Sentamu has spoken on issues including young people, the family, slavery, and injustice and conflict abroad. In an early TV appearance in 1988 he joined, among others,
Ray Honeyford,
Ann Dummett and
Lurline Champagnie to discuss "Race and the classroom" on
After Dark. In November 2005 he sought re-discovery of English pride and cultural identity, stating that zeal for
multiculturalism had sometimes "seemed to imply, wrongly for me, 'let other cultures be allowed to express themselves but do not let the majority culture at all tell us its glories, its struggles, its joys, its pains'." In 2006 he claimed that the
BBC was frightened of criticising
Islam. In 2006, Sentamu featured prominently in the British press because of his comments on the treatment of detainees in
Guantanamo Bay Naval Base.
Poverty Sentamu regrets that many low-paid workers are not paid enough to lift them and their families out of
poverty. Sentamu believes that food poverty is causing
malnutrition in the UK. In 2013, he said that "last year more than 27,000 people were diagnosed as suffering from malnutrition in Leeds – not Lesotho, not Liberia, not
Lusaka but Leeds?" and feels these reports "disgrace us all, leaving a dark stain on our consciences".
Stop and search In 2000, Sentamu, then
Bishop of Stepney, was stopped by a
City of London Police officer near
St Paul's Cathedral. Sentamu claimed it was the eighth time he had been questioned by police in eight years, and that he was the only Church of England bishop to have been stopped by police in this way. In a 2010 debate in the
House of Lords, Sentamu was critical of the standards of "reasonable grounds to suspect" applied by police.
Robert Mugabe On 9 December 2007, during a live television interview with
Andrew Marr on
BBC One, Sentamu made a protest against
Zimbabwean president
Robert Mugabe. Sentamu took the white insert off his
clerical shirt and cut it up stating that: His protest followed criticism against Mugabe at the EU-Africa summit in
Lisbon. In December 2008, Sentamu again spoke out against Mugabe, saying "The time has come for Robert Mugabe to answer for his crimes against humanity, against his countrymen and women and for justice to be done". On 26 November 2017, Sentamu returned to
The Andrew Marr Show and kept his promise to reinstate his dog collar following Robert Mugabe's resignation earlier in the week. Marr presented him with an envelope containing the original cut up pieces of collar. Of it he said He then put on a new dog collar which he had brought with him. He also said it could be possible for Zimbabweans to forgive Mr Mugabe. "Mugabe needs to say at some point to Zimbabweans: 'Forgive me'. He's a very, very intelligent man and I think he is capable of doing it."
Financial crisis In September 2008, Sentamu and the Archbishop of Canterbury,
Rowan Williams, spoke out against opportunistic stock market trading. Sentamu compared those who practised
short selling of
HBOS shares, driving the share prices down, to "bank robbers".
Sexuality and marriage Sentamu, born in Uganda, said
laws being debated in Uganda which would impose the death penalty on homosexuals and on those supporting them were "victimising". He told the BBC that the proposed law "tends to confuse all of homosexual relationships with what you call aggravated stuff and that's the problem", but that the Anglican Communion was committed to recognising that gay people were valued by God. Previously, as area Bishop of Stepney, he was one of four English bishops who refused to sign the
Cambridge Accord, an attempt in 1999 to find agreement on affirming certain human rights of homosexuals, notwithstanding differences within the church on the morality of homosexual behaviour. In 2012 he stated his opposition to government plans to legalise
same-sex marriage in the United Kingdom, asserting that "Marriage is a relationship between a man and a woman, I don't think it is the role of the State to define what marriage is" and "We've seen dictators [redefine marriage] in different contexts and I don't want to redefine very clear social structures that have been in existence for a long time." At the same time, he expressed support for same-sex
civil partnerships. "They
civil partnerships] are in every respect in ethical terms an honourable contract of a committed relationship." In 2016, speaking to
Piers Morgan, Sentamu said that he would not call homosexuality a 'sin' and still supported civil unions while opposing same-sex marriage. “I support civil partnerships because I think that’s a matter of equality, and a matter of fairness, but for me, it was wrong for the Government to try to redefine the nature of marriage" he said. In 2017, Sentamu spoke out in favour of a motion at
General Synod to call for the government to ban the use of
conversion therapy, a controversial practice meant to change a person's sexual orientation. At the same session of General Synod, Sentamu supported a motion to offer "welcome and affirmation" for transgender persons as members of the Church of England. Commenting on
Prince William and
Catherine Middleton's decision to
live together before their wedding, Sentamu said that the couple's public commitment to live their lives together today would be more important than their past. He said that he had conducted wedding services for "many cohabiting couples" during his time as a vicar in south London, and said, "We are living at a time where some people, as my daughter used to say, want to test whether the milk is good before they buy the cow." He also said, "For some people that's where their journeys are. But what is important, actually, is not to simply look at the past because they are going to be standing in the Abbey taking these wonderful vows: 'for better for worse; for richer for poorer; in sickness and in health; till death us do part.'"
National Trust Egg Hunt In 2017 he criticised the
National Trust for "airbrushing out" religion from the National Trust Egg Hunt. ==Other activities==