Premium Content:

Barbados finally removes laws that made gay sex illegal

Barbados has removed the laws which made gay sex illegal in the country. The laws were removed via a landmark judgement from the country’s High Court.

- Advertisement -

Those found guilty of having homosexual sex previously faced a life prison sentence. Barbados is the third Carribean nation to remove laws outlawing gay sex this year following Antigua & Barbuda and St Kitts and Nevis.

Téa Braun, chief executive of the London-based Human Dignity Trust, a human rights organization, welcomed the decision.

“It’s gone from a certain ripple effect to a tidal wave in the Caribbean, which is what everyone involved set out to achieve,” Braun told The Guardian

“The striking down of the laws reverses that and overnight tells the entire society that this is consensual contact and that what people choose to do with their private relationships is not the business of the law.”

While prosecutions under the laws had become rare in recent years, rights activists note that they still sent a message to LGBTIQA+ people that they were criminals and lesser citizens. Violent attacks of LGBTIQA+ people are not uncommon in the country.

Non-Government Organisation Equals also welcomed the decision.

“We are very pleased with the result of this case, which is a result of years of advocacy efforts by the community organizations as well as the litigants,” Michael Rapley, a member Equals, told Reuters.

“This is a step in the right direction for the protection of LGBTQ+ people in Barbados as we continue to ensure stigma-free access to services and positive inclusion in society.”

Around the world 67 jurisdictions continue to criminalise private, consensual same-sex activities. The number however is falling, a decade ago homosexuality was illegal in 80 nations.

OIP Staff


You can support our work by subscribing to our Patreon
or contributing to our GoFundMe campaign.

 

Latest

LGBTIQA+ Inclusion Strategy fails regional communities

Meeka Smith chair of Busselton Pride Alliance says Inclusion Strategy falls short.

Rainbow Refugees helped Julian find home and community in Perth

Grassroots support group Rainbow Refugees has been working to support LGBTIQA+ migrants and refugees to settle in Perth.

Queer Book Club pick ‘Little Rot’ as their book of the month for March

The 2024 novel by the Nigerian writer follows five friends who become ensnared in a mess of sex, lies, and corruption.

Pride WA schedules Special General Meeting to hear member’s concerns

The new meetings is a follow on from last year's epic AGM that ran for 5 hours.

Newsletter

Don't miss

LGBTIQA+ Inclusion Strategy fails regional communities

Meeka Smith chair of Busselton Pride Alliance says Inclusion Strategy falls short.

Rainbow Refugees helped Julian find home and community in Perth

Grassroots support group Rainbow Refugees has been working to support LGBTIQA+ migrants and refugees to settle in Perth.

Queer Book Club pick ‘Little Rot’ as their book of the month for March

The 2024 novel by the Nigerian writer follows five friends who become ensnared in a mess of sex, lies, and corruption.

Pride WA schedules Special General Meeting to hear member’s concerns

The new meetings is a follow on from last year's epic AGM that ran for 5 hours.

Fresh Tracks | The latest tunes worth checking out

New tracks from Linda Perry, SZ4N, Jessie Ware, Bebe Rexha, and Sam Ashby.

LGBTIQA+ Inclusion Strategy fails regional communities

Meeka Smith chair of Busselton Pride Alliance says Inclusion Strategy falls short.

Rainbow Refugees helped Julian find home and community in Perth

Grassroots support group Rainbow Refugees has been working to support LGBTIQA+ migrants and refugees to settle in Perth.

Queer Book Club pick ‘Little Rot’ as their book of the month for March

The 2024 novel by the Nigerian writer follows five friends who become ensnared in a mess of sex, lies, and corruption.