A brief comparison with the current South African constitution was also made during the questioning, specifically highlighting that country’s transformation from the days of apartheid to a now human-rights-conscious society that protects the rights of every citizen, including the GLBT community.
Interestingly, Jamaica and Jamaicans were among the many who supported the economic sanctions against that country, showing unmitigated disapproval of the human rights violations under the apartheid regime. While an entire race was being subjugated in that case as a result of ethnicity and economic power, the underpinning injustice of discrimination mirrors the ongoing experience of Jamaica’s gay people, a minority group based on sexual orientation.
In fact, the former Archbishop of Cape Town and Nobel Peace Prize winner, Desmond Tutu, affirms that homophobia is a crime against humanity and is equally as destructive as apartheid. In a later comment, the minister declared, “Let the people of Jamaica tell the government what to do as far as gay rights are concerned,”
which was followed by a half-hearted round of applause from some members of the audience. In this regard, the overtly expressed mindset by the Minister of Justice as far as the rights of Jamaica’s gay community are concerned reflects the general unjust approach and principles of the current administration in relation to the protection of the rights of minorities in Jamaica, which upholds popular and/or cultural biases over universal human rights.
Sadly the easy way is being taken here as we all know where a referendum in this sensitive matter there may not be time even to properly launch a public education, hence it would be a resounding no to amending buggery or not oblige ‘gay rights’ political parties fear losing elections and given the previous election win of the PNP despite a leader who has been pigeon-holed as gay. Populism is more important than anything else as a weak parliamentary opposition only secures the ease for the PNP to glide effectively unchallenged.
I would not be too optimistic on this at all.
Let us see if some enlightenment will come one fine day.
I would not be too optimistic on this at all.
Let us see if some enlightenment will come one fine day.
More to come as the struggle continues
Peace & tolerance
H