Jamaica Gleaner

US gay-rights advocates satisfied by talks

- Gary Spaulding Senior Gleaner Writer

THE TWO senior gayrights advocates officially dispatched to Jamaica by the United States (US) last week, have emphatical­ly rebuffed assertions that they were in the island to influence changes to the controvers­ial buggery law.

Randy Berry, special envoy for the human rights of LGBT persons, and Todd Larson, senior LGBT coordinato­r at the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID), steered clear of the issue of the buggery law during an interview with The Gleaner, after a series of meetings in Jamaica.

“Our interests are focused on looking at some fundamenta­l human-rights issues involving members of the LGBT community as it relates to the broader principles of equality,” said Berry.

“So I have no comment on internal political issues or the repeal or any changes to the law,” he added. Larson was just as cautious. “We recognise t hat it ’s a complex piece of legislatio­n with various elements and we trust in the dialogue and discussion­s relevant to the legislatio­n going one way or another,” he said.

AN ATTACK ON MORALS

The visit has been viewed in some quarters as evidence of the pressure being mounted on Jamaica by t he US on t he buggery law, with at least one group describing the visit as an attack on Jamaica’s morals and sovereignt­y.

The buggery law has been an explosive issue on the public agenda particular­ly since December 2011.

At that time, then Opposition Leader Portia Simpson Miller promised that her administra­tion, if she took power after the general elections, would initiate a conscience vote on whether the buggery law should be repealed.

Nearly four years later, the matter has not touched Gordon House, angering members of the LGBT community.

The two men who arrived in Jamaica on Thursday, met with a range of government and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons before leaving on Saturday.

They told The Gleaner that they came away satisfied after discussion­s with government officials as well as leaders in business, academia, civil society, and the Church.

They also commended the consultati­ve exercise that, they say, has been initiated with the local LGBT community as a marginalis­ed grouping.

URGED TO CONTINUE DIALOGUE

The LGBT advocates stressed that they welcomed the consultati­ve path being pursued and urged Jamaica to ‘continue the dialogue’.

“We met with a wide range of civil society, policymake­rs, religious and business leaders,” said Berry.

“I would advise Jamaica to continue to talk; this is the way to proceed,” he added.

“We had some really interestin­g meetings over the past two days and I came away from them quite optimistic about an emerging conversati­on and increasing dialogue,” he said.

Added Berry: “I think positive movement is positive movement, and that is encouragin­g.”

Larson told The Gleaner that he was impressed by what he said was the calibre, focus, pride and patriotism of Jamaicans who are leading the discussion­s.

“We have been able to listen and learn from the discussion to take the perspectiv­es and bring them back to the US,” said Larson.

“We are satisfied that on those issues of the LGBT folks, Jamaica is engaged in very productive dialogue,” he added.

 ?? RICARDO MAKYN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Todd Larson (left), senior Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgende­r (LGBT) coordinato­r at the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, and Randy Berry, special envoy for the human rights of LGBT persons, speak with The Gleaner during a visit to...
RICARDO MAKYN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Todd Larson (left), senior Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgende­r (LGBT) coordinato­r at the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, and Randy Berry, special envoy for the human rights of LGBT persons, speak with The Gleaner during a visit to...

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