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Category — boycott

Boycott Jamaica

We picked up information about new website Boycott Jamaica on the Joe My God blog earlier today, and we thank him for bringing it to our attention.  Thanks Joe!  Can you see us?

Anyhow, the new website promotes boycotting Jamaican products and travel to Jamaica.   I am sure many of you know how absolutely unbelievably homophobic Jamaica is.  If you do not, well it is!  It is common for gay Jamaicans not only to be beaten and bashed, by mobs no less, but also murdered.  It is truely unspeakable.  Here is an excerpt entitled A History of Violence taken from the Boycott Jamaica website:

The world started paying closer attention to Jamaica’s entrenched anti-gay discrimination by 2004, when reports began surfacing.
In 2006, human rights groups told Time Magazine that Jamaica was “the most homophobic place on earth.” The article spoke at length about the “rampant violence against gays and lesbians.”

By 2008, things had only gotten worse, according to The New York Times. The article said, “For years, human rights groups have denounced the harassment, beating and even killing of gays here, to no avail.”

State Department report cites reliable claims of harassment and arbitrary detention of gay people by public employees, with little if any investigation by police. It also says there have been several anti-gay mob attacks, at times with direct police complicity. Some of these attacks have resulted in murder.

In March 2009, Jamaica’s Prime Minister, Bruce Golding, reiterated the island’s official support for persecuting gay people.

“We are not going to yield to the pressure, whether that pressure comes from individual organizations, individuals, whether that pressure comes from foreign governments or groups of countries, to liberalize the laws as it relates to buggery,” said Golding.

Given the island’s ongoing war against GLBT people, Jamaica has left us no choice but to call for a boycott.

You can take action on this issue.  Here is a description of what you can do.  Certainly don’t support Jamaica’s tourist industry by traveling there, and don’t drink Jamaican rum or use Jamaican products.  We certainly will not.

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March 30, 2009   4 Comments