THE
JAMAICA FORUM FOR LESBIANS ALL-SEXUALS AND GAYS (J-FLAG)
WITH REGARD TO "AN ACT TO AMEND THE CONSTITUTION
OF JAMAICA TO PROVIDE FOR A CHARTER OF RIGHTS AND
FOR CONNECTED MATTERS"
A constitution should provide a foundation of principles
upon which the laws of a society are built. It should ensure,
for all its constituents, the rights to equality before
the law, and to dignity of the person.
Rights
such as these are integral to the very foundation of this
country. The birth of Jamaica as a modern nation occurred
out of a history of oppression and colonialism that necessitated
the claiming, by the disadvantaged black majority, of a
new rule of law that idealised these two rights.
A Bill
of Rights should seek to protect the inherent human identity
from abuse. By this we mean that features which are inherently
and innately a part of one's identity ought not to be allowed
to form the basis for discrimination or exclusion by others.
The Jamaican Constitution currently protects against discrimination
based on race, and it is now proposed that gender be included
as a head of non-discrimination. We believe that sexual
orientation also ought properly to be brought under the
protective umbrella of the anti-discrimination clause.
What,
then, is "sexual orientation"? Professor Edwin
Cameron (now a Judge of the South African Constitutional
Court) writes, at pp. 450 of the 1993 volume of the South
African Law Times ([1993] S.A.L.T. 450):
"Sexual
orientation is defined by reference to erotic attraction:
in the case of heterosexuals, to members of the opposite
sex; in the case of gays and lesbians, to members of
the same sex. Potentially, a homosexual or gay or lesbian
person can therefore be anyone who is erotically attracted
to members of his or her own sex".
The
sexual orientation of a person does not merely refer to
the preferred gender of one's sexual partner. It speaks
to the person's individuality and personality - one's notion
and expression of self, social and emotional bonding, lifestyle
and conduct.
The
balance of scientific opinion is weighted in favour of the
view that sexuality, including sexual expression, is indivisible
from individual identity. More than thirty years ago the
American Psychiatric Association announced that it would
no longer consider homosexuality to be a pathology; after
all, one's sexuality is as much a fact of life as one's
race, or gender.
The
notion of "sexual orientation", therefore, is
clearly neutral, and an anti-discrimination clause would
protect all persons from injury to their person, property
or interests on the basis of the fact or perception of their
sexual orientation. Discrimination, or institutionalised
prejudice, based on one's sexual orientation is an issue
that affects mainly the minority lesbian, gay and bi-sexual
community.
In Jamaica,
the law reflects a manifestly heterosexist worldview, illustrated
not only by the absence of any kind of protection based
on sexual orientation, but also by the criminalisation of
male homosexual intimacy.
THE
LAW
The
Offences Against the Person Act prohibits "acts of
gross indecency" (generally interpreted as referring
to any kind of physical intimacy) between men, in public
or in private. The offence of buggery is created by section
76, and is defined as anal intercourse between a man and
a woman, or between two men. No force is required for the
commission of the offence of buggery. Most of the prosecutions
in fact, involve consenting adult men suspected of indulging
in anal sex. To the best of our knowledge, a man and a woman
engaging in consensual anal sex is seldom, if ever, prosecuted
for buggery.
Justice Albie Sachs of the South African Constitutional
Court (SACC) who, on his recent visit to Jamaica, attended
a special meeting with the Steering Committee of J-FLAG
and other members of the gay and lesbian community, is reported,
at para. 108 of the Judgement of the SACC in Case No. CCT
11/98, The National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality
(NCGLE) et al versus The Minister of Justice et al, as saying:
"It
is important to start the analysis by asking what is
really being punished by the anti-sodomy laws. Is it
an act, or is it a person? Outside of regulatory control,
conduct that deviates from some publicly established
norm is usually only punishable when it is violent,
dishonest, treacherous or in some other way disturbing
of the public peace or provocative of injury. In the
case of male homosexuality however, the perceived deviance
is punished simply because it is deviant. It is repressed
for its perceived symbolism rather than because of its
proven harm. If proof were necessary, it is established
by the fact that consensual anal penetration of a female
is not [prosecuted]. Thus, it is not the act of sodomy
that is denounced
but the so-called sodomite who
performs it; not any proven social damage, but the threat
that same-sex passion in itself is seen as representing
to heterosexual hegemony."
The
social effect of these laws is that homosexuality is seen
as perverse/ "bent", not because of what the actors
do, so much, but because of who they are - namely, homosexual
men. Effectively, the buggery and gross indecency laws sanction
discrimination against gay men, for being gay men.
Notwithstanding
that there are no penal sanctions attending lesbian conduct,
homosexual females are affected by the same taint as male
homosexuals. Ironically, the best evidence of this is the
fact that the Jamaican word for lesbian (i.e., sodomite)
is actually derived from sodomy, the other word for buggery.
And in socio-cultural terms - jobs, housing, general treatment
- the Jamaican lesbian is just as discriminated against
as her male counterpart, although she is less likely to
face physical violence.
THE
CONSTITUTION
The
right to equal treatment before the law is entrenched in
our current constitution, which also speaks to the right
to privacy, as part of the legal framework for protection
of the dignity of the person. Unfortunately, by virtue of
the savings clauses at section 26 (8) and (9), which preserve
laws that pre-existed the Constitution, the interpretation
of these rights is, essentially, crystallised in pre-1962
law -both common law and statute law as it was transplanted
from Britain. (Today, the British have rid themselves of
laws such as the buggery law, which by virtue of our savings
law clause remains constitutionally preserved here.)
We
do not propose any ingenious interpretations to make the
present Constitution progressive. We argue, simply, that
the right not to be discriminated against by virtue of sexual
orientation should be expressly and unequivocally propounded
in any reformed Bill of Rights. This is the approach of
the new South African Constitution (1996) which provides,
at section 9(3):
"The
state may not unfairly discriminate directly or indirectly
against anyone on one or more grounds, including race, gender,
sex, pregnancy, marital status, ethnic or social origin,
colour, sexual orientation, age, disability, religion, conscience,
belief, culture, language and birth."
Our
recent political history indicates the dangers of allowing
ourselves to be led, legally and socially, by a tyranny
of the majority. The bloodshed that has resulted from tribal
politics over the past two decades graphically demonstrates
the natural progression of intolerance for difference, particularly
when supported by the force of might.
This
type of intolerance is based on a fear that difference,
particularly when it appears as a departure from norms,
or "deviance", may lead to a destruction of society
as we know it. But this fear is totally unjustified. History
is replete with challenges to various norms - racist, classist,
sexist, even biblical norms - and such challenges have often-time
contributed to, rather than detracted from, the development
of mankind.
Nonetheless,
we do not propose the removal of heterosexual norms in favour
of homosexual ones - that would only create another type
of homogeneity, with a different basis for discrimination
in this regard. Furthermore, no amount of legislative activity
could achieve that. What we propose, instead, is the development
of a normative framework of law, which acknowledges, and
ensures respect for, all types of differences - political,
ethnic, cultural, religious, sexual, social, economic and
physical.
Justice Sachs, at para. 134 of the same case report mentioned
earlier (NCGLE vs Min. of Justice) says, in relation to
the SA constitution:
"What
the constitution requires is that the law and public
institutions acknowledge the variability of human beings
and affirm the equal respect and concern that should
be shown to all as they are. At the very least, what
is statistically normal ceases to be the basis for establishing
what is legally normative. More broadly speaking, the
scope of what is constitutionally normal is expanded
to include the widest range of perspectives and to acknowledge,
accommodate and accept the largest spread of difference.
What becomes normal in an open society, then, is not
an imposed and standardised form of behaviour that refuses
to acknowledge difference, but the acceptance of the
principle of difference itself, which accepts the variability
of human behaviour."
As he
explained in his meeting with the Jamaican gay and lesbian
community, in arriving at this type of approach, the question
for the framers of the South African constitution was, simply,
what kind of society were they in the process of creating?
If the intention was to create a truly plural society, which
had learnt its lessons from a history of institutionalised
oppression, there was no place for the exclusion of any
recognisable constituency from the protection of the new
constitution.
INTERNATIONAL
HUMAN RIGHTS PERSPECTIVE
Broad-based
anti-discrimination clauses are in keeping with prevailing
international human rights standards. In 1994, the United
Nations Human Rights Committee, under the Optional Protocol
of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR, to which Jamaica was, until recently, a signatory)
had occasion to consider sections 122 and 123 of the Tasmanian
Criminal Code, which is similar to our gross indecency law.
The
Committee found that the provision violated articles 2 and
17 of the ICCPR which, respectively, prohibit discrimination
and protect privacy. In response to government arguments
that the legislation was designed to meet concerns about
the spread of HIV-AIDS, the Committee declared that "the
criminalisation of homosexual practices cannot be considered
a reasonable or proportionate measure", and noted that
such legislation would only worsen the situation by driving
(infected) homosexuals underground.
It also
rejected Tasmania's claim that "moral issues are exclusively
a domestic concern" and interpreted "sex"
in the non-discrimination clause of the ICCPR as including
"sexual orientation".
There
are a growing number of countries that are being guided
by these principles: Namibia and Ecuador have recently incorporated
into their constitutions, clauses similar to section 9 (3)
of the South African constitution, while Chile and Georgia
(USA) repealed their sodomy laws just this year. The Netherlands
and other European countries have always had progressive
policies in this regard, even granting legal recognition
to homosexual domestic partnerships.
As a
country that relies so heavily on international aid and
trade, and prides itself on being a leader in the Caribbean,
Jamaica should seek to be at the forefront of these international
trends. The European Union is considering including human
rights conditions, with particular reference to gay rights
and the death penalty, in any future aid grants to the Caribbean
territories; we believe it would show both economic and
political wisdom, to be pre-emptive in this regard. Otherwise,
we might be forced into a position where we are seen as
bowing to international pressure, and/or "selling out"
our moral values.
SOCIAL
ATTITUDES AND REALITIES
Jamaica's
intolerance of homosexuality is so acute that it has gained
international notice, through the lyrics of gay-bashing
songs like "Boom Bye Bye", and the hostility to
our gay visitors, which they have reported to international
organisations like the International Lesbian and Gay Travel
Association. It is not only the international gay community
that has been incensed by such incidents, but also persons
of heterosexual orientation who value human rights and justice.
Some boast that intolerance towards the gay and lesbian
community is "part of our culture," and that protection
of homosexuals from discrimination is, likewise, counter-cultural
and even anti-nationalistic. But should bigotry and prejudice
be perpetuated by constitutional silence, and endorsed by
express legislative provisions?
In any
event, it is precisely this intolerance, and its potential
for harm, which creates the necessity for protection from
discrimination, and so to rely on it for the opposite effect
is very much like Caesar appealing to Caesar.
It is
claimed that our homophobia finds its justification in the
pages of the Bible, and particularly in the story of Sodom
and Gomorrah, and the purity laws of Leviticus. While we
recognise that established ethical and moral guidelines
have certainly been influenced by the Bible and related
biblical documents, we hold that the appropriation by legislatures
of the Christian condemnation of homosexuals is a purely
arbitrary process, guided largely by individual biases and
collective prejudices. In the case of adultery, of which
much more mention is made in Biblical text, Jamaica has
no law pertaining to its condemnation or prosecution. The
same applies to the act of fornication.
Furthermore,
the Bible (or, rather, one or other interpretation of it)
ought not to be a source of laws in a country whose constitution
guarantees freedom of conscience/religion. In a non-theocratic
society where the separation of Church and State has long
been established, legal norms cannot be based on declarations
of any one religious document. This is not to undermine
the importance of the Church in the lived experiences of
Jamaicans, but rather to encourage a less universalistic,
more inclusive approach to the legislative process, one
which recognises the variability of those lived experiences.
Mark
Wignall, in his article "J-FLAG must cool down its
homosexual heat" published in the Jamaica Observer
of 21st December, 1998, captures the Jamaican attitude of
revulsion and condescension towards homosexuals:
"Jamaicans
expect homosexuals to be quiet as they indulge in their
watchamacallit. Jamaicans expect them to be ashamed,
remorseful, penitent and retiring. None of us want them
to take their song and dance routine to the National
Arena, or Jamaica House."
It is
precisely these types of stereotypical and derogatory comments
that affect the ability of gays and lesbians to make their
contributions to Jamaica national life. Despite the significant
contribution of the gay and lesbian population to all areas
of national life, but particularly in the professions and
the arts, we are marginalised, victimised, abused - emotionally,
verbally and physically - and even, sometimes, killed. Thus
we are denied, in real terms, the basic rights of self-expression
which heterosexuals take for granted.
How
does this affect us? Justice Sachs answers this question
so well in pares 127 and 128 of the NCGLE vs. Min of Justice
judgement:
"In
the case of gays, history and experience teach us that
the scarring [of the sense of dignity and self-worth]
comes
from invisibility. It is the tainting of
desire, it is the attribution of perversity and shame
to spontaneous bodily affection, it is the prohibition
of the expression of love, it is the denial of full
moral citizenship in society because you are what you
are, that impinges on the dignity and self-worth of
a group.
Gays constitute a distinct though invisible
section of the community that has been treated not only
with disrespect or condescension, but with disapproval
and revulsion; they are not generally obvious as a group,
pressurised by society and the law to remain invisible;
their identifying characteristic combines all the anxieties
produced by sexuality with all the alienating effects
resulting from difference; and they are seen as especially
contagious, or prone to corrupting others. None of these
factors applies to other groups traditionally subject
to discrimination
"
Any
framework of laws that encourages this type of treatment
of any section of the society, as apartheid did, is illegitimate
and should not be supported or perpetuated. The changes
we propose will not in any way detract from the rights of
any person. Gays and lesbians, contrary to another popular
stereotype, are not interested in "recruitment"
of others to any cause. We are quite simply requesting the
same rights and protections under law, which have already
been afforded the majority of Jamaican society. Such inclusion,
in effect, will only enhance the right of self-determination
and self-expression for all citizens in this plural society.
We are, after all, "out of many, one people".