First: LGBTQIA Refugees in Kenyan Safe Houses

A narrative picture story that explores an important social, economic, or political issue.

Caption
Slide 5 of 11
September 28, 2023
NAIROBI, KENYA, 28 SEPTEMBER 2023: Lady Tina, in the wig, and Pretty Peter are trans women who fled harsh anti LGBT laws in Uganda and now live in a safe house in Nairobi, Kenya. They live with other trans woman and keeps a low profile, only dressing as women within the privacy of the house and only very occasionally going out like that to a sympathetic bar. Both Pretty and Tina were jailed for their trans lifestyle and experienced sexual assault in prison, Lady Tina is waiting to be resettled in Toronto, Canada and Pretty is still waiting for a decision. Both were betrayed by a fellow trans woman who informed on them to the Ugandan authorities, they were arrested and imprisoned but later released. Ironically, the person who betrayed them was the first gay person to be arrested under Uganda's draconian new anti LGBT laws and is now in prison serving a very long term.

    LGBTQIA Refugees in Kenyan Safe Houses

    Uganda officially criminalized same sex conduct for those convicted of “aggravated homosexuality,” in May 2023. The Anti-Homosexuality Act of 2023 violates multiple fundamental rights guaranteed under Uganda’s constitution and breaks commitments made by the government as a signatory to a number of international human rights agreements. Uganda’s penal code already punishes same-sex conduct with life imprisonment but the new law creates new crimes such as the vaguely worded “promotion of homosexuality” and introduces the death penalty for several acts considered as “aggravated homosexuality.” It also increases the prison sentence for attempted same-sex conduct to 10 years. Anyone advocating for the rights of LGBT people, including representatives of human rights organizations or those providing financial support to organizations that do so, could face up to 20 years’ imprisonment for the “promotion of homosexuality.”As a result of these harsh measures, many LGBT people have been forced to flee Uganda and many are now in fragile safe houses in Kenya, attempting to put shattered lives back together with minimum resources. Kenya is not an LGBT friendly country, and it is necessary for LGBT people to live out of the spotlight for their own safety. This is a series of photographs that attempts to show some of what that looks like and how people who choose to live true to their nature and seek love within same-sex relationships are persecuted for something the rest of the world takes entirely for granted.

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