Guyana respects CCJ decision on cross-dressing– PM Nagamootoo
Moses Nagamootoo Prime Minister and First Vice-President of Guyana
Moses Nagamootoo Prime Minister and First Vice-President of Guyana

PRIME Minister Moses Nagamootoo has said that Guyana respects the decision of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) on its recent ruling that the criminalisation of cross-dressing here is “unconstitutional.”

On the sidelines of a Human Rights forum at the Pegasus on Monday, the prime minister said now that the court has ruled, Guyana must now work on adjusting its culture to include all sections of society including Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) persons. Emphasising that it is a human rights issue, the prime minister said that education will need to form a major part of the process intended to change the way persons engage with the LGBT community.

“So I think social organisations in particular have a responsibility to start the education process to be more tolerant to accept that we have differences in our society that we are not all the same; that we are all entitled to the same rights,” the prime minister said.
The Ministry of Social Protection and the Ministry of Social Cohesion also have a role to play in the process, he added, emphasising that the ruling “is one step forward in an appreciation of the fact that society has differences.”

He noted too that government must also find mechanisms through which it can give teeth to the decision.
The Society Against Sexual Orientation Discrimination (SASOD) has also underscored the importance of training in Guyana for the country’s law- enforcement agencies, judiciary and social society, to guard against discrimination against those who will now be exercising their freedom to cross-dress.

In its recent ruling, the CCJ said the law, Section 153(1) (xlvii) of the Summary Jurisdiction (Offences) Act which makes cross-dressing criminal, should be “struck from the laws of Guyana.”

The decision was handed following the conclusion of the case of Quincy McEwan, Seon Clarke, Joseph Fraser, Seyon Persaud and SASOD versus the attorney general of Guyana.
The case has its origin in the February 2009 arrest of the four appellants, who identify as transgender persons and were detained, convicted and punished for cross-dressing in public. At the time of the arrest, McEwan was dressed in a pink shirt and a pair of tights; Clarke was wearing slippers and a skirt; and Fraser and Persaud were dressed in skirts and were wearing wigs.

While in custody, Fraser was denied legal counsel, medical attention, a telephone call and a statement. Also, all four spent the entire weekend in police custody without any explanation. They all pleaded guilty to the cross-dressing charge and McEwan, Clarke and Persaud were fined G$7,500, while Fraser was fined G$19,500.

With the assistance of SASOD, proceedings were brought in the High Court of Guyana challenging the law on several grounds, including that it is discriminatory and inconsistent with the Constitution of Guyana.

Both the High Court and the Court of Appeal in Guyana had denied the constitutional challenges, after which the appellants took their case to the CCJ. The CCJ panel, comprising the Honourable President Justice Saunders and Justices Wit, Anderson, Rajnauth-Lee and Barrow, agreed that the law was from a different time and no longer served any legitimate purpose in Guyana.

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