NAIROBI — A judge in Kenya has temporarily lifted a ban on a film that features a lesbian love story, allowing its producers to fulfill the criteria necessary to submit it to next year’s Oscars as a nominee for Best Foreign Language Film.
The film, called “Rafiki,” which means friend in Swahili, depicts two young women from opposing political backgrounds who nevertheless fall in love. Kenya’s Film Classification Board banned it in April, saying it violated the country’s “family values.” Homosexuality is criminalized in Kenya, as it is in many former British colonies, and can carry up to a 14-year prison sentence. But Friday’s ruling on “Rafiki” may be a precursor to overturning those laws.
India and Trinidad and Tobago, also former British colonies, legalized homosexuality this year, with judges providing legal reasoning for why Victorian-era anti-sodomy laws were irreconcilable with the civil rights enshrined in their post-independence constitutions.
In her ruling on Friday, Judge Wilfrida Okwany said that she was “not convinced that Kenya is such a weak society that its moral foundation will be shaken by seeing such a film.” Read more via Washington Post
My most heartfelt thanks to our wondrous Lawyer @sofwaraj and @katibainstitute. Creative Economy Working Group and I are thrilled that out constitutional rights have been upheld! Join us in celebration by watching the movie on kenya! @rafikimovie is posting details!! Adults only!
— Wanuri (@wanuri) September 22, 2018