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US says LGBTQ+ community in Bahamas is disenfranchised

BAHAMAS Christian Council president Bishop Delton Fernander and several dozen senior pastors held a press conference at UB in October of last year, objecting to a LGBTQ+ forum to be held at the university.

BAHAMAS Christian Council president Bishop Delton Fernander and several dozen senior pastors held a press conference at UB in October of last year, objecting to a LGBTQ+ forum to be held at the university.

By RASHAD ROLLE

Tribune News Editor

rrolle@tribunemedia.net

THE United States wrote extensively about how the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Intersex community in The Bahamas is disenfranchised or treated differently from heterosexuals in its latest human rights report.

The report includes a claim by non-governmental agencies that “self-identifying LGBTQI+ children were remanded to juvenile correctional facilities after their guardians deemed the children ‘uncontrollable’ based on their sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression.”

The report further said: “Societal discrimination existed against members of the LGBTQI+ community, with some persons reporting job and housing discrimination based on sexual orientation.”

“NGOs reported LGBTQI+ individuals faced social stigma and discrimination and did not believe they were adequately protected by authorities. There was generally low social tolerance for same-sex relationships. Same-sex marriage was not legal. Homophobic epithets were common and socially acceptable.

“During Pride events held in October, local religious leaders publicly demonstrated against LGBTQI+ awareness events and condemned scheduled activities at the country’s sole university.”

The report noted that the age of consent for heterosexuals is 16, while the age of consent for sexual activity between people of the same sex is 18.

The US said although there were no reports of groups inciting or tolerating violence against LGBTQI people, “NGOs noted a lack of an alternative reporting mechanism for LGBTQI+ persons who might be uncomfortable reporting incidents to police or government agents.”

The US noted that while the Domestic Violence (Protection) Orders Act protected partners from domestic and sexual violence, no such law protects LGBTQI+ people. The US said although the government effectively enforced the law, “activists suspected heterosexual and homosexual rape were underreported”.

Comments

ted4bz 1 week, 3 days ago

The day will come when we'll regret signing up to this, it's nothing other than a recipe for further disunity. This should have been something left up to each individual, not law. Furthermore, there were enough moral laws to protect everybody, we didn't need anything other. Give the globalist an inch, and they take a mile, the more you give, the more they want, they will never stop, nor be satisfied. We should've never allowed yourself to be lured into another globalist trap.

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