The Voice, U.K.
Jamaica’s Prime Minister Bruce Golding made comments which led to widespread debate and reinforced the image that the Caribbean island is massively homophobic. With such a volatile backdrop, reporter Garwin Davis in Jamaica ask one resident what it was like to be gay in such an environment.
"I can't help being the person I am," he declared, his defiant voice sounding somewhat relieved that he could say this openly. "I didn't just wake up one morning and decide that I wanted to be gay, I was born this way and so are a lot of other Jamaican men and women. We are no different from anybody else -- God made us this way and no, I am not ashamed of who I am."
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Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Jamaican and Gay
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Thursday, May 22, 2008
EDITORIAL - Homophobic silliness and a failure of leadership
Jamaica Gleaner News
Leadership often demands of the person who assumes that role a willingness to adopt what initially may be unpopular positions and, the ability to persuade and cajole those whom they lead to the embrace of new ideas.
Then Mr Golding was asked about past remarks that no homosexual could be a member of his Cabinet. Here, there was a bit of a waffling inconsistency: while he broadly viewed people on the basis of their abilities, he was under no compulsion to consider gays, in exercising his choice in forming a Cabinet.
When he was pressed on the issue, Mr Golding resorted to the tactics of the cornered - neither he nor Jamaica would be dictated to. And, on whether gays can ever sit in a Jamaican Cabinet: "Sure ... but not in mine."
Jamaica and Mr Golding can expect further pressure from the international community, which is the lesser of the outcomes from the PM's performance. His greater failure is that of leadership.
A potentially unintended consequence of Mr Golding's trenchant statement is that people interpret it as vindication of homophobic and anti-gay violence and for the liberation of the voyeurs.
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Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Come Out, Come Out, Where Ever You Are
By Christian Taylor
Inside Out Australia
Nathan Burke, former St Kilda skipper and now club director, has spoken out about homophobia in the AFL (Australian Football League). He wants the league to discipline and penalise players who engage in homophobic behaviour.
“The rules should be along the same lines as its successful racial vilification policy,” Burke told the Herald Sun.
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