Van Reenen has likened legal discrimination against LGBT people in Namibia to discrimination against non-white people that occurred under apartheid. They have frequently criticised the Government of Namibia for permitting what they consider to be "state-sanctioned homophobia". Van Reenen considers the
Constitution of Namibia to enshrine rights for LGBT people within article eight, which guarantees respect for all Namibians, regardless of sex or gender, and has accused politicians of eroding the country's status as a constitutional democracy by ignoring this and article three, which prohibits apartheid ideology. In 2023, Van Reenen publicly criticised the
Popular Democratic Movement and the
All People's Party for advocating for, or remaining silent about, proposed homophobic laws, despite having campaigned during the
2019 general election as "champions" of the LGBT community. This followed comments by the APP's general secretary, Vincent Kanyetu, who called same-sex marriage "taboo" and "an abomination". Van Reenen has also criticised the role of church leaders in spreading homophobia in Namibia, following an attack on a transgender woman in Walvis Bay in 2024. Van Reenen has called for the
decolonialisation of Namibian ideas and views about LGBT people. They have criticised politicians who have stated that homosexuality is a Western import, and instead considers homophobia in Namibia to stem from Western influence during the colonial period.
Equal Namibia Following his return to Namibia, van Reenen became a noted LGBT rights activist in the country. In March 2021, they co-founded Equal Namibia in response to the plight of Namibian citizen Phillip Lühl and his Mexican husband, Guillermo Delgado, whose daughters Paula and Maya, who were born via a surrogate in South Africa, had been denied Namibian citizenship and therefore prohibited from entering the country. In May 2021, Paula and Maya were issued travel documents, allowing them to enter Namibia, and in October 2021, they were both granted Namibian citizenship. Van Reenen subsequently shared safety advice for LGBT Namibians, including calling for them to delete social media apps such as
Grindr due to concerns about anti-LGBT campaigners using such apps to harass and blackmail gay Namibians. Through Equal Namibia, van Reenen has also organised events throughout the country to mark
Pride Month. In December 2021, they commemorated Namibia's first LGBT historic landmark, a rainbow sidewalk outside of the
Namibia Breweries building in central Windhoek. They have also promoted the rights and plights of LGBT people in Namibia abroad, including at
Berlin Pride in 2022. == References ==