When she was being acquitted of cyber harassment last week, Nyanzi collapsed as Uganda Prisons Service officials battled with her supporters who were blocking her forceful return to prison to formally sign out of Luzira prison.
Nyanzi has widely published on themes of gender and sexualities, cultural development, health, and law. Oxfam Novib/PEN International Award is given to writers and journalists annually in recognition of their significant contribution to freedom of expression despite the danger to their own lives.
When Kahyana who is also a senior literature lecturer at Makerere read to Nyanzi the speech by Carles Torner, the director of PEN International that was sent in on Wednesday, February 26, she broke down, reminiscing her life in the cells.
The teary Nyanzi kept on seeking solace from her daughter Barack. She said; “When Danson was in Luzira to break the news to me about the award, I remember I was seated on the floor and he was telling me I was given an award on an empty chair.”
According to Nyanzi, she was supposed to write her acceptance speech but every time she wrote, the chits got stolen and others confiscated by the prison authorities.
“I celebrate Oxfam Novib and PEN International for nominating and awarding me this honourable award. Who am I to receive The Freedom to Write Award of 2020? I am a convicted prisoner who writes graffiti on prison walls, writes poems to be sneaked out of prison gates, and writes an award speech denied permission by the prison leadership. I am deeply grateful for the award,” reads Nyanzi’s award acceptance speech.
Isaac Ssemakadde, said representing Nyanzi was his, “greatest honor of being a lawyer.” He said they had opened a website “Be Bold like Nyanzi” in celebration of her stand against injustice.
Nyanzi’s life in prison
Nyanzi has despite our efforts to secure her interview on her life in prison declined on grounds that she is still unstable as she is still on treatment and recovering from prison trauma. Nevertheless, Nyanzi shared some of the memories including when she was put in solitary confinement.
She says she was denied visitors in prison for extended periods and some of her regular visitors were banned from returning to the maximum-security prison, where she was confined for nearly 15 months.
The poem was published on her Facebook page, in 2017. While in prison, Nyanzi says, “I was been beaten, punched, kicked and bruised by prison staff. My remission was reduced to ten days. I was even locked up in solitary confinement while handcuffed and nude for five days. And yet I kept on writing most nights I spent in this prison.”
She says she used the handcuffs binding her hands together to scratch huge indelible writings into the three walls of the scary cell of solitary confinement in the “condemned” section of Luzira Women Prison.
These graffiti read, “YOU CAN HANDCUFF MY BODY BUT YOU WILL NEVER HANDCUFF MY SPIRIT – STELLA NYANZI” “LIBERTY WITHOUT FREEDOM IS STILL CAPTIVITY – STELLA NYANZI” and “SOY LIBRE – STELLA NYANZI.”
