Jamaica PM stands firm on sodomy law
03.04.2009 4:34pm EST
(Kingston) Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding has told Parliament his government will not yield to “perhaps the most organized lobby in the world” and will not abolish prison sentences for sodomy.
Golding made the comment during debate on a new sexual offences law primarily aimed at combating rape and child abuse. Jamaican LGBT rights groups and international human rights organizations had urged the government to include a repeal of the sodomy law in the new act.Gay sex is punishable by up to 7 years in prison under a law which dates back to British colonial rule. Britain has long since abolished the law and has urged its former colonies to do the same.
“We are not going to yield to the pressure, whether that pressure comes from individual organizations, individuals, whether that pressure comes from foreign governments or groups of countries, to liberalize the laws as it relates to buggery,” Golding told Parliament .
“Every society is shaped and defined by certain moral standards and the laws that evolve in that society are informed by a framework that the society recognizes. If we start to yield; if we start to liberalize in the direction that strong organized lobby would insist that we should, then where do you draw the line?” the Prime Minister said.
But Golding also distanced himself from another member of Parliament who called for stiffer sentences.
MP Ernest Smith last month suggested life sentences for homosexuality. He also called for the prosecution of LGBT rights groups Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, and J-FLAG under the country’s law against conspiring to corrupt public morals.
“I disagree with the comments he made about the rights of persons who advocate for liberation of laws relating to sexual offences, to facilitate, to allow persons the right of choice in their sexual practices,” Golding said.
Jamaica has been described by human rights groups as having the worst record of any country in the New World in its treatment of gays and lesbians.
In January 2008 a group of men approached a house where four males lived in the central Jamaican town of Mandeville, and demanded that they leave the community because they were gay, according to Jamaican human rights activists who spoke with the victims.
Later that evening, a mob returned and surrounded the house. The four men inside called the police when they saw the crowd gathering. The mob started to attack the house, shouting and throwing bottles.
Those in the house called police again and were told that the police were on the way. Approximately half an hour later, 15-20 men broke down the door and began beating and slashing the inhabitants.
Human Rights Watch, quoting local activists said that police did not arrive until a half hour after the mob had broken into the house – 90 minutes after the men first called for help.
One of the victims managed to flee with the mob pursuing. A Jamaican newspaper reported that blood was found at the mouth of a nearby pit, suggesting he had fallen inside or may have been killed nearby.
The police escorted the three other victims away from the scene; two of them were taken to the hospital. One of the men had his left ear severed, his arm broken in two places, and his spine reportedly damaged.
There have been no arrests.
The attack echoes another incident in the same town on Easter Sunday, April 8, 2007 when approximately 100 men gathered outside a church where 150 people were attending the funeral of a gay man.
According to mourners, the crowd broke the windows with bottles and shouted, “We want no battyman [gay] funeral here. Leave or else we’re going to kill you. We don’t want no battyman buried here in Mandeville.”
Several mourners inside the church called the police to request protection. After half an hour, three police officers arrived.
Human Rights Watch said that instead of protecting the mourners, police socialized with the mob, laughing along at the situation.
A highway patrol car subsequently arrived, and one of the highway patrol officers reportedly told the churchgoers, “It’s full time this needs to happen. Enough of you guys.”
The highway patrol officers then drove off. The remaining officers at the scene refused to intervene when the mob threatened the mourners with sticks, stones, and batons as they tried to leave the service. Only when several gay men among the mourners took knives from their cars for self-defense did police reportedly take action by firing their guns into the air. Officers stopped gay men from leaving and searched their vehicles, but did not restrain or detain members of the mob, Human Rights Watch said.
More than 30 gay men are believed to have been murdered since 1997 , J-FLAG says. In most of the cases the killers have never been brought to trial.
Arrests, however have been made in several cases which received international attention.
In 2004 Brian Williamson, Jamaica’s leading LGBT civil rights advocate, was brutally murdered. He had been stabbed at least 70 times in the neck. A 25-year-old man is currently serving a life sentence for the murder.
In December 2005, Lenford “Steve” Harvey, who ran Jamaica AIDS Support for Life, was killed.
Harvey was shot to death on the eve of World AIDS Day. His organization provided support to gay men and sex workers. Four men were arrested almost a year later.
In 2006, the bodies of two women believed to have been in a lesbian relationship were found dumped in a septic pit behind a home they shared. The killers of Candice Williams and Phoebe Myrie have not been caught.
Students at University of the West Indies in Kingston rioted last year as police attempted to protect a gay student and escort him from the campus. The incident began when the student was chased across the campus by another student who claimed the gay man had attempted to proposition him in a washroom.
The same year, a young man plunged to his death off a pier in Kingston after reportedly being chased through the streets by a mob yelling homophobic epithets.
In February 2007, three men in “tight jeans” and wearing what some witnesses described as makeup were cornered by a mob of 2000 in a drugstore. There were yells of “kill them” along with gay slurs and demands the three be sent out “to face justice”. Police had to fire teargas into the crowd to rescue the three.
Reggae, or Jamaican dancehall music, is blamed for fueling homophobia. Reggae star BujuBanton’s hit song Boom Boom Bye Bye threatens gay men with a “gunshot in ah head.”




Sessy probably wants to keep going because it is so easy to buy weed in public.
How about try Amsterdam?
I was in Jamaica once, just passing through the airport on a business trip to South America. I had to go outside to change terminals, and as soon as I stepped on the sidewalk 3 or 4 people started following me offering pot. I was dressed in business attire!
I’m not at all against pot but this is just my example of what an out of control society it must be there. You would think they could get it away from the airport, at least, with the vacationing families arriving etc.
What a double standard, it seems. Now that we have a more receptive audience in Washington, it may be time to get Mrs. Clinton doing something to put pressure on them. I guess another letter to write….
Boycotts do work, look at how it influenced other countries in that area that would not allow gay cruise ships to dock in their waters. When gay people are being beaten and killed it is very disturbing (sorry, but you are part of the problem, Sessy) when we think more about our own needs for recreation and sunshine than their welfare.
“Personally”, I think your an asshole, Sessy. LOL! Boycott EVERYTHING jamaican NOW!! Show these putrid little hetero hatemongers, including their brain dead PM, exactly how long their little 3rd world sh*thole will last when the tourist $$$ dries up!
Personally I love going there. I have never been to the “tourist” areas either which is where I’m guessing most of the people from the US go to whenever they visit such places.
Point well taken, Sessy. Indeed the Bush administration was more aligned with the attitudes of the Jamaican PM and is a blemish and embarrassment for right-minded Americans.
That said, leaders sometimes have to be forced out if not convinced that basic human rights protections are the business of government. Not mob rule.
Meanwhile, why would any right thinking LGBT person, family or friend want to visit Jamaica when there are so many other friendly places in the world. In the Caribbean, check out Trinidad. I’m jus sayin’.
I say if you don’t want to go then don’t. Trust me you won’t be missed. I find it funny that so many Americans talk about such hateful things when it comes to this place but the damage Jamaica has done to the world is non existent to the damage that America has done.
No big shocker there. I’ve known a few Jamaicans and they were all blatantly, rabidly homophobic.
Also, one of them was a HUGE blip on ye olde gaydar….irony, meet denial
The U.S. should boycott Jamaica. Money talks, that is the only thing that will get through to them. Halt their tourism industry.
I for one will never be going there or buying anything from there. Whats really funny is that jamaica owes its birth to britain, but they hold hold onto the old laws by the very people who oppressed them. Haha, ignorance at its best.
I won’t go there.
It’s sad that in this day and age that a Prime Minister has to outlaw sodomy, hmm? Sounds to me that he’s the PM of “I can’t get none, neither will you.”
One wonders why anyone would visit this backward, hateful country! Any U.S. travel agency that books trips there should cease the practice immediately. If all U.S. travel agencies, airlines, and cruise ships would boycott these bigots they would soon change People should also note no one is safe there—if those mobs think anyone looks “gay” they can be beaten or killed with no intervention by the so called police.
Jamaica is the only place I have been that I do not want to go back. Sad because I meet several nice people there and the island has great natural beauty. Seemed like it was perfectly O.K. for men to sleep aroung creating more mouths to feed in a poor country, Then they get all high and mighty about morals. One tour guide bragged about how he had several kids all by different mothers.
Tom in Long Beach
So what do we do to help besides boycotting Jamaica??? Seriously. I’m SICK TO DEATH of reading these stories about the repression and horrors visited on LGBT people in Jamaica, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Pakistan – the list goes on. What can we do to help? Any ideas?
A country which shows such blatant ignorance and callous disregard for the well being of all members of humanity will have to answer for its history some day.
The best thing to do with Jamaica and other countries that not only permit, but encourage hate is to stay out of there and encourage others to boycott those countries as well. Also, be sure not to purchase goods produced in Jamaica.