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Jamaica: I failed Oshane Gordon. I will not fail Dwayne Jones.

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This commentary appeared previously in Dadland Shut Up.

Dwayne Jones in his casket

Dwayne Jones in his casket

In the early morning on August 18, 2011, armed thugs barged into the small home that 16 year-old Oshane Gordon shared with his mother in the resort town of Montego Bay, Jamaica. As Oshane tried to flee through a window, the men chopped on his foot.

When they caught him, they finished him off with several more blows from their machetes. The men then went back for Oshane’s mom and chopped her up as well. But thankfully she survived. The reason given for this brutal assault was Oshane’s “questionable relations with another man.”

In 2011, I swore in Oshane’s memory that no other Jamaican child would pay the price for Jamaica’s savage homophobia. I naïvely thought that by alerting Jamaicans to the senseless loss of life caused by irrational fear of gays that our innate sense of humanity would kick in and we would rise up in one voice and call for a halt to this brutality.

I was wrong. I failed Oshane’s memory.

Another Jamaican teenager was gruesomely killed by a mob as a result. Below is the August 24, 2013 funeral photo of Dwayne Jones, a 16 year-old teenager who was also from Montego Bay.

Dwayne was buried on the same day that homophobic Jamaican reggae singer, Queen Ifrica, was prevented from performing at a concert in Toronto that was partially funded by Canadian taxpayers, some of whom are gay.  Ifrica thinks her freedom of speech was unjustly curtailed.

I look at Dwayne’s lifeless body and I fail to see how she has been harmed. She lost some money; Dwayne lost her life.

Like Oshane Gordon, Dwayne Jones was killed for being different. Dwayne was biologically male but identified as female. Dwayne is seen here lying in her casket wearing a masculine suit because that is how society would like to remember her in death. But, her last words were “I am a girl!”

That was before a mob set-upon Dwayne at a street-dance and shot and stabbed her to death after a female member of Dwayne’s church pointed out her biological gender to the bloodthirsty mob. When the savages completed their gruesome act of murder, they dumped Dwayne’s body in nearby bushes and went right on dancing. The police discovered her body the next morning.

Appeal To International Community: Tourist Dollars & Investments

Jamaican mob barricades five allegedly gay men in their house. (Photo from video)

Jamaican mob barricades five allegedly gay men in their house. (Photo from video)

This time around, I will be taking a more strident approach to ensure that this type of murder of innocent persons ceases. Appeals to the Jamaican government to aggressively promote and protect the human rights of LGBT citizens have largely fallen on deaf ears. And on August 22, just two days before Dwayne’s funeral, we saw the sixth anti-gay mob attack in a month where police had to rescue five gay men who had been barricaded in their home by a community intent on getting rid of them. The government just will not challenge the powerful fundamentalist churches whose members include the woman who outed Dwayne to his killers.

Arguments based on human rights and public health issues are simply irrelevant as the government is more concerned about votes. And the churches promise a lot of them. However, economic arguments resonate with this government.

I will be appealing to the international community to consider if they should continue rewarding Jamaica with financial support (whether through tourist dollars or investments) while vulnerable members of the LGBT community are brutalized on an almost daily basis. In the meantime, the Jamaican government does precious little.

No more Oshanes and Dwaynes

My platform will now be: NO MORE OSHANES AND DWAYNES. Jamaica either halts the senseless attacks on the rights of LGBT, or I will use my international profile to call on the global community to take action. In this regard, I will even more aggressively highlight the attacks on LGBT Jamaicans since other LGBT groups on the island seem to think that downplaying these attacks will get the government to actually engage in fruitful dialogue. We saw that policy fail miserably with Oshane. We must not do the same for Dwayne.

I. WILL. NOT. FAIL. DWAYNE.

 



Another anti-gay mob attacks in Jamaica. Why??

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In Old Harbour, Jamaica, crowd tells news reporter that gays must go away. (Click image for the video on YouTube.)

In Old Harbour, Jamaica, crowd on Aug. 26 tells news reporter that gays must go someplace else. (Click image for the video on YouTube.)

LATEST HOMOPHOBIC ATTACK

Why such a series of anti-gay attacks in Jamaica?

Is it a populist homophobic response to human rights activists’ challenges to the country’s anti-sodomy law, to TV stations’ prohibition on ads urging tolerance for LGBT people, and the controversies over anti-gay singer Queen Ifrica?

How much blame should be assigned to the extreme language of anti-gay conservative Christian leaders?

If Jamaican television stations hadn’t refused to air  pro-tolerance public-service announcements, would the level of anti-gay hatred be lower?

If preachers emphasized the importance of love as much as they decry homosexuality, would LGBT people in Jamaica be safer?

In the latest incident, a mob surrounded two allegedly gay men who were involved in a minor traffic accident on Aug. 26  in Old Harbour in southern Jamaica.

Police intervened to shield them from the mob at the police station and then helped them reach safety, according to a TV news report uploaded to YouTube by GLBTQ Jamaica under the headline “Mob Descends on Old Harbour Police Station to demand Gay Men.”

Anti-gay violence of July 22 to Aug. 22:

Other recent attacks in Jamaica have included:

Dwayne Jones in his casket

Dwayne Jones in his casket

1) The murder of 17-year-old cross-dresser Dwayne Jones at a public street-party in St. James (the Montego Bay area) on July 22.  Jones was attacked after a female party-goer complained that Jones was a man dressed as a woman.

2) A mob attack on a Kingston police officer suspected to be gay on Aug. 1. He had to be rescued by other officers firing shots in the air and firing teargas into the crowd.

3) A mob attack on the home of two gay persons in St. Catherine, also on Aug. 1. They too had to be rescued by police.

4) A mob attack on a cross-dresser in St. Catherine on Aug. 10. The police again had to rescue the individual.

5) A mob attack on five allegedly gay men, who were trapped in their house in Green Mountain on Aug. 22 until police arrived and escorted them to safety.

Related articles


Jamaican police claim equal danger faces gays, straights

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Devon Watkis, asst. commissioner, Jamaican police. (Photo courtesy of Jamaican Information Service)

Devon Watkis, asst. commissioner, Jamaican police. (Photo courtesy of Jamaican Information Service)

LGBT Jamaicans and straight Jamaicans are equally at risk of violence, the Jamaican police allege.

“I have no specific evidence outside of those isolated ones, that [LGBT people are] a target group as opposed to the ordinary citizen,” said Jamaican Assistant Police Commissioner Devon Watkis.

The “isolated” incidents that he referred to are a recent series of attacks in Jamaica that have targeted allegedly gay men and a cross-dressing youth, who was killed at a street party.  Watkis did not suggest, however, that heterosexuals are targeted for their sexual orientation.

Watkis implied that LGBT people can live peacefully in Jamaica as long as they keep their sexual orientation secret. He said:

“I won’t dispute that there has been some cultural intolerance manifested in the public, but I have known individuals who have chosen that lifestyle but they have practiced their choices with responsibility and as a result they have not been subjected to any major taboo from the citizens of Jamaica.”

LGBT rights activist Maurice Tomlinson left Jamaica for safety in Canada because he received receiving death threats after his marriage was publicized in his home country. Tomlinson’s decision to marry his partner apparently would not qualify as “practicing his choices with responsibility,” in Watkis’s viewpoint.

In its report on Watkis’s statement, the Jamaica Gleaner said:

Jamaica has been described by some human-rights groups as the most homophobic place on Earth because of a perceived high level of violent crime directed at LGBT people.

The United States Department of State said in 2012, that homophobia was widespread in the country, and through the songs and the behaviour of some musicians, the country’s dancehall culture helped perpetuate homophobia.

In its Human Rights Report, the State Department said that during 2012, Jamaica Forum for Lesbians All-sexual and Gays received 68 reports of sexually motivated harassment or abuse, which included 53 cases of attempted or actual assault, including at least two killings and 15 reports of displacements.

Political sociologist at the University of the West Indies Professor Anthony Harriott believes that every Jamaican is susceptible to violence.

“From my ongoing study of homicides, I can say that there is nothing extraordinary about the killings of gays to the extent that one can discern from the information in the police records that the victim is gay.

“As it relates to other forms of violence such as beatings, I do not know, but from my observation there might be a tendency of advocates for gay rights to name all violence against gays as anti-gay and we have to be careful with that,” he said.

He added: “I think there is a lot of loose talk in just lumping up all victimisation of people who happen to be gay as victimisation against gays. Truth is, I have encountered cases of murder where it is evident that it is as a result of one being gay, but those are few.”

Tomlinson told Gay Star News that the frequency of homophobic attacks has been  “unprecedented.” He said, “We would normally expect to hear about an incident a month. It is not just the level of the attacks, but also the severity.”

Few or none of the recent attacks in Jamaica fit into Harriott’s category of “victimization of people who happen to be gay” rather than “victimization against gays.”

The attacks include:

Dwayne Jones in his casket

Dwayne Jones in his casket

1) The murder of 17-year-old cross-dresser Dwayne Jones at a public street-party in St. James (the Montego Bay area) on July 22.  Jones was attacked after a female party-goer complained that Jones was a man dressed as a woman.

2) A mob attack on a Kingston police officer suspected to be gay on Aug. 1. He had to be rescued by other officers firing shots in the air and firing teargas into the crowd.

3) A mob attack on the home of two gay persons in St. Catherine, also on Aug. 1. They too had to be rescued by police.

4) A mob attack on a cross-dresser in St. Catherine on Aug. 10. The police again had to rescue the individual.

5) A mob attack on five allegedly gay men, who were trapped in their house in Green Mountain on Aug. 22 until police arrived and escorted them to safety.

6) Threats by a mob that surrounded two allegedly gay men who were involved in a minor traffic accident on Aug. 26  in Old Harbour in southern Jamaica. The mob said that homosexuality might be acceptable elsewhere, but not in Old Harbour.


Jamaica needs urgent action to save LGBT people’s lives

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Maurice-Tomlinson-and-LGBT-protesters-stand-09-2013

Maurice Tomlinson and other protesters take part in Sept. 10 2protest, LGBT Jamaicans Stand Against Violence.

High-horse of urgency vs. callous indifference

I met some remarkably resilient young Jamaican men on Sept. 10, 2013.  We were together at the latest anti-homophobia stand [protest] in Kingston entitled “Even in Private.”

Police evicted gay men from abandoned house in Millborough. (Photo courtesy of Jamaica Gleaner)

Police recently evicted gay men from abandoned house in Millborough. (Photo courtesy of Jamaica Gleaner)

These brave front-line warriors in the Jamaican LGBT liberation struggle were all kicked out of their homes because of their sexual orientation, gender identity and expression.  Some have been on the streets surviving by their wits from as early as 11 years old.

After being hounded by the police and an uncaring society from one abandoned building to another, some of these individuals  now sleep in the gullies and drain pipes across the city, only re-emerging at night to scrounge for a living.  They even watched as buildings they once occupied were demolished soon after their forcible eviction by police so that the youngsters could not “re-infest” them.

Desperation drives these homeless men who have sex with men (MSM) to do just about anything.  Some engage in sex work with married men from uptown Kingston.  Yet the society remains largely ignorant as to just how our national homophobia creates opportunities for HIV and other sexual transmitted infections to spread.

Nearly a third of all Jamaican MSM have HIV and a full 60 percent of them also have sex with women.  This creates a bridge for HIV to pass between the MSM and general populations.

Demolition of abandoned house where homeless homosexual men were living. (Photo courtesy of Jamaica Observer)

Demolition of abandoned house where homeless homosexual men were living. (Photo courtesy of Jamaica Observer)

However, as far as most Jamaicans are concerned, out of sight, out of mind. We no longer talk about homeless MSM, so the problem must have been solved.  Hardly.  What we have is a ticking time-bomb, just when the Global Fund is pulling financial support for our HIV and AIDS response.

Sadly, even leaders in the local LGBT movement have failed these youngsters.  This is partly a function of the intense class divide which has come to define the Jamaican LGBT liberation struggle.  When I first suggested that we have a public stand with some of the homeless MSM to protest their treatment, I was advised by a senior member of the LGBT movement that I should not, as the youngsters would first need to be taught how to behave at a stand.  Quite likely, this elitist statement was born out of a desire not to have the homeless men distract from the nice middle-class look and feel of the emerging LGBT movement in Jamaica.

I tried to secure Precautionary Measures from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) on behalf of the homeless youth and was advised that I had to provide specific information on the types of abuses that individual members of the group had experienced.

This should have been relatively simple to accomplish.   Several dozen persons on the island had been trained in documenting human rights abuses against LGBT and J-FLAG was the secretariat for this exercise.  J-FLAG and most of the documentarians were based in Kingston.  Many of these men were known to J-FLAG.  Their interactions with J-FLAG were also part of the reason the organization had to move location.

However, at the expiration of the two-week deadline for the collection of this information for the IACHR, J-FLAG sent me a list of the names, aliases and phone numbers of some of the homeless youth.  Nothing more.  The clear implication was that I am to contact all these youngsters myself.  Thankfully, there is a new organization on the island willing to work with these youngsters.  Together we will seek to get the necessary information before a further extended IACHR deadline has passed.

Maurice Tomlinson (Photo by Jalna Broderick, courtesy of Gay Star News)

Maurice Tomlinson in an earlier protest. (Photo by Jalna Broderick, courtesy of Gay Star News)

A cruel twist to this sorry tale is an accusation by a Caribbean LGBT academic (activist is hardly fitting in this case) that those like myself who are urging immediate action to end Jamaican homophobia are riding a “high-horse of urgency.”  His perspective is not surprising because in his home country of Trinidad and Tobago, a recent study indicated that nearly half the population is tolerant of LGBT persons and savage anti-gay attacks are rare.

On the other hand, nearly 80 percent of Jamaicans self-identify as homophobic in a recent study produced by the University of the West Indies. The month of August 2013 saw a string of vicious homophobic attacks all across the country.

Today, Saturday, Sept. 14, fundamentalist religious groups on the island are mounting yet another anti-gay march, following several similar events launched to coincide with the domestic challenge to the Jamaican anti-sodomy law.  This case is currently before the courts and over a dozen religious groups have been joined as interested parties to oppose the repeal of the archaic and discriminatory law.  These groups have incredibly high-powered legal counsel and the government’s legal representative is known to be a member of one of these groups.  At the same time, it has been difficult to identify and retain legal counsel who are willing to challenge the law.  Such an act is considered professional suicide.

Dwayne Jones, also known as "Gully Queen." (Photo courtesy of Minority-Insight)

Dwayne Jones, also known as “Gully Queen.” (Photo courtesy of Minority-Insight)

Powerful religious leaders have also declared publicly that they are willing to die to prevent the recognition of human rights for LGBT Jamaicans.  This rhetoric is clearly being picked up by their congregants.  It was a female member of Dwayne Jones’ church that outed him to a barbaric mob at a street dance on July 22.  These brutes stabbed and shot Dwayne to death before tossing his body in a nearby ditch.  They all continued dancing and no one called the police.  Not surprisingly, no arrests have yet been made in this very public act of murder.

Dwayne was kicked out of his home at age 14 because of his sexual orientation.  He was killed just two years later.  Some Jamaican LGBT academics even blame us for “milking” Dwayne’s death.  I disagree.  His death was not an anomaly, as these individuals assert, but represents the sickening froth of a bubbling cauldron that is homophobic hate being stirred by religious zealots in the country.

Urgent action is needed to address this situation, or MORE PEOPLE WILL DIE.

I hope that I am numbered amongst those riding the “high-horse of urgency” demanding respect for the human rights of Jamaican LGBT.  I would consider it a badge of honour.  I am seriously impatient with those who stay in the comfort of their middle-class locales and determine what is best for our movement, all this while people are dying.

Finally, some wimpy Caribbean LGBT leaders always raise the false choice between urgently responding to LGBT human rights abuses and forming strategic alliances to move the society along the path for tolerance.  Sadly, this set of Caribbean LGBT leaders is  unable to do both.

Dr. Robert Carr (Photo courtesy of CVC Coalition)

Dr. Robert Carr (Photo courtesy of CVC Coalition)

However, the late Dr. Robert Carr certainly could.  He was on the streets of Kingston distributing condoms to sex workers and getting arrested in the process, while making invaluable connections between all the liberation movements across the region and the globe.  His vision led to the creation of the Caribbean Vulnerable Communities Coalition, the preeminent HIV advocacy group in the region.

Some of those who would now choose to speak for the region in the way this great man did are simply unworthy of the task.  They even trumpeted the news of his untimely passing as if it was now their time to take centre stage.  They are woefully misinformed and inadequate for this undertaking, despite their undeniable eloquence and mastery of passive-aggressive tactics.

Talking nice at conferences changes little.  Doing the real work of advocacy is frustrating and dirty, but it is worthwhile.   Some of us need to leave our air-conditioned offices long enough to see that.

Pardon this rant.  However, on this cold Saturday morning while I plan my next intervention to address Jamaican and Caribbean homophobia, I needed some perspective.

The work IS urgent.  It is truly regrettable that some of the current LGBT leadership fail to see that, or are just too comfortable and callous to care.


Hard work and progress toward LGBT rights in Africa, Jamaica

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Albert Ogle

The Rev. Canon Albert Ogle

The Rev. Canon Albert Ogle, president of the St. Paul’s Foundation, tells of the foundation’s latest work with activists seeking equality in Jamaica, Uganda, Cameroon and Malawi:

This coming week marks the fourth birthday of the St. Paul’s Foundation. We have much to celebrate in the short time we have pooled our resources to work together for an important shared value: global equality. I want to alert you to some upcoming events and important dates to share just how far we have come from an initial gathering of these dreams and ideas. Clearly, 2013 is far from over, and our work is far from completed.

A year ago, our delegates to the Spirit of 76 Initiative returned home following the International AIDS Conference. We remain in touch with many of our activists, faithfully supporting those who await asylum, listening to the unmet needs of others and I wish we had more resources to build a stronger and deeper network. You can read more about specific people and projects here:

In the film "Love Heals Homophobia," heterosexual African- American clergy discuss their spiritual journeys that led them to understand the importance of loving, not hating, LGBT people. (Click on the image to see the trailer.)

In the film “Love Heals Homophobia,” heterosexual African-American clergy discuss their spiritual journeys that led them to understand the importance of loving, not hating, LGBT people. (Click on the image to see the trailer.)

Love Heals Homophobia — our first film

Angeline Jackson requested we make a film where heterosexual African-American clergy could share their spiritual journey to LGBT acceptance and that film has been miraculously made and will have its public debut in Washington on October 11th. All our donors will receive a free copy.

You can find out about our screening of “Love Heals Homophobia” screening here (a PDF file).

Angeline also wanted to start her own non-profit agency for Jamaican lesbians and we were able to forward funds this month from generous donors like you to make this happen.

Support for work in Kenya

Jane Wothaya from Kenya returned to the USA this month to begin a one year internship program with HRC’s International specialist, Ty Cobb. We are delighted Ty and Jane are working together.

Fighting HIV and homophobia in Uganda

I spent a lot of time this year in Uganda and with Ugandans where the initial HIV work of the St. Paul’s Centre has expanded to include 14 organizations led by Most At Risk Populations Network (MARPS). We completed our three years of support to Bishop Christopher’s ministry and intend to continue the work in Uganda through the Good Samaritan Consortium. 50 people are about to undergo an intensive training program to provide community-based healthcare and HIV testing and outreach to the LGBT community. The Foundation will sponsor this initial program and assist MARPS Network with two organizational retreats to deepen the Consortium’s new venture, so more people can be served in Uganda.

The World Bank and the economic cost of homophobia

Maxensia Nakibuuka of Uganda and the Rev. MacDonald Sembereka of Malawi shared [their experiences and insights] with the World Bank earlier this year and will be part of a delegation to Rome later this month as we seek to engage other faith organizations engaged in HIV work internationally. The Foundation was invited by the Bank to select the first-ever LGBT representative to attend the Annual Meeting of the IMF and Bank in October and to represent the voice of millions of LGBT people who are kept in poverty by unjust laws that deem us criminals.

Seizing an opportunity for change in Cameroon

This October, we will also continue to show our commitment to the still shell-shocked Cameroonian community recovering after Eric Lembembe’s brutal murder. We are halfway to raising funds to allow four individuals to personally present an important report to the African Commission on Peoples and Human Rights as they meet in the Gambia.  The African continent needs to hold its leaders and the government of Cameroon accountable for well-documented human rights abuses.

Eric Lembembe (Photo courtesy of Facebook)

Eric Lembembe (Photo courtesy of Facebook)

Eric Lembembe was a young leader who lived and died for this community. He was passionate about reducing the spread of HIV and stigma and as a devout Catholic, wanted to educate his church about being LGBT. Even though his Archbishop railed against Eric and his community as people who were responsible for “Crimes Against Humanity”, this never stopped Eric from believing in people’s goodness and if they were educated more on this issue, Cameroonians would be able to work together with the common goal to reduce HIV and stigma. Eric never lived to see his dream come true and his tortured body was found in his apartment, limbs and neck broken and disfigured by an electric iron. Despite the brutality of this murder, his government and church failed to condemn the crime or to call for a full investigation. The cause of death requested on the death certificate was left blank. I have never seen this kind of institutional neglect and collusion as we have seen with Eric’s death.

Others are joining a chorus where this silence will be broken because we cannot participate in this kind of inhumanity and cruelty. Some of us are donating a few dollars to ensure his friends and colleagues are present and will speak powerfully, loudly and demand an investigation.

Eric’s legacy has still to be realized and his mantle falls upon us to ensure African governments protect all their citizens including those who work in the politically dangerous area of HIV prevention and care. We are seeing more and more HIV workers imprisoned, subjected to exile and violence and worse, abandoned by organizations that clearly have the resources to protect them and do not.  Silence and indifference can be transformed when we step out, and though many of us will never have to work or simply love with the constant threat of violence, we can reach out to support the few individuals we know who can make a major difference.

Our most important work

As I said earlier, 2013 is far from over and I believe this year holds and cherishes our most important work since we stepped out three years ago. We are particularly encouraged by the good news that one of our donors has pledged $100,000 if we can find $100,000 from others who are passionate and will journey with us, friends in Cameroon, in Uganda and Jamaica and Malawi and other places.

As we enter our fourth year, there is much to be thankful for and we have never asked our donors to consider pledging to this movement, until now. $10, $20 or whatever you can afford on a monthly basis would ensure we not only met the challenge by the end of the year, but continue to be in solidarity with these wonderful people mentioned here.

How to take action

  • Help the matching fund campaign today — visit our website.
  • Download poster to the premiere of the film for DC supporters here.
  • Justice 4 Eric Lembembe campaign. Find out why this is important HERE. Two African Human Rights Commission attendees funded and two to go!

Despairing, a Jamaican plea for arrests in anti-gay crimes

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The Jamaica Gleaner today published a remarkably downbeat little editorial about the murder of cross-dresser Dwayne Jones and the firebombing of the house where he used to live.

Implicitly, it challenges the police to take action. Explicitly, it predicts that injustice will prevail:

Dwayne Jones, also known as "Gully Queen." (Photo courtesy of Minority-Insight)

Dwayne Jones, also known as “Gully Queen.” (Photo courtesy of Minority-Insight)

Nothing has, so far, come of the murder of Dwayne Jones, the drag queen who was beaten, stabbed and shot by a mob at a dance in St James.

Frankly, we expect nothing to come of Mr Jones’ murder. And not only because of the police’s general incompetence in solving crime, reflected in a ‘clear-up’ rate of under 40 per cent for homicides.

Rather, Mr Jones was gay. That is likely to mean his case having even less attention.

Earlier this week, the house where Mr Jones lived, which was occupied by other gay men, was firebombed. Like with the Jones incident, we don’t expect much.

It would be good for the police to surprise us by actually doing something.

Does ‘pastoral role’ of churches include jail for gay sex?

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The Rev. Everald Galbraith, president of the Jamaica Council of Churches (Photo courtesy of Jamaica Observer)

The Rev. Everald Galbraith, president of the Jamaica Council of Churches (Photo courtesy of Jamaica Observer)

The long-awaited policy of the Jamaica Council of Churches (JCC) on the issue of homosexuality has been released. Unsurprisingly, it is very conservative, and raises the “red herring” of gay marriage.  It is important to note that this issue is NOT central to the human rights debate for Jamaican LGBT at this time.  Jamaican gays are being mobbed, stoned, shot, stabbed, firebombed out of their homes, and even murdered while some local church leaders are trumpeting from public platforms that they are willing to die to prevent the advance of human rights for gay Jamaicans.

That said, the following paragraph in the recent JCC statement caught my eye:

“While the council affirms the prophetic role of the church, it also affirms its pastoral role and so appeals to the church, as well as the wider religious community, not to speak or act in ways that could ostracise, incite violence or any other treatment of indignity towards persons who are homosexuals…”

In light of this statement, I am putting these questions to the Methodist president of the Jamaica Council of Churches:

“Does this statement mean that the JCC opposes the anti-sodomy law, which sentences consenting adult males to 10 years in prison at hard labour for their private acts of intimacy?  Is this treating homosexuals with indignity?”

These are relevant questions since the JCC claims to speak for the majority of the island’s established churches.   Several of these groups have joined the Jamaican government as interested parties in opposing the constitutional challenge to the British colonially imposed anti-sodomy law. Please remember that the aim of this case is to have the 19th century law “read down” to allow for private acts of intimacy between consenting adults.  That’s it.

Previously I wrote to the senior Roman Catholic bishops in Jamaica inquiring if their church supported the law.  The Roman Catholic Church held the presidency of the JCC up to very recently. However, their bishops refused to provide a straight answer to my simple question.  Instead they referred me to a very ambiguous statement about LGBT rights made by a Vatican representative before the United Nations.  In the meantime, a group of high-ranking Catholics have joined the domestic case opposing the repeal of the anti-sodomy law.  This approach certainly seems to fly in the face of the more liberal positions being espoused by Pope Francis.

I certainly hope that the current leadership of the JCC will be inclined to provide more direct answers.

For more information, read the Jamaica Observer article about the JCC statement.

Anti-gay Jamaican police must end their hostile acts

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Today my colleague Anika Gray went to the New Kingston police station with some homeless MSM (men who have sex with men) to report ongoing attacks they have experienced. These violations include police officers allegedly going to the gully where these men have been forced to live and burning all their belongings last night.

Anika says she was shocked at the hostility the police displayed towards these men, three of whom were brave enough to show up at the station today. The police flatly refused to take the report of the alleged attack by the other officers last night, stating that this had to be handled by the Independent Commission (INDECOM). The inspector in charge of the station accused Anika (who is very slim) of assaulting him because she gesticulated with her hands(!)

After taking the reports of two of the men, the police declared that they could provide no assistance because the men could not provide the NAMES and ADDRESSES of their attackers(!) This is the usual lie spun by police intent on dismissing anything to do with anti-gay attacks.

We will not let this matter rest. We will be escalating it to the Commissioner of Police, the Public Defender, and any other local or international agency that is willing to help. As the Jamaica Gleaner editorial states, the Jamaican police do not care about protecting the rights of homeless MSM, and they must be made to care.


Letter to Pope: Halt church support of anti-gay violence

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Pope Francis (Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)

Pope Francis (Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)

Human Rights Watch has challenged Pope Francis to speak more directly in opposition to  violence and discrimination against LGBT people worldwide and to ensure that other Catholic officials do so too.

In a letter to the Holy See on Oct. 16, HRW praised church teachings that uphold human dignity for all, but added that “too often Catholic Church officials around the world contradict these stated principles in speech and practice.” Specifically, HRW asked Pope Francis to:

> Clearly and publicly condemn violence against people in sexual and gender minorities whether by the state or private actors;

> Call for the decriminalization of consensual, sexual relationships and support the repeal of other unjust criminal penalties that discriminate against people in sexual and gender minorities;

> Help moderate the public tone of local Church leaders on sexuality; and

> Call for greater legal protections for people in sexual and gender minorities.

The organization cited specific anti-LGBT statements and actions by church officials in Cameroon, Nigeria, Uganda, Jamaica, Belize, and the Dominican Republic. This is the section of the letter about those countries:


Archbishop Samuel Kleda of Douala, Cameroon

Archbishop Samuel Kleda of Douala, Cameroon

In Cameroon, for example, Archbishop Samuel Kléda and other Catholic leaders have endorsed unjust criminal penalties against people in sexual and gender minorities, while failing to denounce the violence these vulnerable populations routinely face. Cameroon has the worst record in Africa regarding the persecution of homosexuals. In Cameroon, people are often arrested and prosecuted simply for “being gay” — ostensibly indicated by the way they dress, their mannerisms, or their personal tastes. Organizations that work to defend LGBT rights face horrific attacks. Recently, a LGBT human rights activist, Eric Lembembe, was brutally tortured and murdered.

Sadly, Archbishop Kléda has not only failed to denounce these deplorable acts, he has actively contributed to an environment of hostility toward sexual and gender minorities. In February, for instance, Archbishop Kléda joined a group of Catholic legal professionals, the Association of Cameroonian Roman Catholic Jurists, to publicly endorse criminalizing homosexuality. In so doing, during a panel discussion, he cited a passage from Leviticus 20:13, which calls for the death penalty for sexual relations between two men. In Cameroon, under section 347 bis, a person who engages in “sexual relations with a person of the same sex” can already face a prison term of up to five years. Archbishop Kléda has appeared to imply that the law is too lenient.

[Editor's note: Kléda is archbishop of Douala, Cameroon. Pope Francis has replaced the similarly anti-gay archbishop of Yaoundé, Cameroon, Victor Tonye Bakot, with the apparently more compassionate Archbishop Jean Mbarga.]

We believe that Catholic leaders should openly condemn these kinds of statements. They belie the Holy See’s position and contribute to a very real climate of hatred, harassment, violence, and death.

Cardinal John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan (Photo courtesy of OsunDefender.org)

Cardinal John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan (Photo courtesy of OsunDefender.org)

In Nigeria, politicians since 2006 have debated a series of statutory measures that would criminalize same-sex civil marriage, impose harsh penalties on same-sex couples, and even criminalize participation in a group that advocates the rights of people in sexual and gender minorities. A bill to this effect was recently passed in the Nigerian House of Representatives, bringing it one step closer to becoming law.

The Church has endorsed these proposed punitive policies. In 2009, Reverend Patrick Alumake, speaking on behalf of the Nigerian Catholic Church at the Nigerian National Assembly, said the Church supported the bill “wholeheartedly.” This past May, when the House of Representatives approved the bill, the Nigerian Church failed to denounce provisions in the bill that seriously limit the civil rights of sexual and gender minorities. On the contrary, in the months preceding the final vote on the bill, Cardinal John Olorunfemi gave a homily condemning same-sex marriage and seemingly supporting the legislation.

We recognize that the Nigerian Catholic Church has the same right to advocate for or against same-sex marriage as any other entity in Nigeria. However, the bill in question goes well beyond a position on marriage and criminalizes anyone who registers, operates or participates in clubs, societies, and organizations for sexual and gender minorities, as well as public shows of affection between people of the same-sex. The bill seeks to deny the very freedom of expression that the Church is exercising. The Church, we strongly believe, should publicly declare its opposition to laws and leaders that convey a message of hate and condone the persecution of vulnerable minority groups.

Archbishop Cyprian Kizito Lwanga (Photo courtesy of Instablogs.com)

Roman Catholic Archbishop Cyprian Archbishop Kizito Lwanga (Photo courtesy of Instablogs.com)

In Uganda the Catholic Church has wavered in its position on the fundamental civil rights of vulnerable sexual and gender minorities. In December 2009, Archbishop Cyprian Lwanga opposed the Ugandan Anti-Homosexuality Bill, which proposed sentences of life in prison or even death for same-sex sexual acts. Archbishop Lwanga called the bill “at odds with Christian values” such as “respect, compassion, and sensitivity.” At the time the Holy See also condemned the bill as unjust discrimination. In June 2012, however, a coalition of Anglican, Catholic, and Orthodox churches asked the Ugandan parliament to speed up the process of enacting a version of this bill. By joining this coalition, the Ugandan Catholic Church has seemed to accept a proposed bill that would not only increase existing penalties for consensual same-sex sexual acts to life in prison, or even death, but would also require all Ugandans to inform authorities if they are aware that someone is a homosexual, or else face criminal sanctions.

Bishop Charles Dufour of Jamaica

Archbishop Charles Dufour of Kingston, Jamaica

In the Caribbean, the Archbishop of Kingston, Jamaica, Charles Dufour, has also refused to condemn both the endemic violence faced by people in sexual and gender minorities in Jamaica, and the Jamaican government’s criminalization of private sexual acts between consenting adults. In recent years, Human Rights Watch, the Organization of American States, the U.S. State Department, and other governments and organizations have criticized the pervasive violence sexual and gender minorities face in Jamaica. Beatings, police brutality, torture, and murder of people in sexual and gender minorities are commonplace.

As in other parts of the Caribbean, such as Belize, local advocacy groups are challenging Jamaica’s anti-sodomy law. When asked by advocates to clarify the Catholic Church position on the criminalization of consensual acts between same-sex partners, Archbishop Dufour said he felt no “need to make any special declaration” regarding the debate in Jamaica. Archbishop Dufour, however, did call attention to the vilification and persecution of religious groups advocating against rights for sexual and gender minorities.

We find this statement disheartening. Archbishop Dufour and other leaders in the Jamaican Church missed an important opportunity to give substance to the Holy See’s position, and have contributed to the vicious climate many Jamaicans face.

In the Dominican Republic, Cardinal Nicolás López Rodríguez recently harshly opposed the appointment of James Brewster, an openly gay man, to the post of U.S. ambassador to the Dominican Republic. Cardinal López Rodríguez referred to Brewster on national television as a “faggot” (maricón). Subsequently, the Catholic Church of the Dominican Republic called on Dominican Catholics to organize a “Black Monday” protest to object to the appointment.

Cardinal López Rodríguez’s words and actions are deeply troubling and offensive, promoting a climate of disrespect and intolerance. Sadly, this type of dehumanizing language is too often used by Church leaders around the world.


The letter also praised Catholic leaders in Kenya, Dominica, Colombia, and the pope’s own actions both as pope and previously in Argentina, when he was still archbishop of Buenos Aires. This is the section of the HRW letter about that leadership:


In your own ministry, you have called for a Catholic position that engages society in a critical dialogue, while avoiding religious harassment and respecting civil rights. As Archbishop of Buenos Aires, you publicly condemned the “spiritual harassment” that takes place when ministers impose demands “in such a way that takes away the freedom of the other person.” You have noted that while religious leaders have the right to advocate specific moral positions, this does not mean forcing others to adopt these positions. Similarly, during the Argentine same-sex marriage debates, you defended the Church’s moral position, while proposing an alternative that would recognize civil unions. More recently, you have made public statements concerning the need to reserve judgment of homosexual people. We are heartened to hear these statements and to know that, despite our different moral positions, we agree on the need to ensure everyone’s fundamental freedom and to honor and protect human dignity.

Archbishop Charles D. Balvo

Archbishop Charles D. Balvo, papal representative to Kenya

The Apostolic Nuncio to Kenya, Archbishop Charles Daniel Balvo, recently stressed that while the Church does not approve of homosexual conduct, it recognizes and respects everyone’s individual dignity. He said that homosexuals “should be defended against violation of their dignity and human rights, they are human beings like any one of us.”

In the Caribbean island of Dominica, the Bishop of Roseau, Gabriel Malzaire, has also publicly opposed the criminalization of sexual acts between consenting adults. In April, Bishop Malzaire made a public statement to that effect, approvingly citing the Holy See’s 2008 statement at the U.N. General Assembly. Bishop Malzaire stated that “free sexual acts between adult persons must not be treated as crimes to be punished by civil authorities.” He went on to say that the Church’s role in these debates is primarily a moral one.

Bishop Gabriel Malzaire

Bishop Gabriel Malzaire

Statements like Bishop Malzaire’s are important in protecting the civil rights of sexual and gender minorities in countries that, like Dominica, criminalize consensual sexual acts between people of the same-sex.

In the midst of the same-sex debate in Colombia this past April, Cardinal Rubén Salazar Gómez, president of the Colombian Episcopal Conference, spoke to the local newspaper El Tiempo. Cardinal Salazar explained that although the Church did not support same-sex marriage, it supported legal recognition for same-sex unions. Cardinal Salazar noted that legal same-sex unions “have a right to exist, no one can ask them to not exist.”

We commend these actions by Church leaders. We find that these types of statements are critical in creating societies that defend the civil rights of people in sexual and gender minorities, and protecting these vulnerable populations from abuse and harassment. We call on you and local Catholic communities around the world to help disseminate, and encourage these types of examples.

For more information, read the HRW press release “Holy See: Condemn Violence, Bias Against LGBT People” and the full text of the letter.

Jamaica police join attacks on homeless LGBT men

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The gully where the homeless men lived.

The gully where the homeless men lived.

On Tuesday night, Oct. 15, police raided the gully in New Kingston where some homeless MSM (men who have sex with men) were living. The officers piled up the youngsters’ clothes and burned them before warning that they should not be seen in the area again.

Yesterday (Oct. 16) some of the MSM went to the New Kingston police station to make a report about the incident: they were refused. The officers claimed that the report had to be made to the police complaints department.

As I am writing this, seven of the men are at the police complaints department making their reports. They had to borrow clothes from their comrades so they would be “presentable” enough.

We are currently engaged in an appeal for clothing or food items to assist these young men. We are trying to at least restore some dignity to them.

A report on On the Ground News Reports (OG.NR) was filed about the incident, which we tried unsuccessfully to get the police to record yesterday:

“Police in New Kingston on Tuesday night conducted a crackdown of gay men who have been described as violent and unruly in the area. The men who fled as the police arrived on the scene are accused of offering services to male clients at the location and vandalism of business establishments. A number of their personal belongings were set ablaze by the lawmen in a gully where they reside.”

As usual, the homeless MSM who now live in gullies after being hounded out of every other residence are cast as villains, despite the fact that chronic homophobia contributes to these men engaging in anti-social behaviour.

OG.NR report on police crackdown on homeless LGBT men.

OG.NR report on police crackdown on homeless LGBT men.

The vulnerability of homeless Jamaican MSM is real. Those who engage in sex work are also paid a premium by their clients to ride “bareback.” The potential for the spread of HIV and other STIs is clear. But, the government is claiming it is powerless to intervene. So we cut off our nose to spite our face.

We hope to engage more authorities to arrive at a real solution to this problem. Certainly, burning the men out cannot be a solution. Last week it was a community that burned gay men out of a residence in the tourist capital Montego Bay. Now the police are joining in the campaign to rid society of the “scourge” of homeless gays.

Jamaican-style ‘Les Mis’: Help for LGBTs forced into the sewers?

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Click the image for video: Homeless man tries to retrieve his belongings from the fire set by police. (Photo courtesy of Jamaican LGBT News)

Click the image for video: Homeless man tries to retrieve his belongings from a fire set by police. (Photo courtesy of Jamaican LGBT News)

Homeless LGBT men whom Jamaican police burned out of their shelter in a drainage ditch have relocated to the sewers, according to an informed activist.

The men’s plight — evicted from their homes by family, chased out of abandoned houses by police, forced out of a ditch where they huddled, now hiding in the sewers — has touched the hearts of a few charitable souls, who have provided a little food and financial assistance. See the bottom of this post for information about how you can help too.

The men are typically referred to as “unruly gays,”  because their behavior is sometimes obnoxious or abusive.

But the police strategy of driving them out of wherever they live is short-sighted. At this point, a comprehensive, longer-term solution is under discussion, but remains far from reality.

Here’s the latest on the homeless MSM (men who have sex with men):

UPDATE ON HOMELESS MSM BURNED OUT BY JAMAICAN POLICE

A female Jamaican senior citizen and mother was so moved by the plight of these young men who were burned out by the police on Oct. 15 that she started providing them with non-perishable food items and cooking utensils from her own meager resources. Since a  plea went out for assistance last week, several persons have agreed to help her defray some of the costs associated with this venture.

Thanks to this generosity we have been able to provide the youngsters with very basic sustenance and we also collected clothes which we will be sending to replace some of what they lost.

These youngsters (some of whom are just teenagers) have to be very mobile as they have been chased out of every home they occupied. Some of their previous residences were actually torn down after the boys were evicted by armed police. Now they live in sewers and even there they are not safe from police attack.

The gully where the homeless men lived.

The gully in New Kingston, Jamaica, where the homeless men lived.

While we work on meeting their immediate needs, we are also collecting and documenting their stories so we can decide which course of action to pursue in order to provide them with long-term assistance.

It is clear these boys need a dedicated facility as they are harassed and abused when they use the government shelters. This is not surprising as our national revulsion against homosexuality makes homeless LGBT the lowest on the national totem pole of poverty. Any facility for these damaged youth will need to address their physical and emotional needs caused by crushing societal and family rejection.

Jamaicans should care about this issue because “the measure of a nation is how it treats its weakest members.”

Anyone who wants to help these homeless young men should leave a message in the comments section below this post or on the Erasing 76 Crimes page on Facebook.

Shunned by families, gay teens face rape, HIV on Jamaican streets

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Services for gay teens are few, says St Rachel Ustanny, chief executive of the Jamaica Family Planning Association  (Photo by Napthali Junior courtesy of Jamaica Observer)

Services for gay teens are few, says St Rachel Ustanny, chief executive of the Jamaica Family Planning Association (Photo by Napthali Junior courtesy of Jamaica Observer)

An LGBT rights activist comments about Jamaica:

Jamaican LGBT youth are being evicted as young as 11 years old. Some engage in sex work to survive. Many contract HIV and other STIs. And still there is a deafening silence from the state about this growing problem.”

The problem is explored in a heart-breaking article in the Jamaica Observer of Nov. 3 entitled “Homelessness, rape and HIV.”  These are excerpts:

Homelessness, rape and HIV

Abandoned by their families, gay Jamaican teens — some as young as 13 years old — end up on the gritty streets of the capital city where they are sexually abused by older men who expose them to various sexually transmitted diseases.

A group of young gay men who recently spoke with the Jamaica Observer painted a horrific picture of the physical and sexual abuse they face on the streets and the emotional scars they still bear from those experiences.

With no other means of survival, some have turned to prostitution, either by selling sex on the streets or soliciting clients on gay websites, despite being infected with HIV.

Life on the streets, the young gay men say, is not an option they willingly chose, but one they were forced into after family members turned them out of their homes when they suspected them of being gay. …

“Some of the boys are as young as 13 and 14 years old and when you call the CDA (Child Development Agency) to get them somewhere to stay, them don\’t come, so there is nowhere else for them to go,” [one gay teenager] explained.

Many of these young boys, the gay teen said, are themselves abused by older men who have sex with men (MSM) who often rape them on the streets. …

Chief executive officer of the Jamaica Family Planning Association, St Rachel Ustanny, [said] that services for gay teens are limited.

With the conflict between law and policy preventing the wider youth population from accessing contraceptive services such as condoms, Ustanny said the problem must be large within the sub-population group of MSMs.

Ruth Chisholm, country programme manager for Population Services International/Caribbean, said the current environment makes it very difficult to provide information and counselling to these gay teens.

There would be less demonisation if dialogue started in the home as this is a key solution to some of the challenges,” she said.

Dane Lewis, president of J-FLAG, on YouTube video in the "We Are Jamaicans" campaign.

Dane Lewis, president of J-FLAG

But this dialogue has not started in the homes for gay teens, as the Jamaica Forum for Lesbians All-Sexuals and Gays (J-FLAG) Executive Director Dane Lewis said it is becoming an increasingly common practice for some parents to turn out their children when they self-affirm or are suspected of being lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (LGBT).

“Every month we intervene in about 10 cases involving young persons, most of whom are young male adolescents, whose families have put them out because of their real or perceived sexual or gender identity,” Lewis said, adding that J-FLAG’s crisis intervention officer reports that there has been a significant increase in the number of cases since 2011. …

For more information, read the full article in the Sunday Observer: “Homelessness, rape and HIV.”

Related articles

How to help homeless LGBT Jamaicans

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Demolition of abandoned house where homeless homosexual men were living. (Photo courtesy of Jamaica Observer)

Demolition of abandoned house where homeless homosexual men were living. (Photo courtesy of Jamaica Observer)

Some money and plenty of encouragement have flowed in for Jamaicans who are seeking to help a group of homeless LGBT men and boys who have been hounded out of their homes and temporary shelters by family, police and homophobic attackers.

One activist reports, “We are now beginning to think medium-term for the funds. Some of the homeless youngsters have expressed a desire to continue their schooling. We want to help but they need to be in a home so they can actually focus, so we are looking at boarding facilities.”

A planning meeting is scheduled for next week.

Meanwhile, a tax-deductible method of contributing to the cause has been set up in the United States.  Similar arrangements are in the planning stages in Canada and the United Kingdom.

For people in the United States, tax-deductible contributions can be made via PayPal at the website of the Open Arms Metropolitan Community Church in Rochester, N.Y.  To make sure the contribution goes where you want it to, add a notation that the donation is for  “Homeless LGBT Jamaicans.”

Jamaican police keep attacking homeless LGBTs

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"Bingy" fired by police.

“Bingy” fired by police.

Police in Jamaica are continuing their harassment of homeless LGBT youths who are living in the sewers and gullies of New Kingston after being rejected by their families and ousted from temporary shelters in vacant homes and in a drainage ditch.

A veteran human rights activist in Jamaica reports:

These raids have been taking place nightly for the past three weeks. The usual pattern is that the police arrive in a vehicle and the youth scatter in the gully or toward a nearby park. The police fire what are described as “bingys” or what looks like iron marbles from slingshot devices. At least one youth has been hit by a “bingy” (see photo), but injuries are usually related to attempts to escape the police.

Sometimes the police use pepper spray. Last night, for example, the gully was pepper sprayed, but none of the youth was affected. I think the Commissioner of Police needs to explain the use of “bingys” which I don’t know to be a police-issued weapon.

It seems the youth are targeted because of the nightly robberies that take place in New Kingston. I was informed that some of the homeless gay youth are responsible for these robberies, but some thefts are carried out by youth who are not homeless. The police have apparently not sought to arrest any of the homeless gay youth, but just seem to want to harass the entire group so they move out of New Kingston.

Here again, the Commissioner of Police needs to explain what part of the use of force policy allows for harassment of citizens for any reason whatsoever. Power of arrest is another matter, if the police have evidence that a youth has committed, is committing, or is about to commit a criminal act.

A group of concerned citizens in Jamaica and abroad is collecting money to help the homeless LGBT youths with schooling and housing.

In the United States, tax-deductible contributions can be made via PayPal at the website of the Open Arms Metropolitan Community Church in Rochester, N.Y.  Contributions should be designated for  “Homeless LGBT Jamaicans.”

Jamaica: ‘Church, TV can dictate how gays are viewed’

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Rejected ad: ‘As a Jamaican, I respect you and I love you.’

In rejecting an appeal for a TV ad promoting respect for LGBT people, the justices of the Jamaican Constitutional Court last week “basically upheld the right of anti-gay fundamentalist churches (to which they belong) to dictate to the public how LGBT citizens should to be viewed,” activist Maurice Tomlinson said on Facebook.

AIDS-Free World announced it would appeal the ruling. The group explained:

The innocuous ad promoting tolerance was created as part of AIDS-Free World’s broader HIV advocacy strategy in the Caribbean, which includes impact litigation, human rights trainings, and communications campaigns. Those efforts address discriminatory anti-gay laws and attitudes that fuel the spread of HIV by driving LGBT underground, away from effective HIV prevention, care and treatment services.

The banned ad starred two Jamaicans, including claimant Maurice Tomlinson, AIDS-Free World’s Legal Advisor, Marginalized Groups. The television stations had argued, illogically, that by allowing an ad that promotes respect for all Jamaicans, regardless of sexual orientation, they would be supporting an illegal activity.

The court ruled that in Jamaica “the right of freedom of expression does not give anyone the right to use any other person’s property to disseminate his views,” the Jamaica Gleaner reported on the case.

Maurice Tomlinson (Photo courtesy of International Planned Parenthood Federation)

Maurice Tomlinson (Photo courtesy of International Planned Parenthood Federation)

Tomlinson and AIDS-Free World seek a declaration that refusing to air the ad promoting tolerance for homosexuals breached Tomlinson’s constitution rights to freedom of expression and freedom to distribute or disseminate information, opinions, or ideas.

Tomlinson commented that “the court said that by denying an ad which calls for respect of the rights of gay Jamaicans, the stations were covering this important public issue ‘fairly and accurately.’ ” He added:

So, the TV stations, who operate under a public trust in the form of a broadcast license, have the court-sanctioned right to ignore the lived reality of an entire segment of the population (vulnerable gays) in order to patronize the group campaigning against them! If us gays want equal airtime to counter the hateful falsehoods being spread about us, we should just set up our own TV station! Simple, enough right? Well, not quite. You see, there is the HUGE matter of acquiring a license!

Please note that at no time did we say the stations HAD to air the tolerance ad. We simply said that, in the public interest, the stations should ensure that they acted REASONABLY in making their decision whether or not to air. Was it reasonable for the stations (especially the public broadcaster who has a statutory obligation to promote respect for the rights of citizens, such as gays) to simply refuse to air the ad because they did not want to anger the powerful fundamentalist churches? Is there ANY concept of separation of church and state in Jamaica?

I hope my Jamaican LGBT family and our allies realize just how much work we have to do in order to achieve full equality. I hope this decision makes you MAD enough to actually DO something for the cause of LGBT liberation. All the powerful organs of the state appear to be working against us and in cahoots with the homophobic factions of the church. We need to be LOUD AND PROUD to claim our RIGHTS as no one is going to hand them to us on a silver-platter (or on the silver-screen).


Caribbean nations are abuzz with LGBT news

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The LGBT-focused International Resource Network published a useful compilation of LGBT news from the Caribbean last week, including these items from Guyana, Belize, Jamaica and Trinidad.

An editorial in the Kaieteur News of Guyana speaks to “The Plight of the Homosexuals”

Recently, a local group, SASOD [the Society Against Sexual Orientation Discrimination], published the findings on the treatment of gays in the Caribbean. Guyana is featured prominently. Indeed, policemen have been known to take a course of action when the matter involves gays, sometimes in a manner that would make the most ardent jurist blush.

But it is the action of the church that must come under scrutiny. To discriminate against gays is to do exactly what the Lord does not advocate. Church members believe that homosexuality is a new phenomenon when in fact it is as old as mankind. The church believes that homosexuals are wicked when scientists say that they are just another group of people in the human chain.

… while a BBC documentary (first aired 9 November, 2013) addresses Jamaica’s Gay Divide.

BBC report on homophobia in Jamaica is illustrated with this AP photo of the riverside bar where Dwayne Jones danced and was murdered.

BBC report on homophobia in Jamaica is illustrated with this AP photo of the riverside bar where Dwayne Jones danced and was murdered.

Across Jamaica’s Gay Divide – Part One
(Audio, 55 minutes)

The social psychologist Dr Keon West returns to his native Jamaica to assess the state of the country’s gay rights and anti-homosexuality movements. Gay rights activists made the first legal challenge in Jamaica’s history earlier this year, appealing for the so-called ‘Buggery Law’ to be re-assessed. The law, which is a colonial legacy prohibiting certain sexual acts, is the focus of much controversy in Jamaica and at its heart is the question of whether or not homosexuality is culturally or even morally acceptable.

From a group of activists standing silently promoting gay tolerance, to a march that calls for sexual purity, including maintaining of the Buggery Law, West speaks to both sides, asking if attitudes are now inexorably changing. The Christian tradition of Jamaica is central to this debate, where Biblical interpretation underpins many of the arguments against homosexual behaviour.

Maurice Tomlinson (Photo courtesy of International Planned Parenthood Federation)

Maurice Tomlinson (Photo courtesy of International Planned Parenthood Federation)

With contributions from the pastor Reverend Lenworth Anglin, the prominent Jamaican gay rights activist Maurice Tomlinson and Rastafarian poet Mutabaruka, West considers what it is like to be a gay person in Jamaica from day-to-day, when many consider this ‘lifestyle’ to be un-Jamaican by its very nature.

Earlier in October, the police conducted a raid in Jamaica on some of the homeless gay youth as reported in this news item. Their belongings were burnt and no alternative accommodation was found for the youth..

SASOD launches a video with the Envisioning Project entitled Homophobia in Guyana  which tells the story of Jessica and Maeve . …

Former Chief Justice of Trinidad & Tobago, Satnarine Sharma said he personally does not find the idea of two men living together repugnant

In Belize, the parliament has started to discuss amendments to their sexual offences legislation to include further protections for children.

For more information, read the full article on the Caribbean IRN Blog: “Plight and Pride of the Caribbean homosexuals.”

How to help shelter Jamaica’s persecuted LGBT youths

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No place like home: LGBT youths forced to live in the sewers. (Photo courtesy of Michael Forbes)

No place like home: LGBT youths forced to live in the sewers. (Photo courtesy of Michael Forbes)

Activists and other concerned citizens in Jamaica are working to build support for a shelter for homeless LGBT youths who have sought refuge in the sewers after being driven out of their family homes and out of abandoned buildings.

Their project is called “Dwayne’s House” in memory of 16-year-old Dwayne Jones, who was murdered in July because he went to a public dance in a dress.

Here is one activist’s account of the project, which now has a Twitter account to follow and a Facebook page to like.  Contributions are welcome — designate donations for “Dwayne’s House” on the gay-friendly church’s website.

WHY DWAYNE’S HOUSE?

Dwayne Jones

Dwayne Jones

Over 80% of Jamaicans self-identify as homophobic.

Some parents throw their LGBTI kids on the streets as young as 12 years old.

Dwayne Jones was thrown out at 14 and murdered at 16 for wearing a dress to a public street-dance.

Armed police have chased these homeless kids from every abandoned building they occupied.

Some of these buildings have been torn down to prevent the kids “re-infesting” them.

When these youngsters go to the few government shelters they are attacked by other residents because of their sexual orientation, gender identity and expression.

Some of these youngsters now live in sewers in Kingston. See the images above and below.

Many of them sell sex to survive.

Some clients pay the youth extra to have condom-less sex.

This has increased the vulnerability of these youngsters to contracting HIV and other STIs.

Dwayne's House logo

Dwayne’s House logo

We need to get these homeless youth off the streets and into a shelter and provide them with basic social services.

We are currently providing them with non-perishable food items twice per week.

We have also collected clothing for them.

We need your help to make this a sustainable venture. We also want to establish a permanent home for them.

Please consider donating to Dwayne’s House at www.openarmsmcc.org with a notation “Dwayne’s House.”

Thank you.

Homeless LGBT youths sleeping in Jamaican sewers. (Photo courtesy of Micheal Forbes)

Homeless LGBT youths sleeping in Jamaican sewers. (Photo courtesy of Micheal Forbes)

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8 arrests, not help, for homeless Jamaican LGBTs

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Homeless LGBT youths sleeping in Jamaican sewers. (Photo courtesy of Micheal Forbes)

Homeless LGBT youths sleeping in Jamaican sewers. (Photo courtesy of Micheal Forbes)

Police in New Kingston, Jamaica, arrested eight homeless men on robbery charges  Dec. 1, even as concerned Jamaican citizens and activists work to help LGBT men forced to live in the sewers.

Some activists expressed doubt that police were targeting the right people. Others saw criminal behavior as a predictable outcome of unrelenting homophobic harassment that the men have endured. Many criticized newspaper coverage of the arrests.

What should be done?

One Jamaican activist wrote:

More Anti-Gay Reporting by the Sandals Resorts-Owned Jamaica Observer

Once again the homophobic Jamaican tabloid, the Jamaica Observer, which is owned by Gordon “Butch” Stewart of Sandals Resorts, seeks to demonize and vilify all gays through an inflammatory headline. Exactly why is the sexual orientation of these young men relevant? Are we going to start seeing headlines “heterosexual man murders his girlfriend?” Or ” straight pastor rapes female congregant?”

Some Jamaican gays were kicked out of their homes as young as 12 years old because of the country’s crushing homophobia. Some of them now engage in anti-social behaviour to survive. Should we as a society be surprised that some of these youngsters choose to steal from a society that so blatantly rejected them?

This is the Jamaica Observer’s story about the arrests:

8 homosexuals in custody for robbery

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Eight homosexual men believed to be involved in a series of robberies in the New Kingston area were taken into custody at the Half Way Tree Police Station Sunday [Dec. 1].

Police say the one-hour joint operation conducted by the New Kingston Police Post, the St Andrew Central Division and Delta Special Operations started at 12:00 pm on Antigua and Trafalgar Roads and culminated on Dumfries and Ruthven Roads.

The lawmen say they accosted and searched the men who reside in a close by gully and recovered several items of stolen property.

The police also listed five other men believed to be involved in the spate of robberies as ‘Persons-of-Interest’. The men, only known by their aliases, are ‘Marlene Malaboo-Forte’, ‘Michelle’, ‘Pebbles’, ‘Goodas’ and ‘Bat Man’.

Jamaican police seize, burn donations to LGBT youths

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No place like home: LGBT youths forced to live in the sewers. (Photo courtesy of Michael Forbes)

LGBT youths forced to live in the New Kingston sewers. (Photo courtesy of Michael Forbes)

Jamaican police on Dec. 1 seized and burned food and clothing that concerned citizens had donated to LGBT youths who have been living in the sewers of New Kingston, activists say.

The youths moved into the sewers after being evicted first from their families’ homes and then from abandoned buildings.  The donations were part of an effort to help the men, with the goal of providing them with housing and basic social services.

The destruction of the donated goods occurred during a police crackdown that resulted in the arrest of eight homeless young men on robbery charges.

A human rights activist who spoke by telephone with one of the arrested youths on Dec. 1 reported the following information, provided by Rick (not his real name):

Maurice Tomlinson (Photo courtesy of Macalester.edu)

Maurice Tomlinson (Photo courtesy of Macalester.edu)

Police burned their clothes, as they had also done on a previous raid, including clothes that LGBT rights activist Maurice Tomlinson had given to them.

Police also burned canned food that was donated to them last week.

The youths only remaining possessions are what they were wearing and what they carried in their bags.

Although the Jamaica Observer reported that police recovered several items of stolen property, Rick said he saw no such goods and heard no such claim from the police.

When the group came out of the gully, on orders from police who raided the site, they were met with television cameras and reporters from television stations and from the Jamaica Star.

Police then took the youth to Half-Way Tree police station where the police photographed the youths, took their names, their parents’ names, and their parents’ addresses.

The youth were then told that the gully [also described as the sewers] was now a forbidden area, and if they were found in the gully they would be locked up.

Police told them that it was the holiday season, so more people would want to be in New Kingston, but  the presence of the youth was scaring people away.

Police told them to go back home to their parents [who previously threw them out because of their sexual orientation].

Rick and about 10 or 11 others were on the road , and they are likely to have little choice but to return to the gully.

Concerned citizens are seeking donations to Dwayne’s House, which is the name of the shelter that they hope to provide for the homeless LGBT youths.

To contribute online, go the website of the gay-friendly Open Arms Metropolitan Community Church; indicate that your donation is for “Dwayne’s House.”

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Jamaica: Support grows for LGBT youths living in sewers

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Jamaican LGBT youths living in sewers. (Photo courtesy of Facebook)

Jamaican LGBT youths living in sewers. (Photo courtesy of Facebook)

The plight of homeless LGBT youths in Jamaica has become much more widely known recently, even as much remains to be done to help them.

Ousted from everywhere else they have tried to live — their parents’ homes, then abandoned buildings, then an open-air gully — the youths have sought shelter in the sewers of New Kingston, most recently in a drainage tunnel under Trafalgar Road. Police raided the site on Dec. 2, seizing and burning clothing and food they suspected was stolen.

Police released seven of the eight youths whom they had arrested on suspicion of robbery, the Jamaica Observer reported. No charges were filed against them.

As it turned out, the items that police destroyed included clothing and food donated by concerned citizens seeking to help the youths. The police decision to burn charitable donations provoked outrage, boosting the visibility of the effort to provide the youths with food, social services and a shelter, to be called Dwayne’s House.

Achievements of the Dwayne’s House project include:

  • Dwayne's House logo

    Dwayne’s House logo

    Regular food deliveries for about 15 LGBT youths.

  • Early attempts to find work for them so they will have an alternative to sex work and theft as sources of income.
  • Initial planning toward the goals of:
    • Establishing a drop-in center where the youths can eat, shower and receive basic services.
    • Establishing a residential facility where the youths can receive appropriate social services to help them get on their feet as productive members of society.
  • The launch of a Facebook page and a Web site, which is still partially under construction.
  • A method for people in the United States to make online tax-deductible contributions to Dwayne’s House via the Open Arms Metropolitan Community Church in Rochester, N.Y. (On the church’s PayPal Web pages, on the page for reviewing your donation, write “Dwayne’s House” in the field labeled “Add special instructions to the seller”) before authorizing the donation.)
  • A method for people in Canada to make online contributions to Dwayne’s House that are eligible for tax credit via the Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto. (Write “Dwayne’s House” in the Message/Instructions field of the church’s page at the CanadaHelps.org donation site.)
  • Progress toward incorporating Dwayne’s House in Jamaica, which will allow it to do its own fund-raising.

In the meantime, officials of J-FLAG (the Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals and Gays) spoke up for the youths at a Jamaica Gleaner Editors’ Forum:

Dane Lewis, president of J-FLAG, on YouTube video in the "We Are Jamaicans" campaign.

Dane Lewis, president of J-FLAG

Latoya Nugent, J-FLAG’s public education and community outreach manager, said state agencies are often afraid to assist the children because of their sexual orientation.

“When you have boys under 18 – and as young as 13 – who are on the streets, that is something that the CDA (Child Development Agency) should be responsible for. But then, nothing happens because everybody is afraid to touch them,” she said.

Dane Lewis, J-FLAG’s executive director, said the group has been given the runaround in its quest to get these children off the streets.

“The CDA has suggested that it is the police’s responsibility first, and the police say, ‘Our hands are tied’,” Lewis added.

But the Gleaner also took a sensationalist approach to the topic, publishing an article headlined “The enemy within – Aggressive New Kingston homosexuals causing fresh backlash against community.”

The article stated, “There are growing fears that the rowdy and sometimes criminal behaviour of a group of homosexual men in New Kingston could erode the strides that have been made towards greater tolerance of homosexuals in Jamaica.”

But it also stated that Lewis of J-FLAG “says the rambunctious gathering — which in the past has been fingered in robberies, theft and other antisocial behaviour — highlights the issue of persons being evicted from their communities because of their sexual orientation.”

Sean-Major-Campbell-Rev-Jamaica-Gleaner

The Rev. Sean Major-Campbell (Photo courtesy of Jamaica Gleaner)

The Rev. Sean Major-Campbell, an Anglican priest at Christ Church, Vineyard Town in St. Andrew, on Dec. 8 urged Christians to help the youths, saying he was disappointed that more Christians were not speaking out against the injustices the youths face.

“How many Christians have you heard calling out for any kind of help for those young men who have taken refuge in the gully?” he asked during a church service sponsored by Jamaicans for Justice (JFJ) to commemorate International Human Rights Day and the life of Nelson Mandela. As reported by the Jamaica Observer, he said:

“It is a shame that in a country like Jamaica we are more likely to hear the voice of civil society speaking out for human rights while the Church remains quiet.”

Rev. Campbell said that he was aware that some members of the group (homosexuals) may have turned to crime, but said that was an issue for the police to deal with. …

He said that it was important for Jamaicans, the Church included, to recognise the human rights of all people, bar none.

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