Her sexually explicit protests have been likened to pornography, but Ugandan activist and writer Stella Nyanzi says sex is the most effective—and entertaining—way to shake people out of their apathy.
“I learnt very early that there are some topics in Uganda that are tiring and… the only way to capture attention is to introduce some shock value,” the 47-year-old told AFP in an interview in Kampala.
And plenty of people have been shocked by Nyanzi’s methods, which range from calling President Yoweri Museveni “a pair of buttocks” to baring her breasts during a court hearing.
But the former university researcher, who holds a doctorate on sexuality in Africa and boasts nearly 300,000 followers on Facebook, is unrepentant.
“We don’t see or pretend we don’t see what’s happening in society, especially the excesses and the violations” under Museveni’s decades-long authoritarian rule, she said.
“To say to a violent, militant, brutal regime that you are violent, stop, does not (have) as much impact as to say… fuck the rapist, militant penis of the dictatorship.”
She has paid a high price of her willingness to challenge authority – imprisoned for “cyber-harassment” in 2019 after she posted a profane poem on Facebook about Museveni and suffering a miscarriage after being beaten in jail.
Although she insists that her losses are “not worth writing home about,” grief is at the heart of her quest to bring down Museveni.
After losing her parents in quick succession six years ago – unable to find life-saving medicines or get an ambulance in time – Nyanzi turned to humor, in part to escape the overwhelming sadness that engulfed her.
In her hands however, humor has also become a weapon to channel her rage against a government she blames for the deaths of her parents and thousands of Ugandans who lack access to reliable health care and other public services.
A polarizing figure, Nyanzi has drawn scorn from religious conservatives, and even from some feminists, who criticise her relentless focus on sex.
“I am tired of feminists telling me how I am wrong and how I can’t do this and how this is anti-feminist,” she said.
“Just allow me to be free, to do my own thinking and my own protest,” she said, pointing out that her no-holds-barred approach to sexuality is based in pre-Christian Ugandan culture and aimed at empowering women by encouraging them to discuss taboo subjects.
Her tactics also borrow from a political tradition of “radical rudeness,” which has its roots in the country’s anti-colonial struggle.
And while her blistering online diatribes comparing Museveni’s regime to parasitic pubic lice have earned her the tag of “Uganda’s rudest woman,” the strategy has also made her a social media star outside the country.
“What I am doing is not erotica and it’s not pornography. It’s rage and the expression of rage using my body.”