Showing posts with label National Geographic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Geographic. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Buzz surrounds Bobi Wine: docko, presidential rerun

Bobi Wine: Presidential material?
VOA public domain photo via Wikimedia Commons

Podcast Snap Judgment talked to director Moses Bwayo in March about his Bobi Wine documentary, the first ever Oscar nominated film from Uganda, and Bobi Wine will run again for president of the East African nation.

I wrote in February 2024 about Bobi Wine: The People's President (2022) (IMDb) and Brooke Gladstone's interview with Wine and Bwayo for WNYC's On the Media. According to Snap Judgment, the documentary "received a ten minute standing ovation at its premier[e] at the Venice film festival." The film is being distributed by National Geographic and is streaming on platforms including Disney+.

Last week, Wine said he will run again for the presidency in Uganda in the quinquennial election in January 2026, and he believes that the Ugandan youth vote can push him to victory. "We cannot just give the election to General Museveni," Wine told The Guardian.

For a time it was thought that the six-term hegemony of President Yoweri Museveni would transfer to his son, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba. But Kainerugaba dropped out of the race late last year and endorsed his father—not a given (VOA). Museveni will turn 81 in September.

USAID cuts meanwhile have hit the Ugandan LGBTQ community hard. Museveni has been "intensifying [a] crackdown," The New York Times reported, since 2023 passage of laws threatening life imprisonment for same-sex relations; up to 10 years for attempt; and the death penalty for same-sex relations with minors or disabled persons. The Times explained:

The United States provides more than $970 million annually in development as well as humanitarian and security assistance to Uganda. In 2023, about $440 million was spent on health programs, followed by emergency relief, agriculture and education services, according to U.S. government data.

For years, the United States supported L.G.B.T.Q. groups in Uganda through U.S.A.I.D.-funded initiatives, offering H.I.V. treatment, legal training and resources for activism. Previous U.S. governments also condemned human rights violations against gay Ugandans, imposing trade and travel restrictions in response.

Oddly enough, Kainerugaba urged the Trump administration to restore aid for HIV treatment, according to the Times. Kainerugaba, who commands the military, had threatened Wine on social media. Wine himself has had a controverted record on LGBTQ rights.

Friday, February 23, 2024

'Gripping' Ugandan documentary makes Oscar cut

Uganda has its first ever Oscar-nominated film, a documentary about political persecution and daring resistance to the Museveni regime.

Bobi Wine: The People's President tells the story of musician Bobi Wine's transition from pop culture to political activist running for the presidency of Uganda against entrenched incumbent Yoweri Museveni. En route, Wine is arrested many times, brutally beaten, and effectively exiled from his homeland.

Here is the trailer.


For On the Media, Brooke Gladstone has a compelling interview with Wine himself and director Moses Bwayo.

In following Bobi Wine for the film, the film crew was itself in peril. If behind the scenes was as breathtaking as Bwayo described, I can't imagine how unnerving the end product must be. Wine briefly spoke on OTM of his torture by Ugandan authorities, and it's not easy to hear, before he himself stopped and said he could not talk it about it more.

It happens that my all-time favorite documentary to date is Call Me Kuchu (2012), which deals with the detestable persecution of the LGBTQ community in Uganda. Call Me Kuchu is hard to watch, but I come away from it every time thinking it should be required viewing for humanity: a lesson in immorality, the horror that results when the great commandment of Matthew 22:39 is disregarded. 

I note that it's not clear Wine himself, for all his persecution, quite gets the takeaway on the LGBTQ question. But he might have come around, and he's probably right that the Museveni regime leverages past transgressions against him.

Anyway, I am keen to see Bobi Wine, which is streaming in the United States on Hulu and Disney+, where the film is touted as "gripping." Fortunately, the film can be seen in Africa and even has been screened in Uganda. Wine told OTM that National Geographic has made the film available for streaming throughout the continent.

Shockingly, Wine told OTM that he is intent on returning to Uganda. Much as I would like to see change for Uganda—I've traveled there, and it's a magnificent country—I hope Wine takes to heart the lesson of Alexei Navalny and well considers his timing.

UPDATE, Mar. 4: I've since seen the film. Two thumbs up, and prayer for Uganda.