When Elephants Fight, the Grass Suffers: Interview with Gay Rights Activist Pepe Julian Onziema
Life must go on. It’s all we have. If we can still breathe, then there’s a lot we can still achieve. Yes, the laws are strict, but the constitution itself provides for me to be in this country — to live in this country as a Ugandan. The part of me that this law is trying to criminalize, well, the law is abusing the constitution. I have a right to life. I have a right to health. I am not my sexuality, I am a human being. My sexuality, my identity, are part of me being human.
Read the full interview with Pepe Julian Onziema, one of the leading LGBT rights activists in Kampala, Uganda. He is working to fight the recently passed Anti-Homosexuality Act. He is the programs director at the gay rights organization Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG) and was the 2012 recipient of a Clinton Global Citizen Award for his advocacy work.
The interview is conducted by Pulitzer Center grantee Daniella Zalcman and is part of her project: Kuchus in Uganda