So much effort was spent to get this sex education course into children's homes while bypassing the CDA and indeed the CDA should have picked up on it with its internal monitoring of the homes (one wonders if they lied to the public of knowledge of the activity) when so many homeless MSM/Transgender need assistance and programs but does the CVCC and others care, it would seem that they do not.
The Gleaner carried this:
The leadership of Jamaicans for Justice (JFJ) continued to collapse, yesterday as the human- rights lobby's Executive Director Kay Osborne resigned with immediate effect after less than five months into the job.
Osborne's resignation came less than two days after JFJ Chairman Lisa Lakhan-Chen indicated she would be resigning, following the controversial sex-education programme that was delivered in six privately run children's homes.
Osborne stressed in her resignation letter to Lakhan-Chen that JFJ's review of the controversial 'Healthy Sexual Growth and Development in Marginalised Youth: Rights, Responsibilities and Life Skills' course implemented in the homes had explicitly exonerated her from having knowledge or oversight of the programme.
"The board of directors having clarified that the children's home programme was a HIV/AIDS-prevention intervention has led to my decision that I cannot work as executive director of a human-rights advocacy organisation that does not advise me that it is implementing a programme in children's homes to decrease the spread of HIV/AIDS," her resignation letter read.
Osborne has maintained that she was unaware of the programme, tellingThe Gleaner/ Power106 News Centre less than two weeks ago that she would not have taken the job if she had been aware of the sex-education course.
"I was unaware that JFJ was engaged in a sex-education programme. It never came up in the interview and it did not come up in any part of the interview process and confirmation of my appointment," she had said on July 7.
However, Dr Carolyn Gomes, the former executive director of JFJ, under whose tenure the project was initiated, has argued that Osborne was aware of the project and even spoke about it on television and in a press release.
Specific details
In that episode of CVM TV's 'Live @ 7' current affairs programme, which aired in early June, Osborne gave specific details of a programme dealing with sexuality being delivered by JFJ in children's homes.
"We just completed 75 and will complete 100 workshops in children's homes where we are helping children learn more healthy ways of engaging with their own bodies, learning about their sexuality, about self-esteem and so on, helping them to become better citizens," she said on the programme, which aired days before the controversy over the sex-education course and its content first came to national attention.
She added: "We are at fault in that we have not tooted our horn as much as we could."
In a response to Gomes' claim that this was further proof that she was aware of the programme, Osborne yesterday asserted that during that interview she thought the initiative she was speaking of was more in line with JFJ's other programmes.
Expectation
"I mentioned the programme during my 'Live @ 7' interview and in my press release to the Honourable Lisa Hanna, minister of youth and culture, as being among JFJ's ongoing projects. Like Jamaicans everywhere, my expectation was that the children's home programme was similar to one of the different types of human-rights advocacy programmes JFJ is well known for engaging in over many years," Osborne said.
The sex-education programme is now the subject of an investigation by the police, Child Development Agency and the Attorney General's Department, as it is said to have exposed children to inappropriate material.
Lakhan-Chen said JFJ has since sought legal advice in light of the investigations and has conducted its own internal review.
In addition to Osborne and Lakhan-Chen, Gomes recently resigned as a board member of JFJ.
After Gomes' departure, JFJ directors Susan Goffe and Rodje Malcolm also resigned. The Reverend Sean Major-Campbell, deputy chairman of the lobby, is also expected to tender his resignation soon.
See Jamaica Observer's take HERE and their take on
Dr Carolyn Gomes misrepresenting me, says Osborne
ENDS
My opinions remain the same as espoused in my podcast on the matter when it first broke:
Sad to watch this go down like this, why did JFJ take on folks in the first place that were clearly incompetent to begin with and why didn't the old guard be more scrupulous in such appointments are even bigger questions, meanwhile Outgoing chairman of Jamaicans for Justice (JFJ), Lisa Lakhan Chen, says it has sought legal advice in the wake of at least two investigations into the explicit sex education programme it implemented in six private children’s homes this year.
The JFJ chairman told The Gleaner-Power 106 News Centre that to date she has not received any official notice from the police to participate in any probe.
However, Lakhan Chen says in the best interest of the organisation, JFJ has sought advice from its attorneys.
The controversial programme created a firestorm over the sexual details it provided to children as young as 13 years old and an internal review conducted by JFJ concluded, among other things, that children may have been exposed to content that might not have been appropriate for their age.
In addition to a probe by the police, Youth Minister Lisa Hanna has asked the Attorney General’s office to review the contents of the programme to determine if they violated any laws.
here is an older interview from the 18th on Nationwide radio:
The JFJ chairman told The Gleaner-Power 106 News Centre that to date she has not received any official notice from the police to participate in any probe.
However, Lakhan Chen says in the best interest of the organisation, JFJ has sought advice from its attorneys.
The controversial programme created a firestorm over the sexual details it provided to children as young as 13 years old and an internal review conducted by JFJ concluded, among other things, that children may have been exposed to content that might not have been appropriate for their age.
In addition to a probe by the police, Youth Minister Lisa Hanna has asked the Attorney General’s office to review the contents of the programme to determine if they violated any laws.
here is an older interview from the 18th on Nationwide radio:
Peace and tolerance
H
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