Letter to the Editor 08.06.09
The Editor, Sir:
I write in response to an article published on June 4, titled 'Prostitution, buggery laws hamper HIV/STI services'.
It is sad to know that Jamaica, which is known regionally for some of the best strategies in social intervention programmes, is still behind where buggery and prostitution laws are concerned. First, I must commend Dr Kevin Harvey for his consciousness and continued realisation that we continue to delay progress in providing services to commercial sex workers and homosexuals because both activities are illegal.
While what Harvey has said is true and has much relevance, as a young Jamaican I would have been more delighted if he had announced that the ministry would champion the cause for the decriminalisation of these laws so that my colleagues and I would feel comfortable and safe accessing health services without fear of discrimination or violence.
I am knowledgeable that the attitudes and behaviours of health professionals and service providers will not change overnight. However, as a country we must encourage national discourse and promote a culture of respect and tolerance for individual choices in respect to commercial sex work and/or homosexuality. This will ensure that my colleagues will access the appropriate information and care needed without the possibility of the health provider being arrested.
Very little can be done
As a young person involved in several community and national development-led projects/initiatives in youth empowerment, adolescent sexual and reproductive health and violence prevention, I am aware that there are hundreds of youth in dire need of counselling and health care. But there is very little those of us who are either homosexuals, or accommodating of lesbians, gays, bisexuals, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) youth can do without policy change and government support.
In the 2008 country report submitted to UNAIDS, the Ministry of Health indicated that the HIV prevalence rate among Jamaican men who have sex with men is between 25 and 30 per cent. Year by year this will continue to increase if as a country we do not move at speed with the decriminalisation of homosexuality and commercial sex work. We will continue to lower our level of productivity and lose our bright minds who are dying from infection or violence and increasingly seeking asylum in other countries so long as we ostracise these individuals from the society with these outdated and harsh laws.
I am, etc.,
CORBIN GORDON
jamaicanboi85@live.com
Dressed To Kill
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Upon its release in 1980, Brian De Palma's *Dressed to Kill* was as
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