Showing posts with label sexual and reproductive health and rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sexual and reproductive health and rights. Show all posts

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Women's Right to Reproductive Healthcare


SASOD Women's Arm Coordinator, Akola Thompson speaking on the Sexual and Reproductive Health and Gender Equality panel of the Caribbean Forum on Population, Youth and Development 2018.

Greetings all. Let’s gyaff about access to information, access to services and the inequalities that exists in the distribution of these as it relates to sexual and reproductive health and rights.  

Information has the ability to shape narratives and narratives have the ability to shape culture. So, when it comes to providing information, it is important that we get it right. One of the things affecting many Caribbean countries is the high rate of adolescent pregnancy. Yet, with very few notable exceptions, the Caribbean remains a place that is resistant to comprehensive sexual education due to miseducation, religious fundamentalism and political interests. 

Currently, Guyana has the Health & Family Life program, which includes sexual education. Unfortunately, this program does not exist in a majority of schools and most glaringly, it takes an abstinence only approach and is often very useless in explaining issues of consent, body, abuse and is not inclusive of varying sexualities and gender identities. 


I became a mother at 16, a lot later than many of my friends I went to school with. We became sexually active and later pregnant, not because we were “force ripe” as we would say in Guyanese parlance, but because we did not have access to information on our changing bodies due to abstinence only sex education programs or the complete absence of them. 

We were expected to know what to do or what not to do. At every point, we were reminded that the beginning of a pregnancy meant an end of opportunities – but yet no one thought it important for us to talk about sex because of fears that talking about something somehow encourages it. I honestly do not understand that misguided line of thinking. As my friend Andaiye would say, give me a confounded chance

For many of us who got pregnant, many of our educational, economic, social and political opportunities and dreams did end. The more privileged of us were able to reintegrate into private school, opportunities were slow but they still came. There was no school reintegration policy as is currently being worked on by the Ministry of Education and the Guyana Equality Forum, most notably the Guyana Responsible Parenthood Association and the Society Against Sexual Orientation Discrimination.

There have been adjustments over the years to the HFLE program, but it is still lacking and even in the most progressive of schools, falls short of touching on contraception and abortion care. 

We have 20-year-old mothers with three children, all different ages because they do not have information on family planning. When we speak of inter-generational poverty and breaking the cycle of repeat pregnancies in young mothers, we must examine the role in access to reproductive services plays in perpetuating a cycle of unequal gender balance relations and economic inequalities particularly in rural communities. 

While abortion has been legal in Guyana since the passing of the 1995 Medical Termination of Pregnancy Bill, we continue to have abortion related complications and deaths because neither information nor services are readily available. Making these inaccessible is a tactic used by the Right to hinder women’s access to reproductive healthcare. It is just one in many ways that religious fundamentalists seek to infringe on women’s rights and bodily autonomy. 

This often results in women from far-flung areas choosing to either take matters into their own hands, or going to a “bottom-house clinic” to have the procedure done. There are too many cases of women gaining injuries, becoming sterile and even dying as a result. This was seen in 2012 in the case of 19-year-old Karen Badal who died at the hands of a hack doctor and more recently in 2016, a young woman who injected her stomach with a poisonous substance – from which she died - because she was pregnant and did not want to be. 

The stigma associated with abortion in most societies such as Guyana, remains a hindering factor to women professionally getting rid of unwanted pregnancies, even if they are able to and can afford it. This stigma has been fostered over several generations, aided on by our deep religious values that we were pounded in to us from years of colonialist teachings and writings.

We do not need long failed approaches; we need ones supported by facts and not beliefs. They need politicians who care less about political interests and power and more about ensuring we have a safe and well-informed populace. As we’ve covered and proven many times already, not talking about sex and reproductive health can be dangerous. Not being able to access it can be even more so. That is why we as advocates and movement builders should demand more and hold our leaders accountable. We have way too many spaces such as these filled with bureaucracy and inefficiency under the guise of being apolitical and separate. We need to become more radical in our approach, we have way too many policies and bodies but very little implementation. It is time that cycle stops. Leaders, you cannot keep asking to hear our voices and then silence us when we speak. 

















Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Guyana Equality Forum (GEF) hosts successful Human Rights Documentation Workshop

On Friday April 12, 2013, representatives from several Guyanese civil society groups which make up the Guyana Equality Forum (GEF) gathered at the Moray House Trust for a training workshop on Human Rights Documentation. This workshop was made possible through a partnership between the Society Against Sexual Orientation Discrimination (SASOD) and the Equal Rights Trust (ERT) with support from the European Union (EU), through the European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights, Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS (UNAIDS) and the United States Embassy (USE) in Georgetown, Guyana.

SASOD’s Zenita Nicholson, who facilitated the workshop, is also grateful to the Commonwealth Youth Programme – Commonweath Secretariat, Equitas, Caribbean Vulnerable Communities Coalition (CVC) and the Jamaican Forum for Lesbians, All-sexuals and Gays (J-FLAG) for technical support, training and guidance in aiding her preparation to undertake this role.  

Opening remarks were made by the Country Coordinator of  UNAIDS, Dr. Roberto Brandt Campos, who reiterated that to get to zero stigma and discrimination we need to take care of the vulnerable and key populations who are most susceptible to HIV. In order to address discrimination, human rights abuses must be documented. “It’s a good place to start,” added Mr. Michael Fraser, Political and Economic Affairs Chief from the US Embassy in his remarks, sharing a synopsis on the history of human rights, particularly stressing on their universality. Mr. Fraser also shared findings from the US State Department’s Human Rights Report on Guyana.

Civil society groups spanning all three counties of Guyana, Demerara, Essequibo and Berbice, and who work directly with children, youth, women, sex workers, people living with and affected by HIV, substance abusers and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) persons, participated in the workshop: Stella’s Sisterhood of Support and Service (S4) Foundation; Hope Foundation, Bartica; Hope for All, Essequibo Coast; Guyana Sex Work Coalition (GSWC); Network of Guyanese Living with and Affected by HIV and AIDS (G+); Justice Institute Guyana (JIG) Inc.; Youth Challenge Guyana (YCG);  United Bricklayers, Berbice; Def Association Guyana; Linden Care Foundation; Child Link;  Phoenix Recovery Centre; Guyana Rainbow Foundation (GuyBow); and SASOD.

Participants discussed the need, as a GEF collective, to promote and protect human rights and equality in Guyana through advocacy; participation in the consultation process of the Special Select Committee on Guyana’s Commitments to the United Nations Human Rights Council with regards to the Abolition of Corporal Punishment in Schools; the Abolition of the Death Penalty and the Decriminalization of Consensual Adult Same Sex Relations and Discrimination against LGBT persons; forging partnerships and building alliances with other organisations and groups.

Partners were enthusiastic, and agreed unanimously on using the Martus software, which was introduced and discussed as a mechanism to protect sensitive data and shield identities of survivors and witnesses who provide testimony on human rights abuses. The Martus software is an open source tool which is used by organisations worldwide to document human rights violations. 

Click for photo album 



Thursday, March 28, 2013


Red Thread, 
Guyana Rainbow Foundation (GuyBow),
Stella’s Sisterhood of Support & Service (S4) Foundation and the Society Against Sexual Orientation Discrimination (SASOD)

invite all members of the public to a discussion forum on

“Gender Equality and Sexual Rights 
in Guyana”

on Thursday, April 4, 2013 from 17:00 hrs at Moray House Trust,
239 Camp and Quamina Streets, Georgetown, Guyana

________________________________________________________




For further information contact SASOD by telephone on (592) 225-7283 or 623-5155 or by email at sasod.officer@gmail.com


Sunday, March 03, 2013


Press Relase: World Day of Social Justice

Marking World Day of Social Justice, celebrated on February 20 annually, leading Civil Society Groups highlight key recommendations from the recently-concluded review of Guyana’s obligations before the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC). Red Thread, Artistes In Direct Support (A.I.D.S.), Family Awareness Conscious Together (FACT) and the Society Against Sexual Orientation Discrimination (SASOD) contributed a joint submission on sexuality and gender issues affecting children in Guyana to the review which took place in Geneva last month. 

Field research for joint submission prepared by the groups found that many Guyanese children face a wide range of challenges such as poverty, violence, and lack of support from family and teachers, who have little understanding of the problems affecting them and often do not possess the skills to empower, but rather shun them when they seek support and guidance. Desiree Edgehill, Executive Director of A.I.D.S. reiterated," a major concern is contracting HIV, since we know that children are sexually active as early as 14 years old, according to the 2008/2009 Biological Behavioural Surveillance Survey done by the Ministry of Health.” In light of these issues CRC recommended that Guyana undertake targeted programmes for improving access to age- appropriate, HIV and sexual reproductive and health information and services among adolescents.

Additionally, CRC recommended that Guyana adopt a sex and reproductive health policy for adolescents and ensure that sex and reproductive education is widely promoted and targeted at adolescent girls and boys, with special attention to the prevention of early pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections, HIV and sexual health services and information for children. “Children need comprehensive sex and sexuality education so that they can make informed decisions regarding their own healthy, sexual development and growth without the judgements and condemnations that are too often forthcoming from the adults around them. The education authorities must move to implement urgently the age appropriate HFLE programme that has been promised for so long" said Karen de Souza, National Coordinator of Red Thread.

The responses to sexuality and gender issues affecting children are severely constrained, which stems from cultural norms and attitudes which further weaken the support to children and youth specifically when it conflicts with norms and expectations of society. There is too little in place structurally to address the need to provide information and support to these children and youth who are grappling with questions and prejudices about sexuality and gender. When children encounter discrimination based on their real or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity, the responses they receive from adults are often punitive, rather than educational. Many children therefore grapple with these issues without adequate support. Civil society organisations (CSOs) continue to advocate for the rights of all children and youth, and often provide refuge, in lieu of state protection, for children facing abuse, even with their very limited resources.  Specifically, CRC requested that Guyana address discrimination against children based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

"We recognise that discrimination against children based on sexual orientation and gender identity is an issue we need to address not only by educating children, but also their parents, guardians, teachers and community leaders - the ones children turn to for help and support," said Anette Jaundoo, Project Coordinator of FACT. The four Civil Society Groups are calling on all Guyanese to play their role in protecting children’s rights; end discrimination against children based on sexual orientation, gender identity and other grounds and provide access to comprehensive sex and sexuality education. It is by removing barriers related to sexuality and gender like these, which impede children’s rights that social justice will be advanced in Guyana.