The Society
Against Sexual Orientation Discrimination (SASOD), Guyana Trans United
(GTU) and the University of the West Indies Faculties of Law Rights
Advocacy Project (U-RAP) welcome the setting down of the McEwan and
Others appeal, related to the cross-dressing law in Guyana, for a full
hearing on October 17, 2016.The appeal was fixed for hearing on
Wednesday July 13 at 9 am before Guyana’s Court of Appeal. Gulliver
McEwan, the first-named appellant, and representatives of SASOD and GTU
were present in a completely full courtroom.
The appellants filed their skeleton
arguments in accordance with the rules of the Court. The arguments of
the State are yet to be filed. The Court of Appeal noted that the
arguments filed by counsel for the appellants were extensive and that it
wished some time to fully review them and to receive the arguments from
the State.
During the brief hearing, Chancellor of the Judiciary, the Hon. Carl Singh, raised a question as to the procedural validity of SASOD being on the rubric of the appeal, since the organisation was struck out as a party at first instance. Mr.Nigel Hughes, on behalf of the appellants, responded that the relevant documents would be amended, but added that in those circumstances, a formal application would be made for SASOD to be joined in the appeal.
During the brief hearing, Chancellor of the Judiciary, the Hon. Carl Singh, raised a question as to the procedural validity of SASOD being on the rubric of the appeal, since the organisation was struck out as a party at first instance. Mr.Nigel Hughes, on behalf of the appellants, responded that the relevant documents would be amended, but added that in those circumstances, a formal application would be made for SASOD to be joined in the appeal.
Mr. Hughes stressed that SASOD had an
important interest in the appeal in light of the decision of the Chief
Justice to strike it out as an applicant, and given larger questions at
stake on the role that organisations can play in public-interest
litigation.
Asked to comment on this matter at a
post-hearingdebriefing session held at SASOD’s office later in the day,
the first-named litigant and Executive Director of GTU,Gulliver McEwan,
stressed that excluding civil society organisations (CSOs) such as SASOD
and GTU would inhibit marginalised persons from being able to access
justice. “If civil society groups are not included in the case, then how
can we as a community be represented in something that affects us all?”
McEwan questioned. “This case doesn’t just affect the four individual
litigants, it affects us all,” she said while emphasising that CSOs also
give the case weight and credence. “For trans people it has
far-reaching implications, not to mention the entire LGBT community.”
Managing Director of SASOD, Joel
Simpson, posited that Caribbean courts have taken a very restrictive
approach to the standing of organizations, which he finds untenable.
Simpson remarked that “The Guyana Constitution through the 2003 reforms
has given the organisations the right to be heard on behalf of the
people they serve. This case gives the Court an opportunity to give life
to this constitutional right.” He added that this is particularly
important for advancing human rights in Guyana where individuals are
often stigmatized, re-victimized and face amplified risks to their
safety and security when challenging the state to respect the rights of a
minority group. “It makes no sense articulating rights in the
Constitution if organisations are shut out from accessing them ‘acting
on behalf of its members’ as Article 154 of the Guyana Constitution
provides,” Simpson concluded.
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