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Uganda
Bans Vagina Monologues
Fawzia Sheikh, Worldpress.org
May 14, 2005
http://www.worldpress.org/Africa/2081.cfm
 It
is rare for women to make front-page news in Uganda — something
reserved for landmark cases such as when the former vice president
divorced her husband a few years ago for beating her.
But the government’s
banning of the Vagina Monologues, a play written by American
Eve Ensler that explores women’s sexuality and abuse, dominated
headlines for days and stirred passions in the country’s capital
Kampala.
Although
the international community has paid tribute to Uganda’s progressive
strides in certain matters, to some local human rights activists
the episode revealed a country that has failed to shake off patriarchal
leanings ingrained in Africa where women are often still treated
as the property of men.
The media council,
a semi-independent government body prevailing over arts and culture,
agreed the play addresses the issue of sexually abused women but
ultimately ruled against the Vagina Monologues for glorifying
what it describes as unnatural sex — masturbation, lesbianism and
homosexuality.
The debate was
hijacked by a sudden wave of homophobia that swept across the land
and prompted government representatives, religious leaders and ordinary
Ugandans to submit letters to newspapers denouncing the inappropriate
behavior detailed in the play.
The male-dominated
media council asked that the production’s title be changed to something
more "socially and culturally sensitive." But the four
Kampala-based non-governmental organizations promoting the Vagina
Monologues, Akina Mama wa Afrika, Action Aid International Uganda,
Isis-WICCE and Uganda Women’s Network, said intellectual property
rights issues prevent them from making changes.
"This play
needs to be performed in its entirety or not at all," explained
lead promoter Sarah Mukasa, Ugandan program director of Akina Mama
wa Afrika.
The quartet
argued the Vagina Monologues tackles rampant sexual violence
against women in the country, including genital mutilation, incest,
and sexual abuse inflicted by so-called defenders in displaced people’s
camps and at the hands of the Lord’s Resistance Army (L.R.A.), a
northern Ugandan rebel group that for 19 years has clashed with
the government to create a state based on the Ten Commandments.
Uganda’s persistent
abuse of women is a cultural tradition, says Mukasa. She explains
that the banning of the controversial play is rooted in a long-held
belief that it is taboo to discuss sexual assault in society.
"It’s influenced
by very right-wing religious doctrine [entrenched] right from the
top, to members of parliament, right down to the population in general.
And these doctrines really don’t allow discussion."
This argument
has some support. There were rumors circulating that the first lady,
Janet Museveni, a staunch Christian, held considerable sway with
her husband in outlawing the production.
"We had
hoped that Uganda would be renowned for something entirely different,"
says Mukasa. "We sought to advance a campaign against violence
against women in a frank and unabashed manner."
The leading
crime in Uganda, where 65 percent of all child abuse reported in
2003 was sexually related, is defilement or sex with a girl under
18 years old, according to the latest figures from the African Network
for Prevention and Protection against Child Abuse and Neglect, based
in Kampala.
Action Aid International
Uganda also completed a study showing 84 percent of girls had experienced
physical or sexual violence, some of which occurs in school and
in part causes them to drop out.
The play’s ban
has caused the greatest frustration among women in the northern-most
quarters of Uganda. Ester Obwee of the Kitgum Women’s Peace Initiative,
based near the Sudanese border in the heart of rebel country, views
the Vagina Monologues starring sexually abused actors as
a voice for suffering northerners.
She described
a desperate situation in which "most of us are sleeping under
the veranda on nights and weekends" fearful of marauding L.R.A.
soldiers who abduct young girls into sexual slavery.
"But from
there we are being raped. We are being raped time and again, and
we have got no police."
All proceeds
from the sale of play tickets were to be directed to women’s projects
like Obwee’s in northern Uganda, Mukasa explained, but people may
still donate their refunds to these causes.
In political
circles, meanwhile, there was little surprise at the government’s
condemnation. Former minister of state for ethics and integrity,
Miria Matembe, said she fielded many phone calls from male colleagues
wondering about those "crazy women" staging the play.
Her angry response:
"Those are the decent women N.G.O.s working in support of government
policies."
Matembe, a member
of parliament, also blamed the public for judging the play without
first reading the script. "They thought women were going to
strip naked on the stage and show their vaginas."
The consortium
that aimed to bring the play to Uganda was criticized for failing
to repackage the western-conceived production to reflect African
values. But Action Aid International Uganda country director, Amanda
Serumaga, argued the Vagina Monologues is meant to discuss
an unsettling issue in Ugandan society.
Besides, said
Mukasa, the play has already been performed in 76 countries including
the African states of Burkina Faso, Egypt and Kenya, where organizers
and performers were initially threatened and physically attacked.
The torrent
of negative reaction toward the play is ironic considering President
Yoweri Museveni’s government is largely regarded as liberal. His
administration has been praised for its openness in handling the
sensitive H.I.V./AIDS issue compared with other African countries,
a strategy that has seen Uganda’s H.I.V. prevalence decline by 18
percent from the early 1980’s to its current six percent rate, according
to United Nations figures.
Uganda has also
been proactive in catapulting women into positions of power: Betty
Bigombe, the chief negotiator between the government and L.R.A.
and former minister in charge of northern Uganda; Christine Aporu,
minister of refugees and disaster preparedness; and Grace Okello,
minister of state for Northern Uganda, among others.
But even these
appointments have drawn criticism. "As I’ve always argued,
most of it is window dressing," says Sylvia Tamale, dean of
the faculty of law at Makerere University in Kampala. "It is
for political expediency, meant to impress the international community.
There’s no real political will to substantively tackle issues of
inequality and discrimination on the basis of gender…"
Although it
took a hard line on the Vagina Monologues, the ruling party
has "treated with kid gloves" The Red Pepper, generally
considered a pornographic tabloid that regularly carries sexually
explicit photos of women. The publication has spurred public demonstrations,
court cases and warnings from ethics ministers, she charged.
"It’s open
to anyone of any age," said Tamale, and added it’s widely believed
Museveni’s brother, Lt. Gen. Salim Saleh, has connections to the
popular newspaper.
At the moment,
though, the play’s sponsors are more concerned about their own cause
than racy publications that have not been reigned in by government.
They are in the midst of seeking legal advice about their right
to stage the play but admit the government has moved on to other
pressing issues like next year’s elections.
Still, they
are unfazed by the media council’s decision.
"This is
not the end," Serumaga said. "The campaign must continue
until the violence stops."
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