LGBT campaigners staged a Pride parade in Uganda
at the weekend – despite the country being known for its widespread and violent
homophobic and transphobic persecution.
"Today I can finally be myself. Usually I have to hide my sexuality to protect myself from being abused," 26-year-old Rachel Newumbe says, while she is attaching a rainbow coloured flag to a white pick-up truck.
She is a lesbian, but it is only her immediate family and
closest friends that know. If the rest of her friends and relatives find out,
Rachel is afraid that they will turn their back on her. She did not dare tell
anyone that she is participating in the Uganda Beach Pride 2013.
Rachel is taking part in the celebrations together with
200-300 other transgender and gay people, of which the majority are men. The parade is the main event ending
the week long Pride festival in the capital city, Kampala. Many participants
say, that the parade finally gives them a chance to be themselves and wear the
clothes they want to, without fearing for their security.
"If I was walking around Kampala in these clothes in daylight, I am sure people would abuse me. Today I can finally show who I am," says a transgender man, who only wants to be known as 'Bad Black', because he fears being attacked, when he returns to his usual life.
Uganda does not tolerate homosexuality
It's the second time several Ugandan organisations for the
country's LGBT community have collaborated to arrange the Pride parade in the
strongly homophobic country.
In 2009, it was proposed in Parliament that homosexual
behaviour should be punished with the death penalty, but the Anti-Homosexuality
Bill is still under review. When the Ugandan police catch gay people they are
often held at the police station for 2-3 days.
According to statistics, 96% of the population think that
homosexuality should not be accepted in Ugandan society.
To avoid confrontations with the rest of the population the
parade takes place in a more sparsely populated area about 30 kilometres from
Kampala. The parade is watched closely by six police officers, who shortened
this years route to make sure LGBT participants would not come too close to the
locals.
"Uganda is not yet mature enough for us to walk freely
in the streets. But I hope it will be possible during the next five years for
us to parade in Kampala," says Kasha Jacqueline, who brought Pride to
Uganda for the first time last year.
Rachel Newumbe is also taking part in the parade for the
second time. Here she has the chance to meet many of her friends that she is
normally unable to see, because she is afraid being seen with them might reveal
her sexuality.
Roughly every six months she moves to a new area of Kampala
to avoid her neighbours becoming aware of her sexuality. She works as a DJ at a
nightclub in Kampala, where even her colleagues do not know her sexuality. If
the truth is revealed Rachel is certain that she will get fired.
"I just wish they will leave us alone. We are tired of
hiding, because they cannot convert us anyway. We will always be
homosexuals," Rachel says, before she jumps in the back of the pick-up
truck and joins the parade.
Source: Google news
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