PGA welcomes the repeal of anti-LGBTQ laws in Antigua and Barbuda
Parliamentarians for Global Action (PGA) welcomes the decision
by the High-Court of Justice in Antigua and Barbuda to declare laws that
criminalize consensual,
private sexual acts between persons above the age of consent,
unconstitutional.
On July 5th,
The Honorable Justice Marissa Robertson held that sections 12 and 15 of
the Sexual Offences Act (1995), known as the buggery and serious indecency
offences, contravene the constitutionally guaranteed rights to liberty,
protection of the law, freedom of expression, protection of personal privacy
and protection from discrimination on the basis of sex. Therefore, the Court
affirmed and deemed unconstitutional that certain laws criminalize consensual,
private acts between persons of the age of consent, regardless of gender.
Although such
laws have now been voided for cases of persons above the age of consent who
engage consensually and in private acts as described, the offences of buggery
and serious indecency remain a crime and laws remain in force in cases where
sexual acts are not consensual or involve minors below the age of consent.
Reacting
to this important development, PGA Member Senator Aziza Lake (Antigua
and Barbuda) noted:
I wholeheartedly agree with the
recent ruling in the High Court of Antigua & Barbuda that essentially
struck out certain buggery provisions in the Sexual Offences Act 1995. I have
long advocated for the removal of provisions that criminalized anal sex in
Antigua & Barbuda amongst consenting adults. This is not only a victory for
the LGBTQI+ community but for heterosexual adult couples, as well, as it was
previously illegal for them to engage in the act.
I look forward to more decisions
from our judiciary that address equal rights, legislation and the constitution.
Yesterday’s ruling exemplifies how the different arms of our government have a
role to play in upholding the rights of citizens.
PGA Board Member Senator Boris Dittrich
(The Netherlands) added:
This is great
news as love between consenting adults should never be criminalized. Human
rights for LGBT people should be respected like the rights for all consenting
adults. I urge other governments in the Caribbean region like Jamaica, Guyana
and Barbados to follow suit and decriminalize same-sex behavior between
consenting adults.
PGA Board Member Hon. Valerie Woods,
Speaker of the House of Representatives (Belize) declared:
This victory for
Antigua and Barbuda is a critical step for human rights and towards equality.
The decision by the High Court of Justice declaring laws that criminalized
consensual, private sexual acts between persons above the age of
consent to be unconstitutional, is a wonderful development.
Antigua and
Barbuda joins Belize, which decriminalized same sex in 2016, and Trinidad and
Tobago’s High Court decision in 2018. In 2020, Barbados adopted an Employment
(Prevention of Discrimination) Act that includes protections against
discrimination based on sexual orientation. With this ruling in Antigua and
Barbuda last week, we are hopeful it will serve as an inspiration to the wider
Caribbean and the world. Human Rights are for all of us and not just some of
us. This is very encouraging news coming out from the Caribbean.
Chair of the PGA Mozambique
National Group, Hon. Antonio Rosario Niquice, PhD, welcomed the repeal
and underscored:
As a
longstanding member of PGA, I congratulate the High Court of Justice in Antigua
and Barbuda on the repeal of anti-LGBTQI+ laws. Moreover, and as similarly done
in Mozambique in 2015 with the introduction of a new penal code with provisions
also decriminalizing homosexuality, I believe that the criminalization of
people or their actions, based on their sexual orientation goes against all
international and regional human rights treaties. May the repeal of these laws,
not only set a new wave of changes to the actual political, economic and social
reality in Antigua and Barbuda, but also echo around the Caribbean region,
motivating further changes and progress for LGBTQI+ related issues.
Through such
changes, Antigua and Barbuda makes a strong statement and reinforces the fight
against discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender inclusivity. As I declared
to fellow parliamentarians at an African Parliamentary Forum on Sexual and
Gender Minorities, in Johannesburg, South Africa last month, such actions serve
to spread and reinforce the message that it is the duty of all nations to
secure and provide human rights to all our peoples.
Since its
launch in 2013, PGA’s Campaign
against Discrimination based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI) has mobilized
parliamentarians as human rights champions, taking action to guarantee that
every individual has equal value, lives with dignity and is able to achieve
their highest potential free from all forms of violence and discrimination,
including on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity and expression
and sex characteristics (SOGIESC). The Campaign has played an instrumental role
in engaging Caribbean parliamentarians and sensitizing them about their role in
guaranteeing equality and non-discrimination based on SOGIESC.
PGA’s SOGI
Campaign is working closely with theEastern Caribbean Alliance for
Diversity and Equality (ECADE) to facilitate meaning interactions and collaboration between LGBTQI+
civil society representatives and parliamentarians in the region. ECADE is
leading five cases, including in Antigua and Barbuda, challenging the
constitutionality of these Acts in the Eastern Caribbean.More information on the background of this case
can also be found here.