Monday, July 28, 2025

SASOD Guyana Launches LGBTQIA+ Manifesto ahead of 2025 Elections - Businessman Enzo Matthews Joins Call for Inclusion

On Wednesday, July 16, SASOD Guyana launched its Manifesto, ahead of the 2025 General and Regional Elections, calling for political parties to commit to addressing legislative, socio-economic and other critical issues affecting lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex and asexual (LGBTQIA+) Guyanese. The Manifesto lists 10 priority issues for political parties to include in their manifestos or to give clear and definitive commitments to.

SASOD Guyana’s Managing Director Joel Simpson said the Guyana LGBTQIA+ Manifesto will be shared with all the political parties contesting the General and Regional Elections. “Our goal is to have the political parties to include our top 10 priorities in their parties’ manifestos,” Simpson shared. SASOD Guyana launched its first manifesto in 2020, and Simpson pointed out that while only a few parties included the issues in their plans, the organisation is hopeful that all six contesting political parties will do so in 2025.

Simpson noted that a 2022 national poll found that 54% of Guyanese want the outdated laws criminalising same-sex intimacy between consenting adult men in private to be repealed – which is the first priority in the Manifesto. The Manifesto also calls for the Prevention of Discrimination Act 1997 to be amended to include sexual orientation, gender identity and gender expression as protected categories. Supporting this recommendation, the 2022 poll also found that 72.4% of Guyanese believe that LGBTQIA+ workers should be protected from discrimination. “These are common-sense issues that most Guyanese of all backgrounds can agree on,” Simpson noted.

The launch also featured special remarks by businessman Enzo Matthews of the Lezo Group, who commended the LGBTQIA+ Manifesto and called on Guyanese to support its priorities. “We can not pick and choose when we want to come together as a people. We should always come together as a people, holistically for every cause,” the businessman said. “Everyone should be treated fairly regardless,” he added.

Enzo Matthews and Joel Simpson

Matthews also shared that the LeZo Group is proud to among more than 100 Guyanese businesses and organisations that have endorse the Guyana Together campaign, calling for the repeal of the outdated laws criminalising intimacy between men – which is the 2025 Manifesto’s first priority.

Matthews called for all political parties to “adopt” the “golden rule” on the treatment of Guyanese, “treating other people the way you would want to be treated. I take pride in encouraging the values of fairness and equal opportunity in my establishments,” Matthews declared. 

Enzo Matthews

“LGBTQIA+ people and our allies are voting this year because we understand what’s at stake in the 2025 General and Regional Elections,” SASOD Guyana’s Joel Simpson added. Appealing to LGBTQIA+ voters, Simpson called on all to ensure that their “voices are heard,” through their votes. “Show our elected leaders that they must represent Guyanese who want them to uphold our shared values of respect for all families,” Simpson emphasized.

In addition to legislative reform, the Manifesto also prioritises training, policy and programmatic interventions to address the critical socio-economic challenges faced by LGBTQIA+ Guyanese. Mandatory, ongoing training in Justice Equity Diversity and Inclusion is proposed for the uniformed services, social workers, healthcare workers and other state service providers to eliminate discriminatory attitudes and unconscious bias in the provision of state services. The Manifesto underscores that homophobia is a huge barrier for sexual and gender minorities to access public services in Guyana.

In terms of programmes, SASOD Guyana is calling on the elected Government to provide emergency shelter for LGBTQIA+ youth who are fleeing violence in their homes. The Manifesto notes that LGBTQIA+ youth face disproportionately high rates of housing insecurity due to unique challenges, such as family rejection and lack of support systems. Simpson noted that this an especially challenging issue in Guyana when minors are put out of their homes or escape from homophobic violence. “The state has no shelters in place to deal with these dire emergencies,” Simpson lamented.   

Since launching the 2025 Manifesto, SASOD Guyana has been meeting with the contesting political parties to engage them to include the 10 priority issues in their own manifestos and plans. The 6 political parties that have made the ballot have all been invited to the 2025 LGBTQIA+ Elections Town Hall, which will be hosted by SASOD Guyana and the Guyana Press Association on July 29.

Thursday, May 15, 2025

Guyana’s LGBTQIA+ Movement Hopeful New Pope Leo XIV will Continue the Path of Acceptance for LGBTQIA+ Families Initiated by Pope Francis

Celebrating International Day of Families under the theme “Family Oriented-Policies for Social Development,” LGBTQIA+ leaders in Guyana express hope that Pope Leo XIV will continue the path initiated by the late Pope Francis — one of openness, dialogue, and recognition of LGBTQIA+ families. Pope Francis welcomed LGBTQIA+ people, leading to increased visibility and acceptance of LGBTQIA+ families within and beyond Catholic institutions.

Pope Francis met with gay and transgender people many times, supported LGBTQIA+ ministries, opened baptism and the role of godparent to transgender people and allowed priests to bless same-sex couples. In his words, LGBTQIA+ people were recognised as “children of God.”

In early 2023, Pope Francis also made historic remarks calling the criminalisation of sexual and gender minorities “unjust” in an interview with the Associated Press. According to Vatican News, Pope Francis emphasised that “being homosexual is not a crime,” but rather is a “human condition.” 

At the time of Pope Francis’ statement on decriminalisation, Bishop Francis Alleyne, Head of the Roman Catholic Diocese in Guyana, responded positively. Bishop Alleyne stated that “the Legislature should not label consensual same-sex intimacy as a crime.”  Like Pope Francis, Bishop Alleyne contended that homosexuality is a ‘human condition.’ The Guyanese Catholic Church has a long history of opposition to the country’s anti-gay laws.

Guyana is one of only 65 jurisdictions worldwide that continue to criminalise private, consensual, same-sex sexual activity. Guyana remains the only country in South America and among the minority in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) criminalising consensual intimacy between adults, despite 2022 polling demonstrating the majority of people in Guyana support eliminating this outdated law. 

Joel Simpson, Managing Director of SASOD Guyana, said “Pope Francis built a bridge towards LGBTQIA+ families, acknowledging that queer and trans people are cherished members of families and communities. Pope Francis reached out to LGBTQIA+ families who in the past have felt invisible, and we hope to see the new Pope continue with this vision of an inclusive and accepting church.”

Joel Simpson

Despite this historic progress, there is still much to be done to ensure all families are truly accepted and protected in society. The arrival of Pope Leo XIV has renewed hope for some leaders in the Guyanese LGBTQIA+ movement. Savannah Williams, Co-Chairwoman of Sexualities Women and Genders (SWAG) shared that “the new Pope has a history of advocating for marginalised communities in his more than 20 years as a religious leader in Peru.” In his initial address, Pope Leo thanked his predecessor. “The Guyanese LGBTQIA+ movement remains hopeful that his leadership will continue on the path of increasing recognition and acceptance for all families,” Williams added. 

Savannah Williams

Marked on May 15, International Day of Families is an annual United Nations observance. The Day reflects the importance the international community attaches to families and provides an opportunity to raise awareness of issues related to families.