Victor Juliet Mukasa is a Ugandan human rights activist and former chairman of the Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG). Mukasa identifies as a trans-lesbian and is currently an executive director at Kuchu Diaspora Alliance-USA.

Life

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Mukasa was assigned female at birth and raised in a conservative Catholic family. Growing up, he preferred dressing like a tomboy. Gradually, his mother became accommodating to his style of dressing but his father thought of him as stubborn and sometimes punished for his behavior.[1]

He studied at boarding schools and attended Uganda Institute of Bankers.[2]

Uganda was hostile to the LGBT community and Mukasa initially felt he had to follow the mainstream norm, he attended churches but ended discouraged when one performed a form of exorcism on him.[3] He soon began to express himself but faced discrimination as a result. Mukasa became active in the LGBT movement in East Africa, he co-founded SMUG and helped launch other groups including Freedom and Roam Uganda and East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Project.[4]

In 2005, local police raided Victor's home without a search warrant and confiscated LGBT related documents. Victor and a fellow activist, Yvonne Oyoo were arrested and detained by the police. At the time of the raid, the mainstream press in Uganda, the government and many AIDS activists articulated homophobic viewpoints. After his release, he fled to South Africa for a brief period. In 2007, he returned to Uganda and held a press conference on LGBT rights supported by individuals who covered their faces with masks. Victor unexpectedly filed an 'Application for enforcement of rights guaranteed in the Bill of Rights' challenging his and Yvonne's detention and police abuse.[5] In December 2008, a judgement from the High Court decided that Uganda's human rights laws extends to all citizens including the LGBT community.[6]

He went on exile to South Africa where he worked as a program associate at the Cape town office of International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission.

References

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  1. ^ Underhill, Glynnis (May 13, 2011). "The tide of intolerance must turn". Mail & Guardian.
  2. ^ "Lesbian life in Africa is not so gay - African Woman and Child Feature Service". awcfs.org. Retrieved 2017-03-26.
  3. ^ "People - African Homosexuality". africanhomosexuality.weebly.com. Retrieved 2017-03-26.
  4. ^ Thoreson, Ryan R. (2014). Transnational LGBT activism : working for sexual rights worldwide. Univ Of Minnesota Press. pp. 64–65. ISBN 9780816692743.
  5. ^ Ekine, Sokari. "'Maroon the gays': Ugandans facing a barrage of discrimination." New Internationalist, Jan.–Feb. 2008, p. 33.
  6. ^ Frank, Liz. "Moving towards all human rights for all!" Sister Namibia, vol. 21, no. 1, 2009, p. 24+