Nigeria’s Repressed LGBTQ Occasion Folks Let ‘True Self’ Out At Lagos Ball

Judges maintain up their scores ranking performers at a LGBTQ ball in Lagos


Leslie FAUVEL

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Performers strutted their stuff onstage at an LGBTQ neighborhood dance occasion in Nigeria’s Lagos, publicly celebrating their identities in a rustic the place being homosexual might land you in jail.

To the tune of Afrobeats stars like Ayra Starr and pop stalwarts like Beyonce, a parade of sequin-wearing, wig-clad, neo-goth performers danced, spun and posed for the jury, egged on by a raucous crowd.

Among the many attendees was Kim, a 27-year-old transgender girl who got here to Lagos six months in the past after struggling bodily violence and harassment in her central Nigerian city.

“Nigeria is hard on queer individuals however the positivity, simply holding on to what we’ve — and that is our true self — it is highly effective right here,” Kim informed AFP.

Nigeria’s LGBTQ neighborhood faces repressive legal guidelines, widespread discrimination and violence


Yasmine CANGA-VALLES

Like Kim, many within the ballroom have been in search of a protected house to specific themselves within the face of repressive legal guidelines and hostility in Africa’s most populous nation.

Being homosexual in Nigeria — a extremely non secular nation divided right into a predominantly Muslim north and largely Christian south — is punishable by 10 to 14 years of jail underneath a regulation handed in 2014.

Although the regulation isn’t utilized, it has legitimised widespread intimidation and violence towards the LGBTQ neighborhood.

Regardless of this discrimination, Nigeria has had a tradition of LGBTQ balls for round 20 years.

Ayo Lawson, who helped placed on the occasion, mentioned her first expertise of a ballroom was “life altering”, including that the organisers needed “to only give individuals a protected house the place they are often free”.

“Folks underestimate how privileged it’s to have the ability to maintain your girlfriend’s hand, you already know, maintain your boyfriend’s hand, and kiss them within the eating places and stuff like that. So it is tough however we’re all the time completely satisfied to have this little pocket of security,” mentioned Lawson, who identifies as lesbian.

The Saturday night time ball, held in a hangar in suburban Lagos, marked the beginning of Pleasure Month, an annual June celebration of LGBTQ rights world wide.

Uche paid tribute to Fola, the primary trans girl on the Lagos Trend Week catwalk


Yasmine CANGA-VALLES

It was held in reminiscence of Fola Francis, the primary transgender girl to have walked the catwalk at Lagos Trend Week, who died in an accident in December, simply shy of her thirtieth birthday.

“I had the privilege of figuring out Fola in two individuals, as a result of I say I knew Fola earlier than she transitioned,” designer, inventive and artwork director Uche informed AFP.

Sporting a skinny moustache, lengthy braids and a sequined jumpsuit, Uche walked on stage to carry out Coldplay’s “O Fly On” as a tribute to the trailblazing activist, whose loss of life he referred to as “completely devastating.”

On the jury judging Uche’s efficiency that night time was Ashley Okoli, already an icon for Nigeria’s LGBTQ neighborhood at 26 years outdated.

Confidently striding the stage in black leather-based and stiletto heels, a violet fringe framing eyes liberally ringed with kohl mascara, the artist mentioned they appreciated the braveness of the night time’s performers.

“I am right here to truly choose individuals which are nonetheless type of closeted,” Okoli informed AFP, including that it took “lots of guts” to rise up on stage.

Jury Ashley Okoli mentioned takes “lots of guts” for LGBTQ Nigerians to get on stage


Leslie FAUVEL

Regardless of the occasion environment, some on the occasion struggled to overlook the hardships which lingered outdoors the ballroom.

Others, reassured by the camaraderie and caring, struck a extra hopeful observe.

“We’re at a celebration the place lots of trans ladies right here, lots of queer non-binary individuals, haven’t got properties,” mentioned 27-year-old Aaron, who makes use of the pronoun they.

“However the resilience is all the time nonetheless in us and we hold pushing.”

Uche agreed: “I feel Nigerians are very resilient individuals and we discover house wherever. We discover the sweetness within the crack.”

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