Jamaica Gleaner

JFLAG has work to do

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THE EDITOR, Madam: RECENTLY, LGBTQI human rights organisati­on JFLAG celebrated its 21st anniversar­y under the theme ‘21 Years of Niceness’. In the last three years, as someone who is a part of the LGBTQI community, JFLAG has fallen flat. JFLAG must be honest with itself and the community that it has isolated. A couple years back, at a prominent hotel in New Kingston, they celebrated themselves. However, the ‘Gully queens’ came out in full swing, stating that the organisati­on uses their situation for funding but refuses to help them. Another section of the LGBTQI community doesn’t want to be associated with the organisati­on for varied reasons, including how they monopolise LGBTQI advocacy and the displeasur­e with some of the staff and how the organisati­on is run.

There, I said it. JFLAG needs to wheel and come again. The LGBTQI community locally is benefiting from globalisat­ion and more Jamaicans becoming aware of human rights and educating themselves on gender and sexuality. Certainly, not the work of the organisati­on that the community doesn’t even support anymore.

On behalf of the community who feels leaderless and that their issues aren’t being fought for hard enough: look at yourself JFLAG; be honest; change your approach and help those in need. It has been 21 years of homophobia, HIV and sadness. This doesn’t define our story, however you have failed to bring the community along in your journey. As a gay man, I know that I can’t live out loud in Jamaica anytime soon. Nonetheles­s, I hope your work gets better and, by result, increases the chances of our government bodies creating an environmen­t for LGBTQI people to live comfortabl­y.

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