Lupita Nyongâo speaks of family ordeal and condemns âchillingâ Kenya crackdown
Actress Lupita Nyongâo has condemned the Kenyan authoritiesâ crackdown on huge anti-tax protests that began in June.
Demonstrators were met with police brutality, according to rights groups, with dozens of people killed and numerous others abducted.
Nyongâo, whose father was jailed and tortured under a former president, Daniel arap Moi, told the BBC: âIt is chilling to know that this government is resorting to tactics that I had thought had been left in the past.â
In response, the government said it was not possible to compare two âvery differentâ administrations and that it âregrets any death that occurredâ.
But Nyongâo, an Oscar winner who grew up in Kenya but now lives in the US, said the governmentâs handling of the protests was âupsettingâ.
âThe more things change. the more they stay the same⊠I donât know how this story ends,â said Nyongâo, who has starred in Hollywood hits like 12 Years a Slave and Black Panther, during an interview about her new podcast.
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Her father, Anyangâ Nyongâo, is currently a county governor in Kenya and acting leader of the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM), one of the countryâs main political parties.
The governing United Democratic Alliance (UDA) brought ODM politicians into the government in July, as part of a series of measures aimed at placating the protesters.
In the 1980s, Anyangâ Nyongâo, a political science professor at the time, was among a group of academics who organised against Moiâs regime.
Moi, in office from 1978 to 2002, ruled Kenya with an iron fist and ruthlessly suppressed his political opponents.
After Lupita Nyongâoâs uncle, also an activist, disappeared, the family fled to Mexico. Her uncleâs body has never been found, but according to local reports, the family believes he was pushed off a boat.
âI am deeply grateful for the younger people who are on the front lines fighting for a different Kenya,â Lupita Nyongâo said of this generationâs protesters.
Isaac Mwaura, spokesperson for the current Kenyan government, told the BBC that the authorities were âvery co-operative with the protesters and acceded to the demands, including the president not assenting to the finance billâ. It was controversial tax measures in that bill that sparked the trouble.
As for reports that people were killed during the demonstrations, Mwaura said: âOnly police statistics are official. The government regrets any death that occurred during the protests and anyone who may have caused such will be held responsible following the rule of law.â
Nyongâo detailed her fatherâs ordeal in the latest episode of her storytelling podcast, Mind Your Own.
In it, Nyongâo and other African contributors tell entertaining real-life tales in order to explore what it means to be from the continent.
So far in the series, accounts have hailed from Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Rwanda and the diaspora.
Nyongâo tells her dadâs story in an episode named The Freedom Fathers â the only one so far where politics and oppression are mentioned.
This is intentional â the actress said she wanted to focus on âquirkyâ, âpeculiarâ tales rather than well-trodden subjects such as conflict, disaster and poverty.
âI think that all too often we can be narrow about our idea of what is African⊠I wanted to stay away from the hot button issues that are in the news, that are making it across the globe, because those already exist,â she said.
âWhat are the stories that we donât know about â an ordinary person going through an extraordinary situation?â
Although Mind Your Own was produced by American company Snap Studios, numerous African creatives were hired to work behind the scenes.
For example, the podcastâs cover art was made by Mateus Sithole, an artist Nyongâo met in Mozambique, while Nigerian-American musician Sandra Lawson-Ndu did the theme song.
âI really wanted to have as many African hands touch this project as possible. I wanted to send a message, a clear message⊠this is by and for Africans, without it being exclusionary of anybody else,â Nyongâo said.
However, she acknowledges that it is not possible to encapsulate the entire continent, comprising 54 countries, in one podcast.
âThereâs absolutely no way that I would task myself in trying to give the ultimate or comprehensive thesis of Africa â thatâs crazy!â she said.
âAfrica is going to be as as malleable and as changeable as the people who come from there.
âSo weâre never going to be done telling our own stories.â
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