Caribbean: Anti-gay law is ripe for reversal, Antigua says
Colin Stewart is a 45-year journalism veteran living in Southern…
But the Antiguan government won’t take such action on its own.
As Antigua’s Daily Observer reported:
The government has said an outright no to repealing the laws [criminalising] buggery, a decision which has disappointed the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LBGT) community.
The Cabinet of Antigua & Barbuda, on [Aug. 24], agreed that “the buggery law will remain unchanged”.
In the same breath, government acknowledged that the results which were obtained in the recent historic Belize case are likely to follow, should an interest group pursue this matter in the courts, since “our jurisprudence is similar”.
The Supreme Court in Belize ruled a few weeks ago that a law which criminalises homosexuality was unconstitutional.
The decision was handed down six years after a gay citizen advocate, 42-year-old Caleb Orozco, brought the challenge against the attorney general of Belize.
LBGT activist Tasheka Lavann said she is gravely disappointed by the declaration, however she will remain undaunted.
Antiguan law provides for up to 15 years in prison for consensual anal intercourse, whether between men or between a man and a woman.
The country’s minister of social transformation, Samantha Marshall, says the law is antiquated and should be repealed.
Antigua is one of several Caribbean countries where the possibility of repealing such laws is at least being discussed. In Guyana, the prime minister has talked several times about repealing them. In Dominica, the prime minister says they’re not enforced.
Related articles:
- Belize fundamentalists hope to appeal sodomy ruling (August 25, 2016, 76crimes.com)
- Top court in Belize overturns sodomy law (Aug. 10, 2016, 76crimes.com)
- Proposal for Antigua officials: Repeal anti-gay law (May 2016, 76crimes.com)
- Caribbean nations inch their way toward LGBTI rights (April 2016, 76crimes.com)
- Belize activist: ‘I’ve sacrificed my life to this work’ (June 2015, 76crimes.com)
- Death threats, symbols of death haunt Belize LGBTs (July 2013, 76crimes.com)
- Caribbean overview: LGBT rights vs. anti-gay status quo (August 2013, 76crimes.com)
- An LGBT victory in Belize (September 2013, 76crimes.com)
- Archive of this blog’s articles about Antigua.
- Archive of this blog’s articles about Belize.
Good afternoon, it seems your map is inaccurate as Haiti and Domican Republic are separated by a border, however Haiti is not listed on the map.
You are right, Vanessa. Haiti should be listed on the west side of the island it shares with the Dominican Republic. The map does look like the DR occupies the whole island.
— Colin Stewart, editor of Erasing 76 Crimes