Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has criticised the newly crowned Miss World Africa for “wearing Indian hair”.
Tweeting a photo with fellow Ugandan Quinn Abenakyo shortly after her pageant win, he said “we must show African beauty in its natural form”.
Asked what Mr Museveni meant by “Indian hair”, his spokesman Don Wanyama told the BBC: “Just look at the photo and you will see the type of hair.
“It’s an unnatural wig, he was saying she should wear her natural hair.”
Many on social media have defended Miss Abenakyo’s choice to style her hair as she pleases, and have hit back at President Museveni’s comments about “Indian hair”.
Presidential spokesman Mr Wanyama would not be drawn on whether it was a reference to the hair’s texture or its presumed country of origin – India is one of the world’s largest suppliers of human hair for wigs.
‘No-one needs to define you’
Quinn Abenakyo told the BBC she agreed with the president about “not trying to copy what the Western world does”, but added:
“It’s 50/50 for me depending on occasion and how I feel. No-one needs to define how you wear your hair and what you do. If you are comfortable that is what matters.”
Miss Abenakyo said she was “the happiest girl on the planet” after her pageant victory. She is seen here smiling next to the president:
Some on Twitter took the view that it is wrong to police women’s personal choices about their own bodies and how they decide to present themselves:
Several other people supported the president, while others still drew attention to his own hairless pate:
Eurocentric beauty ideals
In recent years, black pageant contestants have increasingly spoken out against Eurocentric beauty standards which favour lighter skin and straighter hair textures.
Former Miss USA Deshauna Barber has been vocal about the colourism she faced in pageants andĀ says there is a need for “diversity of appearances and hair textures”.
Like her, Miss Jamaica 2017 has also competed at pageants with her natural hair.Ā Davina Bennett’s Miss Universe appearance won her praise and plenty of fans on the African continent and beyond.