Thursday, August 6, 2015

Jamaica holds first gay pride

 
Jamaica’s LGBT community is holding its first gay pride celebration in the island’s capital, a weeklong event that was previously almost unthinkable in a Caribbean country long described as the one of the globe’s most hostile places to homosexuality.
 
Events in Kingston have included a flash mob gathering in a park, an art exhibit and performances featuring songs and poems by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Jamaicans. A dance party was set for Wednesday.
 
Jamaican gay rights activists said the peaceful events are a clear sign that tolerance for LGBT people is expanding on the island even though stigma is common and longstanding laws criminalizing gay sex between men remain on the books.
 
Many Jamaicans consider homosexuality to be a perversion from abroad and a newspaper-commissioned poll has suggested there is overwhelming resistance to repealing anti-sodomy laws.
 
But, in recent days, Kingston’s mayor and the island’s justice minister have even publicly supported the weeklong pride activities, a major change in a nation where politicians once routinely railed against homosexuals.

Is Jamaica really changing?









2 comments:

  1. Male gay sex can get you 10 years in prison, and hard labor. They still have laws on the books, and lord help any outsider who is caught with a teenager there. Jamaica, especially Kingston, has a huge amount of violent crime, although the areas the cruise ships go are fine. It still has a long way to go as a gay friendly destination.

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  2. Center Black LGBT (@centerblacklgbt) favorited and retweeted this post.
    Thanks so much!

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