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A regressive 19th century law, that is a legacy of British rule, continues to exist in 10 of the 12 independent Commonwealth Caribbean states.
The law, inspired by the 1553 Buggery Act in England, was imposed on all British colonies by the colonial government in Britain in 1861.  It effectively outlawed homosexuality.
The two independent Commonwealth Caribbean countries that have done away with this archaic law, which, it should be emphasised, was not enacted by Caribbean legislators, are The Bahamas and Belize.    The law also does not exist in Haiti and Suriname which, together with the 12 independent Commonwealth countries, comprise the Caribbean Community (CARICOM).
In one of the 10 countries, Trinidad and Tobago, a High Court judgment ruled that sections of the existing law, which criminalize buggery between consenting adults, ”are unconstitutional and should be struck down”.  So, there has been action by the judiciary to reject the consequences on the Trinidad and Tobago society of a law imposed by colonial England one hundred and fifty-seven years ago.
The law was not imposed by Britain in 1861 because there was a demand for it within its many colonies at the time.   It was reportedly imposed to protect British soldiers and colonial administrators from “corruption” out of a fear that these men sent far from home (and their women) would turn to homosexuality.
Of course, the law has long since been discarded within Britain itself.  Today, homosexual men and women play leading and public roles in every aspect of British society, including its government.
Other former colonies of Britain have also repealed this archaic law.  Among these countries are Australia, Canada, South Africa, New Zealand and most recently India.
The discarding of laws, that discriminated against citizens based on their sexual orientation, has unleashed economic activity and productivity in all these countries.  People who lived lives of fear, closeted from the society and afraid to participate to the full extent of their talents and creativity, are now freely contributing to government, the arts, and the advancement of their countries’ economies in unprecedented ways.

Holding back any society on the basis of any form of discrimination – gender, race, religion and sexuality – stunts it, depriving it of talent, expertise and productivity that would otherwise contribute to its growth and development.
Of the over 200 nations in the world, only 70 retain laws that discriminate against its citizens based on their sexuality.  Of those 70 countries, 35 are in the Commonwealth – all of them retaining the law imposed upon them by colonial England.  The majority of these Commonwealth countries are in Africa (13), followed by the Caribbean (10) the Asian region (6), and the Pacific (6).
This “Commonwealth” problem had been identified by the Eminent Persons Group (EPG) on which I served as a member and Rapporteur between 2010 and 2011.  In our report, “A Commonwealth of the People: Time for Urgent Reform” submitted to the 2011 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Australia, we recommended that: “Heads of Government should take steps to encourage the repeal of discriminatory laws that impede the effective response of Commonwealth countries to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and commit to programmes of education that would help a process of repeal of such laws”.
The EPG cast the repeal of these discriminatory laws in the context of curbing the spread of HIV/AIDS because Commonwealth countries comprised over 30 per cent of the world’s population and over 60 per cent of people living with HIV resided in them.  We recognised that discriminatory laws made homosexuals outlaws and, therefore, deterred persons suffering with HIV from seeking medical attention, lest they be imprisoned. The human carnage was sizeable; it was also needless.
There was much discussion within the EPG about whether to include this recommendation, not because we had any reservation about its rightness, but because a few of us feared – me included – that some leaders would be motivated by their fear of repealing the buggery law to discard the entire report and, with it, solid recommendations for urgent reform of a withering Commonwealth.
Eventually, the recommendation was included because of the persuasive arguments of two members of the EPG – Michael Kirby, a former Justice of the High Court of Australia, and Asma Jahangir (now deceased), a Pakistani human rights lawyer who served as the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief.

Their argument was simple but compelling:  No person should be denied the right to live their lives in equality with other citizens because of who they are in terms of race, political persuasion, religious beliefs, gender or sexual orientation.  Kirby acknowledged that the path to achieve this objective is not easy, but he reminded me and other members of the group that, when we fought against the wrongs of apartheid in Southern Africa, we knew that we were arrayed against mighty forces of bigotry, racism and political interest; yet we fought because we knew that what existed was wrong.
The discriminatory laws against homosexuality, and other forms of sexual behaviour by consenting adults, continue to be defended by a few churches.  In the Caribbean and Africa, these churches are predominantly foreign and dogmatic, and lawmakers are made hesitant to repeal these laws in the face of their assertive influence on local populations.
But, other churches offer progressive views.  For instance, the General Convention of the Episcopal Church has declared that, “homosexual persons are children of God who have a full and equal claim with all other persons upon the love, acceptance, and pastoral concern and care of the Church”, and Pope Francis has observed, “If someone is gay and searches for the Lord, who am I to judge?”
The ten Commonwealth Caribbean countries are burdened by colonial leftovers, including ancient and imposed anti-homosexual laws; it is time for them to move on and join the progressive nations of the world by freeing their citizens in equality.

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VishMahabir posted:

Yo Misty...why you hung up on dis kind of story banna...?

just asking...slow news day??

Do you understand why the buggery laws were introduced  in Guyana?

Is there a valid reason for it to still remain on the books?

Do you support that homosexuality should be outlawed?

 

Mitwah
kp posted:

Lilly Myth is GNI Gay Boy, his avatar looks like an innocent Gay Boy advertising on GNI.

Hey Kutia Pu$$y, if you don't play that game, why then all your posts are about homo erotic fantasies, man's batty, antiman, gayboys etc.? 

Look at Yugli's homosexual avatar. Do you like his gay colors?

Mitwah
Mitwah posted:
VishMahabir posted:

Yo Misty...why you hung up on dis kind of story banna...?

just asking...slow news day??

 

 

Do you understand why the buggery laws were introduced  in Guyana?

Not sure...but the word "buggery" sounds like a terrible one (why cant they say "homosexuals or gays?).

Is there a valid reason for it to still remain on the books?

Not sure there should be such a law...what people do in their bedrooms is their business

Do you support that homosexuality should be outlawed?

Not outlawed, but govt should not get involved in this (it should come under privacy).

V
VishMahabir posted:
Mitwah posted:
VishMahabir posted:

Yo Misty...why you hung up on dis kind of story banna...?

just asking...slow news day??

 

 

Do you understand why the buggery laws were introduced  in Guyana?

Not sure...but the word "buggery" sounds like a terrible one (why cant they say "homosexuals or gays?).

Is there a valid reason for it to still remain on the books?

Not sure there should be such a law...what people do in their bedrooms is their business

Do you support that homosexuality should be outlawed?

Not outlawed, but govt should not get involved in this (it should come under privacy).

I see you have not read the article. 

Mitwah
Mitwah posted:
kp posted:

Lilly Myth is GNI Gay Boy, his avatar looks like an innocent Gay Boy advertising on GNI.

Hey Kutia Pu$$y, if you don't play that game, why then all your posts are about homo erotic fantasies, man's batty, antiman, gayboys etc.? 

Look at Yugli's homosexual avatar. Do you like his gay colors?

Hey Gayboy ? Those colours are of the PPP. It is election time.

BTW, Gays were created by god and everyone is equal in his eyes. We will understand and respect your decision when you decide to come out of the closet.

Have no fear.

FM
yuji22 posted:
Mitwah posted:
kp posted:

Lilly Myth is GNI Gay Boy, his avatar looks like an innocent Gay Boy advertising on GNI.

Hey Kutia Pu$$y, if you don't play that game, why then all your posts are about homo erotic fantasies, man's batty, antiman, gayboys etc.? 

Look at Yugli's homosexual avatar. Do you like his gay colors?

Hey Gayboy ? Those colours are of the PPP. It is election time.

BTW, Gays were created by god and everyone is equal in his eyes. We will understand and respect your decision when you decide to come out of the closet.

Have no fear.

Your avatar is like the Gay Pride flag, probably same colors like your bukta.   Good to know that the Kutia Puppy found you in the closet and brought you out. Anyway, I am pleased that you are happy. 

Oh Ballahu Brahmana, when did you realize that gays were created by Bhagwan and that everyone is equal in his eyes?

Like you say:It is election time. It's good that PPP adopt the colors of the Gay Pride. They probably want to show that they represent the gay, lesbian, bisexual and all other communities. If that is so, why is it during their 23 years in power they did not try to change the buggery laws of Guyana?

Mitwah

Mits if you consider a sex change then don't forget to pass the hat around the board. All the guys will throw some money in the defray some of the cost of the operation.

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad
Prashad posted:

Mits if you consider a sex change then don't forget to pass the hat around the board. All the guys will throw some money in the defray some of the cost of the operation.

Why are you telling me this?

Mitwah
Mitwah posted:
Prashad posted:

Mits if you consider a sex change then don't forget to pass the hat around the board. All the guys will throw some money in the defray some of the cost of the operation.

Why are you telling me this?

I just don't want a fellow GN&I get stuck with a large medical bill from the operation to remove his Captain Guyana.

Prashad
yuji22 posted:

According to posters here, Mits does swing that way. PNC used him good and prappa and they no longer need him for daily cut and paste. 

Sad situation.

And why do you care? Is he invading your space?

FM
Prashad posted:
Mitwah posted:
Prashad posted:

Mits if you consider a sex change then don't forget to pass the hat around the board. All the guys will throw some money in the defray some of the cost of the operation.

Why are you telling me this?

I just don't want a fellow GN&I get stuck with a large medical bill from the operation to remove his Captain Guyana.

I see you are siding and following KP who boasts of carrying a PNC card shaking down his mattee coolees for fried rice , XM rum and Banks Beer.

Please don't behave like an idiot now. This article was penned by Sir Ronald Sanders. Are you that dunce and lazy to look up the source that I provided?

(The writer is Antigua and Barbuda’s Ambassador to the US and the OAS.  He is also a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies at the University of London and at Massey College in the University of Toronto.  The views expressed are his own)
Responses and previous commentaries: www.sirronaldsanders.com

Mitwah
Prashad posted:

Mits looks like he is a born lesbian trapped in a man's body. He is ready to do his thing to the ladies.

 

You are dumb as shithead ugli so the nonsense above is expected.

FM
Mitwah posted:
Prashad posted:
Mitwah posted:
Prashad posted:

Mits if you consider a sex change then don't forget to pass the hat around the board. All the guys will throw some money in the defray some of the cost of the operation.

Why are you telling me this?

I just don't want a fellow GN&I get stuck with a large medical bill from the operation to remove his Captain Guyana.

I see you are siding and following KP who boasts of carrying a PNC card shaking down his mattee coolees for fried rice , XM rum and Banks Beer.

Please don't behave like an idiot now. This article was penned by Sir Ronald Sanders. Are you that dunce and lazy to look up the source that I provided?

(The writer is Antigua and Barbuda’s Ambassador to the US and the OAS.  He is also a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies at the University of London and at Massey College in the University of Toronto.  The views expressed are his own)
Responses and previous commentaries: www.sirronaldsanders.com

You do not need to explain anything to simpletons. They usually percolate down to their natural state at all times.

FM
D2 posted:
Mitwah posted:
Prashad posted:
Mitwah posted:
Prashad posted:

Mits if you consider a sex change then don't forget to pass the hat around the board. All the guys will throw some money in the defray some of the cost of the operation.

Why are you telling me this?

I just don't want a fellow GN&I get stuck with a large medical bill from the operation to remove his Captain Guyana.

I see you are siding and following KP who boasts of carrying a PNC card shaking down his mattee coolees for fried rice , XM rum and Banks Beer.

Please don't behave like an idiot now. This article was penned by Sir Ronald Sanders. Are you that dunce and lazy to look up the source that I provided?

(The writer is Antigua and Barbuda’s Ambassador to the US and the OAS.  He is also a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies at the University of London and at Massey College in the University of Toronto.  The views expressed are his own)
Responses and previous commentaries: www.sirronaldsanders.com

You do not need to explain anything to simpletons. They usually percolate down to their natural state at all times.

Thank you! 

Mitwah
kp posted:
Mitwah posted:
Prashad posted:
Mitwah posted:
Prashad posted:

Mits if you consider a sex change then don't forget to pass the hat around the board. All the guys will throw some money in the defray some of the cost of the operation.

Why are you telling me this?

I just don't want a fellow GN&I get stuck with a large medical bill from the operation to remove his Captain Guyana.

I see you are siding and following KP who boasts of carrying a PNC card shaking down his mattee coolees for fried rice , XM rum and Banks Beer.

Please don't behave like an idiot now. This article was penned by Sir Ronald Sanders. Are you that dunce and lazy to look up the source that I provided?

(The writer is Antigua and Barbuda’s Ambassador to the US and the OAS.  He is also a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies at the University of London and at Massey College in the University of Toronto.  The views expressed are his own)
Responses and previous commentaries: www.sirronaldsanders.com

Lilly Mitwah is GNI Gay Boy using this site to solicit customers.  This is proof he has declared his sexual preferences.  All Mandirs should be aware of this pervert  going around singing Dead House songs.

.

Mitwah
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