Uganda blocks screening of Genocide movies
Tuesday, April 16, 2019
Posters of movies u2018100 Daysu2019 and u2018Shake Hands with the Devilu2019 on the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. Net photos.

Authorities in Uganda recently blocked the screening of films on the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda which were to be shown in the city earlier this month, The New Times has learnt.

The films ‘100 Days’, a movie which takes viewers through events of what happened during the Genocide, and ‘Shake Hands with the Devil,’ were set for screening on April 2 and April 9, but the Media Council of Uganda wrote to organisers demanding the films be classified and cleared for screening.

They were to be screened by African Movie Night Kampala.

But the screening did not happen after Media Council of Uganda informed the organsisers that they needed to secure necessary clearance first.

A April 1, 2019 letter states that: "It has come to the attention of the Media Council that your film ‘‘100 DAYS’’ is set to be screened at the National Theatre, at 7:30 on Tuesday April 2nd, 2019 to different audiences and that you have been putting out advertising material of the same without having them classified as required by the law.”

"The purpose of this letter, therefore, is to remind you to have your film classified to obtain the necessary clearance ahead of the scheduled premiere date so as to avoid any inconveniences.”

The organisers were further directed not to proceed with the planned screening unless and until classification and clearance was obtained from the Council.

African Movie Night Kampala Curator Moses Serugo told The New Times that the classification of a non-Ugandan film costs $150 (about 600,000 Ugandan Shilling, or, about Rwf133,000).

"We were scheduled to screen 100 Days on Tuesday April 2 and 9 with permission from the producer Eric Kabera to commemorate #Kwibuka25.”

Asked what is the standard regarding the cost of screening such movies in Kampala, Serugo said that they have "engaged the Media Council previously” in regards to African Movie Night Kampala’s vision of making cinema or films from or about Africa accessible to audiences.

"These films already have a guaranteed audience,” he said.

The timing of the letter was unusual, Serugo said.

"The timing was rather unusual, sending the letter a day to the screening of 100 Days but yes, all our screenings are affected.

The decision is also surprising especially in regards to "100 Days” which premiered in Kampala in 2002 so it’s not that it was being shown to the public for the first time.”

editor@newtimesrwanda.com