Kenyan senator targeted by online threats after period poverty protest

Gloria Orwoba attended a senate meeting in a suit stained with red dye as part of her campaign for free access to menstrual products

A Kenyan politician has become the subject of a vicious online hate campaign after she protested against period poverty by sitting through a senate meeting in clothing stained with fake menstrual blood.

Senator Gloria Orwoba was asked to leave halfway through the session after her fellow parliamentarians requested the speaker eject her for supposedly violating the house’s “dress code”.

Orwoba, the nominated senate leader, is campaigning for free sanitary towel provision and is planning to introduce a bill in the coming months.

She says well-intentioned female colleagues rushed to help her “cover up” when she arrived at the parliament buildings in Nairobi in a stained white trouser suit.

“I think for all of them, it was in good faith,” she said. “But I also think it’s because the first thing that we have been taught is that periods are dirty and shouldn’t be seen.”

The incident, which she says she didn’t expect to reach beyond the Senate, prompted debate about period stigma and access to menstrual products. A number of women, as well as rights and menstrual health organisations, rallied behind Orwoba for her “bold” and “powerful advocacy” for girls from disadvantaged backgrounds.

One user tweeted: “If this makes you uncomfortable, it’s a mission accomplished. It’s supposed to sting like that until we have free sanitary towels for girls.” The advocacy group Global Citizen Africa also tweeted support, saying: “Breaking the period stigma is crucial to ending period poverty.”

But some labeled her actions “shameful” or dismissed them as “theatrics”. As well as online messages questioning her credentials as a leader, Orwoba was targeted by severe cyberbullying and threats of sexual violence, and said she is thinking about taking a social media break “until temperatures come down”.

Kenya has seen extreme incidents of period shaming. In 2019, a 14-year-old girl killed herself after a teacher reportedly shamed her when she stained her uniform on her first period. Stigma pushes many girls to skip school when menstruating.

Kenya scrapped taxes on period products in 2004 and in 2017 introduced a law requiring the government to provide them free to schoolgirls. However, due to an insufficient budget and corruption in distribution channels, only a small percentage of girls were assisted through the programme.

Orwoba says that while the law exists, budgets and procurement need to be revised to increase local production and meet girls’ needs.

Ministry of Health figures from 2020 suggest that only about 65% of women and girls in urban areas, and 46% in rural areas have access to disposable menstrual pads.

More than half of women and girls in Kenya cannot afford monthly menstrual products, with almost 20% turning to homemade options such as toilet paper or cloth. Inflation has seen the cost of pads nearly double this year, putting feminine hygiene products further out of reach. A petition calling for lowered prices – launched by Dial a pad, an NGO promoting access to feminine hygiene products in Africa – has more than 4,000 signatures.

Faith Mutindi, the co-founder of Dial a pad, said: “Women are already struggling to get this commodity. Now that the price has doubled, you can imagine what kind of struggles and vices, like transactional sex, it opens these girls up to.”

Orwoba stands by her stunt, saying that to bring change, “it is important to dare to be shameless”. But being on the frontline of the backlash, she said, showed her that there is a lot more to be done to eradicate stigma.

“The biggest impact is that we got men talking about periods – and that breaks cultural barriers to some level,” she said. “Period shaming starts with the man and the boy, because they have been brought up to believe that if a woman happens to have a stain, it’s an appropriate response to laugh at, or castigate her – and then the woman has been taught that they need to go into hiding. That’s the unlearning that we need to do.”

Contributor

Caroline Kimeu in Nairobi

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Kenyan schoolgirl, 14, kills herself after alleged period shaming by teacher
Teenager who had her first period during school lesson was reportedly branded ‘dirty’ and expelled from classroom

Ginger Hervey in Nairobi

13, Sep, 2019 @8:00 AM

Article image
‘Me and my menopause’: a view from women around the world
Millions of women are being let down by lack of support during and after menopause. We asked six, from Brazil to Bangladesh, to share their stories of fighting stigma, dealing with symptoms and supporting others

Guardian writers

07, Feb, 2024 @8:50 AM

Article image
‘It’s just you – and memories’: Kenyan rape survivors find help hard to find
Tracey Doyin took to TikTok after she experienced the official indifference and lack of support faced by sexual assault victims

Caroline Kimeu in Nairobi

21, Jun, 2023 @6:00 AM

Article image
As social media grows in Kenya, so does the disturbing and toxic ‘manosphere’ | Caroline Kimeu
Boys and young men are increasingly being drawn into online forums that denigrate, objectify and ‘slut-shame’ women. How can we effectively address it?

Caroline Kimeu

02, Oct, 2023 @5:00 AM

Article image
‘Dark Valentine’ day in Kenya, as nationwide vigils mark grim toll of murdered women and girls
At least 16 women are thought to have been killed by their partners already this year. Families, survivors and activists are demanding justice for victims and action to end femicide

Caroline Kimeu in Nairobi

14, Feb, 2024 @2:22 PM

Article image
Three arrested in Kenya as backlash grows over period strip-search
Police take action as activists, politicians and the company involved all condemn tactics used by managers investigating who put sanitary towel in wrong bin

Caroline Kimeu

10, Jul, 2023 @4:01 PM

Article image
‘This is a real look into our lives’: the Maasai women photographing their people
Two Maasai photographers chronicle the daily challenges facing pastoralist women as the climate crisis increases their burden of care, and food, fuel and water become scarcer

Caroline Kimeu in Amboseli

02, Jan, 2024 @6:00 AM

Article image
Campaigners allege ‘biopiracy’ over export of Kenyan baobabs
Foreign contractors say they are saving the trees, which can live for thousands of years, but one farmer who sold his tree says he feels exploited

Caroline Kimeu in Kilifi

24, Oct, 2022 @6:30 AM

Article image
‘When we plant, they come’: thirsty elephants pose new problem for drought-hit Kenyan farmers
People in Taita-Taveta county have had to find ingenious ways of keeping wildlife at bay as competition for resources increases

Peter Muiruri in Marungu

27, Oct, 2022 @6:45 AM

Article image
Kenyan girls get on their bikes in pursuit of an education | Robert Kibet
A scheme that provides bicycles to children who would otherwise face long journeys to school is enabling kids to spend more time learning

Robert Kibet in Kakamega

24, Jun, 2016 @8:00 AM