In his early career, Fernandes worked a variety of jobs such as advertising distribution in Portugal, construction assistance in Spain, and management of Bar Manda Fama in
Luanda, Angola. Iris Angola, UNAIDS, and other groups pushed towards the revision of Angola's penal code to legalize homosexuality in the country and sought legal protections for sexual minorities, resulting in the adoption of a new penal code 2019. The new penal code legalized same sex sexual conduct and made discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation illegal; it was signed by Angola's president in 2020 and came into effect in 2021. Fernandes participated in a 2021 pride month celebration at the U.S. embassy in Luanda. The event, called "You Are Included", took place over Facebook live. It consisted of a discussion on LGBT+ issues with other Angolan activists including the transgender activist
Immani da Silva, Liria de Castro from Arquivo de Identidade Angolano, and Michel Kouakou from the UNAIDS organization. In 2022, Fernandes was interviewed on
RTP Africa to talk about Iris Angola and LGBT issues in Angola. The same year, Fernandes served as an interlocutor for an oral history project made by GALA Queer Archive and the Arquivo de Identidade Angolano. The project focused on Angolan queer activism with the goal of creating an archive of queer life in the country. According to Caio Simões de Araújo, a leader of the project, he was aware that Fernandes was working on a documentary about LGBTQI+ activism before his death. ==Views==