ezekiel Mutua, the head of the Kenya Film Classifica­tion Board, has said that only “a small portion” of the country’s population has seen it.

“There is no market for homosexual movies in Kenya. Is there value for money in making a homosexual movie that will be watched by 300 out of 44 million people?” Mutua said in an interview on Citizen Television.

It is illegal to have same-gender sex in Kenya.

Kenya’s National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission is currently in court arguing that sections of the penal code violate the constituti­on and deny basic rights by criminaliz­ing consensual same-sex relations between adults.

Leteipan said that although “Rafiki” in the end wasn’t nominated for an Oscar, its screening across Kenya is a “huge win for the articulati­on of freedom of expression.”

She said that after the ban resumes, “we’ll still be in court pursuing the original petition to have the ban permanentl­y lifted.”

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Wanuri Kahiu

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