Activists & filmmakers unite in Lagos for Africa Human Rights Film Festival

The Africa International Human Rights Film Festival (AIHRFF) is set to convene its fourth annual gathering in Lagos, Nigeria, from December 8 to 10, 2025.

Operating under the powerful theme “Using Films to Bridge Divides,” the three-day event aims to be a crucial continental convergence, exposing systemic global patterns of human rights abuses while galvanising concerted action against oppression, police brutality, and rising authoritarianism across the world.

The three-day event will feature Keynote Addresses, Film Screenings, Panel Sessions, Special Appearances, Master Classes, and a Closing Ceremony.

The festival activities will span three days across two primary locations:

Monday, December 8 & Tuesday, December 9, 2025:

Venue 1 (Opening Activities & Panel Sessions): 1A, Adekunle Owobiyi Close, Opposite Government Quarters Estate, Ogba Phase II, Lagos State. These sessions will feature frontline activists, filmmakers, journalists, regulators, and policymakers.

Venue 2 (Film Screenings): Freedom Park, Lagos, from 3:00 PM to 7:00 PM on both days.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025 (Master Classes & Closeout Session):

Venue: The British Council, 20 Thompson Avenue, Falomo, Ikoyi, Lagos.

Comrade Kehinde Adegboyega, Founder and Festival Director of AIHRFF, described the event as the biggest convergence on the continent for human rights activists, filmmakers, and stakeholders who are dedicated to using their skills and voices to amplify issues of global abuse.

The abuses highlighted by the festival include, but are not limited to: police brutality, official corruption, abuse of office, the weaponisation of poverty and social amenities, Gender-Based Violence, the repression of freedom of expression, criminalization of peaceful protests, censorship of the free press, and rising authoritarianism.

Adegboyega emphasised the unique role of Human Rights films, stating, “Unlike conventional filmmaking, the creators of Human Rights films are activists and development advocates who are helping to expose and illuminate dark places where unfathomable human rights abuses are taking place.”

He noted that audio-visual storytelling is critical for justice, as it provides “the most reliable and vivid way to document human rights abuses. It is self-evident, and incontrovertible.” AIHRFF’s Master Classes are designed to expand the ecosystem of civil and rights advocates by passing down this vital knowledge to existing practitioners, enthusiasts, and students. The films contribute significantly to evidence collection and the promotion of prosecutorial justice against perpetrators.

The announcement was made via a statement authored and released by Shakirudeen Bankole, the Communications and Strategy Lead for the Human Rights Journalists Network (HRJN), the umbrella body for the Africa International Human Rights Film Festival.

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