LGBT rights in the Bahamas

LGBT rights in the Bahamas

Same-sex sexual activity legal? Legal since 1991, age of consent not equal.[1]
Gender identity/expression -
Military service Gays and lesbians allowed to serve
Discrimination protections None (see below)
Family rights
Recognition of
relationships
No recognition of same-sex couples
Adoption -

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) persons in the Bahamas may face legal challenges not experienced by non-LGBT residents. Both male and female same-sex sexual activity is legal in the Bahamas.

Same-sex couples and households headed by same-sex couples are not eligible for the same legal protections available to opposite-sex married couples.

Issues

Same-sex sexual activity between consenting adults was legalised in The Bahamas on 16 May 1991. However, the criminal code still differentiates between the age of consent for same-sex and heterosexual conduct. The legal age of consent to engage in homosexual conduct is eighteen years, while the legal age of consent to engage in heterosexual conduct is sixteen years.[2]

Constitutional protections

The Constitution does provide for various civil liberties, but its prohibition against discrimination does not include sexual orientation or gender identity. Efforts to include sexual orientation in a newly proposed Constitution have been blocked by members of a government-appointed commission who oppose homosexuality on religious grounds.

The Constitutional Reform Commission, which had been reviewing the country’s unamended 1973 Supreme Law for three years, presented a preliminary report[3] to a previous Progressive Liberal Party government on 21 March 2006. The Commission indicated that equal treatment be afforded to citizens regardless of religion, political opinion, race, sex and gender. However, despite recommendations, it did not regard sexual orientation as an attribute deserving of any protection from discrimination. The Commission was dissolved and its work abandoned after the Free National Movement won the national election on 2 May 2007.

The present PLP government, voted in on 7 May 2012, has the two-thirds majority in the parliament needed to change the Constitution; however, there has been no indication that a new Commission would be established.

Civil rights protections

On 17 June 2011, The Bahamas Government expressed support for a U.N. Human Rights Council resolution promoting equal rights for all, regardless of sexual orientation.[4][5] Successive governments have done nothing over the past 20 years to ensure that LGBT citizens are included in non-discrimination clauses in statute laws.

Discrimination in areas such as employment, education, housing, health care, banking and public businesses on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity is not illegal. Likewise, there is no national hate crime law to address violence or harassment directed at LGBT people.

In 2001, an Employment Bill was proposed which included a ban on discrimination in the workplace based on sexual orientation, but after much debate it was passed with that clause removed.

Recognition of same-sex relationships

Same-sex marriages and civil unions are not legal in the Bahamas. LGBT rights groups never challenged the country's marriage laws, which previously assumed that a couple is a man and woman. Today, such a challenge would likely fail as the definition of a couple has been clearly defined in amended marriage acts, passed on 7 July 2011.[6][7]

On that day, during debate on a Maritime Marriage Bill to legalize marriages in Bahamian waters, then Minister of State for Finance Zhivargo Laing said a clause defining marriage as a union between a man and a woman was consolidated in the country's four marriage acts to include the Marriage Act, the Marriage of Deceased Wife's Sister Act, the Marriage of British Subjects Act and the Foreign Marriages Act.

Laing said, "A marriage is void if it took place between persons who were male and male or female and female. So, in this Maritime Marriage Bill we are stating this fact in the clear positive — a marriage must take place between a male and a female and we want that to be abundantly clear."[8]

But despite the lack of government sanctioning, same-sex unions and commitment ceremonies have been privately performed by several pastors and Justices of the Peace for years.[9] However, they are increasingly running the risk of being exposed.

On 21 September 2006, a lesbian complained to The Nassau Guardian daily newspaper after reportedly having paid an exorbitant fee to marry her long-term partner. The story got the attention of the president of The Bahamas Christian Council who warned that criminal charges would be brought against clergymen found performing same-sex marriages.[10][11]

On 18 March 2007, a pastor who had written many articles against homosexuality in The Nassau Guardian held a "Save the Family Rally" in Freeport. The purpose of the rally was to oppose same-sex civil unions and marriages. Hundreds of people attended the event and signed a petition calling for a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriages in The Bahamas.[12] Several cabinet ministers were also in attendance but they made no such constitutional motion in parliament.

Military service

There are no prohibitions on gays serving in the police and military forces. In May 1998, then National Security Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Frank Watson reaffirmed the government's stance on the matter, saying the Bahamas military, prison service and police force do not discriminate based on sexual orientation.[13][14][15]

Social conditions

Most Bahamas citizens affiliate with a socially conservative Christian sect that views homosexuality and cross-dressing as signs of decadence and immorality. As a result, politicians have been leery of publicly supporting LGBT-rights legislation and there have been several high-profile situations of discrimination and harassment directed at LGBT citizens along with tourists.

Anti-LGBT violence

There is also a sentiment in The Bahamas’ LGBT community, supported by evidence, that if a gay man is murdered, his killer will not be found by the police.[35] Over the past 10 years, seven known gay men have been murdered in Nassau but none of their cases have been solved by the police.[36] In one case, involving the 2008 murder of Jamaican waiter Marvin Wilson, the suspect turned himself into police. The suspect’s name was not released as he was a 17-year-old minor at the time.[37][38]

In a more popular case, a jury acquitted Troyniko McNeil, accused of the 2007 slaying of handbag designer Harl Taylor.[39] The names of the murdered gay men, their profession and date they were found dead are as follows: Kevin Williams, Policeman, 15 May 2001—Thaddeus McDonald, Lecturer, 16 Nov 2007—Harl Taylor, Designer, 18 Nov 2007—Wellington Adderley, Activist, 26 May 2008—Marvin Wilson, Waiter, 3 June 2008—Paul Whylly, Dancer, 19 October 2008—Shavado Simmons, Photographer, 17 July 2011.

Impact on LGBT culture

As a result of the lack of confidence in the judicial system, legal inequalities and homophobia in the country, many LGBT people are in the closet about their sexual orientation or gender identity.[40] While LGBT rights organizations have been permitted to exist, LGBT social events are often pressured to remain low key. The former LGBT rights group, Rainbow Alliance of The Bahamas, launched a public campaign against discrimination and participated in talk shows on the subject. Today, Bahamas LGBT Equality Advocates is speaking out against homophobia through social media alongside https://www.facebook.com/TheDMARCOFoundation/?fref=ts.The new era for advocacy and visibility has come.

The Bahamas has a tourist-based economy and the government targets a variety of markets, but not the growing LGBT tourism market. Individual and small groups of homosexual tourists are left alone for the most part but boatloads of gay visitors have been protested on three separate occasions — once on 8 March 1998, a month later on 13 April 1998 and again on 16 July 2004. However, the Rainbow Alliance held a counter protest during the 2004 demonstrations, welcoming the gay visitors. In 2014 The Bahamas Welcomes all Tourist to The Country .Tremendous improvement is being made improve the treatment of LGBTI Guest to the Country.

A new day of Advocacy has come for the LGBTI Community of The Bahamas with Trans women taking the lead on LGBTI issues BAHAMAS Transgender, Intersex United (BTIU) in April 26th launched its multi-level equality campaign, “Bahamian Trans Lives Matter”, which seeks to secure equal rights for transgendered Bahamians http://www.tribune242.com/photos/galleries/2016/mar/11/03112016-weekend/16495/ BTIU President and Founder of the D M A R C O Foundation Alexus D'Marco is stepping up and engaging the national conversation. The recent press conference held in Nassau Bahamas for the first time visibility and Unity of this community was shown http://www.thenassauguardian.com/news/64382-transgender-community-were-human-too The coming out of these trans women sparked heighten controversy with a Equality Referendum about to take place in the country.

With statements from The Prime Minister assuring persons if they vote yes to gender equality “I repeat: this referendum will not cause same-sex marriage to become legal in The Bahamas. Marriage in The Bahamas will be legal only if it is between a man and a woman, and male and female are determined at birth." This statement made would have discriminate against transgenders and intersex Bahamians.

http://www.bahamas.gov.bs/wps/portal/public/gov/government/news/pm%20launches%20yes%20campaign%20and%20declares%20referendum%20date/!ut/p/b1/vZTLjqMwEEW_JR-QxjaYxxIIECfhbSCwQUACgUBC3oGvn7TU0mhG6p7NdFetLF3XkY-lYhJmzSSH7F5X2bU-HrL2_ZzwKQsMU5Y50RR1XgYkYHUWL2XWcOErEL8C4JOSwZ_3DRoCQCCQPR-6wGYhEzHrecwq6sWsNM1Ln8HNPnat6RNBauzEv56v5_2J5EHg9Czc8IYRbx2lHrtd1PbnU-6hsuETifO7qD9QmCVTAxHZbVN1f0p8rCcuZ-7oLT9W_UPd4gKuCp34MWe1WtWT6uk6di403QiUIHSjNZ3vrAvVh2xaF-IwGx53bj469q6ft6oQTlNQ3eya3crXxnM8ltgLMb1P5WnKc1Ew-XDxxWP_4TJikq91oY_AF7qt-bHbMvErJnw2RxQEhjJrwKV-M_Rk3I9eAx7I0o7ADy4QNtFoakJkBfvBsgxIZxmEs-BJG4uYNFz5ufagFnU2oRcosuoUpGz_BtqISi-gCvllgIFvsN8NNLAtvmQK1JExeongfxqIvwto2KarviulyrtSdj6X-RVra_Cngf__DxdMUufd26Po3sAb5iDGEkQSjwQkQIEJDwH3zCvzOXNuS52bWs66PB-qTXGpXD6SipGYN_Uc3ygLCyIe1aoCqkq0yFiETxSWBwSKAmO-u0iJl0ml7tWv1QHaOzJjW3WqUKIEhFHhQM_jMn0nnRHCd7bY1EjpLDnRm4NpLZ6jXniAxNJ-eSJjxQm0KcCAFd2vU4Go44ArMhopmtHr4JxO46YaylmCuNl1f8201VntPO6s-75LCv7RhrLEp2r0uK9SNnfTchwVhBvJcydM3wX3Fe-JVvm7TXky-QW4Ga9l/dl4/d5/L2dBISEvZ0FBIS9nQSEh/ 

This movement sparked outrage from a Member of the Government Leslie Miller publicly calling for the "Exile of Transgender out of The Bahamas." Leslie Miller has forcefully denounced the growing transgender community in this country while urging people to financially contribute to having this sect of society exiled to their own private island to ensure “they stay out of the way” of generations of Bahamians who are depending on the success of the June 7 referendum.

While pledging to give the group its first $1,000 toward this relocation, Mr Miller told The Tribune that it was his constant prayer that “God would come now and just end the world” as their actions “go against His will”.http://www.tribune242.com/news/2016/may/03/miller-exile-transgenders/

The LGBTI Community of The Bahamas is now visible with Ms. Alexus D'Marco and Erin Greene taking the lead on issues and finding practical solutions to the Issues LGBTI Bahamas faces. With their focus on advocacy to end The Stigma and Discrimination Against LGBTIQSAA BAHAMAS .


As far as nightlife is concerned, gay bars have existed in the Bahamas for at least four decades. Today, there are hot spots for clubbing and parting in the capital, Nassau. . There are numerous of events that are held each year in Nassau Bahamas to bring the community together. Bahamas Invasion https://www.facebook.com/Invasion242/?fref=ts and CalienteBahamas http://www.gaytravel.com/gay-events/caliente-bahamas-usa-caribbean-party-2015.-oct-9th-12-2015/. Local and visitors can always visit the social media site of A.D Events for whats parties or clubs the LGBT Community will be hosting https://www.facebook.com/groups/ADEMPC/

Gay nightlife in Freeport, Grand Bahama however, is not as vibrant. Gays in the less-populated northern city usually hang out in straight clubs.

Summary table

Same-sex sexual activity legal Since 1991
Equal age of consent
Anti-discrimination laws in employment
Anti-discrimination laws in the provision of goods and services
Anti-discrimination laws in all other areas (incl. indirect discrimination, hate speech)
Same-sex marriage(s)
Recognition of same-sex couples
Step-child adoption by same-sex couples
Joint adoption by same-sex couples
Gays and lesbians allowed to serve openly in the military
Right to change legal gender
Access to IVF for lesbians
Commercial surrogacy for gay male couples
MSMs allowed to donate blood

See also

References

  1. State-sponsored Homophobia A world survey of laws prohibiting same sex activity between consenting adults
  2. World Age of Consent - Avert.org
  3. Constitutional Reform Commission Preliminary Report - March 2006
  4. Bahamas Backs Gay Rights - Nassau Guardian - 18 June 2011
  5. Bahamas Supports Gay Rights - Caribbean News Now - 20 June 2011
  6. Government Against Gay Marriage - Nassau Guardian - 8 July 2011
  7. Definition of Marriage to Remain Between Man and Woman - The Tribune - 8 July 2011
  8. The Story Behind the Marriage Act - Bahamas Uncensored - 10 July 2011
  9. Nassau Guardian - 22 September 2006
  10. Nassau Guardian - 27 September 2006
  11. Gay Union Controversy - 27 September 2006
  12. Freeport News - 19 March 2007
  13. GayLawNet - The Bahamas - May 1998
  14. The Bahamas Does Not Ban Gays in the Military - GayToday - May 1998
  15. Gays Allowed in Bahamas Military - ILGA - June 2009
  16. Gay Cruise Passengers Met With Angry Protest in Bahamas - 16 July 2004
  17. Angry Protest As Rosie's Cruise Arrives in Bahamas - 17 July 2004
  18. Lesbian Beauty Queen Comes Out - 1 September 2005
  19. Bahamas Bans Brokeback Mountain - BBC News - 31 March 2006
  20. Culture Author Speaks Against Brokeback Mountain Ban - 2 June 2006
  21. Bahamas Christian Council Appoints An "Anti-gay Committee" - 29 September 2007
  22. Bahamas Christian Council Opposes Gay Channel - 26 September 2007
  23. Bahamas Christian Council Meets With Gay Rights Group - 27 September 2007
  24. Verbal Attack on Gays Continues - Nassau Guardian - 3 October 2007
  25. Ebony Pyramid Cruise Complaint Against Police - 11 October 2007
  26. Bahamas Police Harass Gay and Lesbian Tourists - 8 October 2007
  27. Ministry Apologizes to Ebony Pyramid Cruise - 16 October 2007
  28. CNN - Bahamians Protest Arrival of Lesbian Cruise - 14 April 1998
  29. On Top Magazine - 3 February 2009
  30. Pink News - 2 February 2009
  31. Judge: Killing was Justified to Avoid a Homosexual Act - Bahamas Local - 11 June 2010
  32. 'Unduly lenient' sentence for shooting death will stand - The Tribune - 10 June 2010
  33. Award Winning Bahamas Gay-Themed Film Children of God - Covering Media - 20 May 2011
  34. Children of God Tackles Homophobia in The Bahamas - 16 December 2009
  35. Gay Murders in Nassau Bahamas - 8 June 2008 Archived 28 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
  36. Police Force Silence on Gay Murders - 20 June 2008
  37. Teen Killer of Gay Man Turns Himself In (Part 1) - 24 July 2008
  38. Teen Killer of Gay Man Turns Himself In (Part 2) - 24 July 2008
  39. Troyniko McNeil Acquitted – 22 July 2010
  40. Two Bahamian Gay Men Talk About Their Lives - 28 July 2003
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.