(Georgetown,
Guyana) The Court of Appeal today in an oral decision delivered by the
acting Chancellor, the Honourable Carl Singh, confirmed the ruling of
the then acting Chief Justice Ian Chang in the High Court that the
expression of one’s gender identity as a trans person is not in and of
itself a crime. However, the Court of Appeal unanimously dismissed the
appeal, rejecting the appellants’ arguments that the law in question
discriminates based on gender and violates multiple equality provisions
in the Constitution. The appellants confirmed that they intend to appeal
this ruling to the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ).
In
2010 four trans women and one of Guyana’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender (LGBT) organisations brought an action challenging the
constitutionality of an 1893 colonial vagrancy law found in the Summary
Jurisdiction (Offences) Act which makes it an offence for a ‘man’ or a
‘woman’ to cross-dress in public ‘for any improper purpose’. The essence
of the case brought by Gulliver McEwan, Angel Clarke, Peaches Fraser
and Isabella Persaud and the Society Against Sexual Orientation
Discrimination (SASOD) was that this 19th century vagrancy law is
hopeless vague, amounts to sex/gender discrimination because it is based
on sex-role stereotyping and has a disproportionate impact on trans
persons.
The
Court of Appeal admitted that the expression ‘improper purpose’ could
be rather broad, but held that from a practical perspective, certainty
and accessibility of laws are not always attainable. As such, the Court
of Appeal said that it would fall to magistrates to determine the
meaning of the term on a case by case basis. Twinkle Bissoon, a
trans-woman activist who has been repeatedly barred from court for
dressing in female clothing, observed that “the ruling of the Court of
Appeal leaves the application of the law to be done on a case by case
basis and is very problematic because it allows police officers and
other law enforcement to interpret the provisions to give effect to
their own prejudices.”
Human
rights activist, Danuta Radzik of Help & Shelter, after learning of
the judgement stressed that “it is ridiculous to expect that every time
a trans-woman in female attire goes to the magistrates courts that we
have to go through this charade. Parliament needs to repeal these
discriminatory laws so that the human rights of all citizens can be
respected.”
Although
the Guyana Constitution is unique in the Caribbean in that Article
39(2) obligates the court to pay due regard to international human
rights law in interpreting the fundamental rights provisions, the Court
of Appeal failed to address any of the arguments of the appellants which
addressed the discriminatory nature and effects of the cross-dressing
prohibition on trans persons. Guyana’s Constitution has the most robust
provisions related to equality found in Anglophone Caribbean
constitutions, largely through amendments made in 2003. These provisions
include a positive duty on the state to secure equality, especially for
disadvantaged groups, and a wide anti-discrimination provision that
prohibits discrimination on the grounds of sex and gender. in the
Concluding Observations from the United Nations Committee on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) on Guyana’s most recent review on
September 28 - 29, 2015, “the Committee recommends that the State Party
repeal the criminalization of … cross-gender dressing.”
The
appellants argued that the Guyana Constitution, as well as
international human rights law, mandates a substantive vision of
equality which recognizes the sex-role stereotyping in the
cross-dressing law as a form of discrimination related to gender, and
prohibited by the Guyana Constitution. However, the Chancellor said that
the court was not persuaded that the law discriminates against anyone.
Dr
Arif Bulkan, one of the lawyers appearing for the appellants, and a
co-coordinator of the Faculty of Law UWI Rights Advocacy Project
(U-RAP), said that the case raises fundamental questions about the
existence of constitutional savings clauses and the protection they give
to colonial laws which could never be enacted today. For this reason,
he said, today’s judgment underscores the importance of the Caribbean
Court of Justice as a final court, where these issues that strike at the
heart of justice for marginalized communities can be fully considered.
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