Monday, August 12, 2024

International Youth Day 2024: Safeguard the Rights of All Young People in Guyana

On the occasion of International Youth Day on August 12, SASOD Guyana calls attention to the importance of safeguarding the rights of all young people in Guyana, and the Americas region, including their rights to life, bodily autonomy and safe working environments in every industry. 

On July 11, 2024, in the early hours of the morning, Coil Bottle - a 27-year old transgender sex worker whose given name is Shawn Simon Hooper – was executed in downtown Georgetown. Currently, two of the alleged perpetrators have been charged and are before the courts. Despite this, there is said to be at least a third perpetrator allegedly involved in the killing who is yet to be arrested and charged, while the motive behind the shocking murder remains unclear.

Coil Bottle

It is vital that a full and comprehensive investigation is conducted by the Guyana Police Force, that the prosecution of this case is professional and sound, and that the judicial process is free from bias and prejudice. While there have been many documented cases of violence against young sexual and gender minorities in Guyana over the past decade, this is a rare case in which the alleged perpetrators have been clearly identified. If justice is not properly administered in this case, this could motivate more bad actors to commit similar crimes against marginalised youth, including LGBTIQ+ youth and young sex workers, in Guyana. Justice must serve as a deterrent to prevent acts of targeted violence against marginalised youth and other vulnerable groups in Guyana.

SASOD Guyana also takes this opportunity to applaud the Organisation of American States (OAS) for the creation of the role of Commissioner for the Rights of Sex Workers and the appointment of Gloria Angélica Careaga Peréz on August 6, 2024. This groundbreaking move highlights the commitment of the OAS to protecting the rights of sex workers across the Americas region. Gloria Careaga is a social psychologist, LGBTIQA+ activist and feminist advocate from Mexico. On her appointment, she emphasised that “sex work is a job that can be recognised as being as worthy as any other and this must be our task.” SASOD Guyana will engage Commissioner Peréz in her mandate to collect and report information to the situation of the rights of sex workers, and submit recommendations to the OAS Secretary General to address these findings.

Sunday, July 28, 2024

"LGBTQ+ Activism in Guyana Stronger than Ever" - Dr. Nastassia Rambarran Tells SASOD Guyana's 21st Anniversary Research Symposium

(Georgetown, Guyana)

On Tuesday, July 16, SASOD Guyana hosted a Research Symposium, as part of the organisation’s twenty-first anniversary celebrations. The presenters were Alessandra Hereman, who presented the research proposal for her Master’s thesis of Alessandra Hereman titled “Gender, Generation, Genres: A Genealogy of a History of Transgressive Experiences and Embodiments in Postcolonial Guyana, circa 1970s to 1980s.” and Dr. Nastassia Rambarran, who presented the findings specifically related to Guyana from her doctoral thesis titled, “A Comparison of Guyana and Barbados with respect to Colonial Legacies, Transnational Processes and Decolonial Activities involved in Queer Activism.” The event was held at Herdmanston Lodge Hotel in Queenstown, Georgetown, and was well attended by the diplomatic corps, elected officials, civil society advocates, international aid workers and LGBTQ+ activists. 

Alessandra Hereman is a transgender Guyanese and a candidate for the Masters in Philosophy in Interdisciplinary Gender Studies at UWI St. Augustine. Hereman is the first openly transgender person to graduate from the University of Guyana in 201, with a Bachelor of Social Sciences Degree in Sociology (Pass with Distinction). She is an articulate activist for human rights of transgender people and other marginalised groups in Guyana and the Caribbean. Her thesis proposes to document the life stories of queer and trans people in early, post-colonial Guyana, in order to counter the false narratives of queer and trans Guyanese being a relatively recent import.

Alessandra Hereman

Dr. Nastassia Rambarran is a Guyanese-Barbadian researcher, writer, physician and public health consultant, based in Barbados. Her thesis is centred on a historical and sociological study of queer activism in Guyana and Barbados, and draws heavily from archival sources and interviews. She began her presentation by drawing attention to early LGBTQ+ organizing in Guyana during the early 2000s. At the time, there were only a couple organisations focused on promoting LGBTQ+ rights. Dr. Rambarran emphasised the vital role which SASOD Guyana during this period, especially in the context of promoting human rights through the use of international mechanisms at the level of the United Nations and the Inter-American human rights system. The evolution of SASOD Guyana progressed through public events such as the then “Painting the Spectrum” LGBTQ+ film festival, which Dr. Rambarran emphasised, is an important way to promote community. Over the 2006-2008 period, SASOD Guyana expanded its work and began engaging with international organisations. Dr. Rambarran also shared that the movement was initially perceived as upper-class organisation and not accessible to the masses and in response, SASOD Guyana held its first event aimed at a wider class audience in 2006.

Dr. Nastassia Rambarran

Although many strides have been made by LGBTQ+ organisations in Guyana, she noted that there are still areas for improvement. These include reducing movement fragmentation, increasing representation of women in the movement, and increasing inclusiveness as some organisations are perceived to be affiliated with one racial group. In particular, the low participation of persons from indigenous communities in the interior regions and their access to organisations like SASOD Guyana remain a significant challenge. “Despite these challenges, LGBTQ+ activism and organising in Guyana is stronger than ever,” Dr. Rambarran concluded. 

Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Press Release: "Defiant Bodies" Book Launched in Guyana to Celebrate SASOD's 21 Anniversary

(Georgetown, Guyana)

Last Tuesday, July 16, SASOD Guyana hosted a book launch of Dr. Nikoli Attai’s “Defiant Bodies: Making Queer Community in the Anglophone Caribbean” as part of the organisation’s twenty-first anniversary celebrations. The event was held at Herdmanston Lodge Hotel and was well attended by the diplomatic corps, elected officials, civil society advocates and the media.

A citizen of Trinidad and Tobago, Dr. Attai is an Assistant Professor of Ethnic Studies at Colorado State University (CSU) where he focuses on Black queer and feminist studies. Dr. Attai is also a co-manager of the CSU Collab Lab - a collaborative research hub that investigates the ways in which race, gender, and sexuality inform a sense of belonging in varied political, cultural, social, economic, and historical contexts.
Dr. Nikkoli Attai

Dr. Attai was motivated to write “Defiant Bodies” by his profound commitment to queer communities throughout the Caribbean, and to share their stories. Dr. Attai spent time in Guyana, Barbados, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, where he observed how queer and trans people navigated life with limited resources. He also conducted research with transgender sex workers in these countries.

In his thought-provoking presentation, Dr. Attai drew attention to the difficult, and often violent situations, faced by queer people to promote discussion of how to resist these challenges both in the Caribbean and globally. Dr. Attai asserted that it is vital to consider the Caribbean’s colonial legacy in order to understand the current situation in which archaic laws continue to oppress these groups. “It is also important to challenge the false western perception of the Caribbean as a uniformly homophobic place where queer people are only suffering, when, in reality, there are defiant communities that are flourishing,” he said at last week’s launch. Dr. Attai notes that queer life is thriving “beneath the radar of the mainstream public space” and across contexts that differ in terms of race, class, gender, and other socio-economic factors. Increasingly, queer communities are moving into the open by utilizing different social spaces that contribute to building community.

The launch concluded with an engaging discussion with attendees, during which Dr. Attai discussed strategies for promoting human rights for queer people in Guyana and the Caribbean.


(Left to Right) SASOD Guyana's Joel Simpson, Author Dr. Nikkoli Attai, Shadow Minister of Governance and Parliamentary Affairs, Geeta Chandan-Edmond, M.P., Pan-American Development FOundation's Jermaine Grant, and Former Mayor of Georgetown, Pandit Ubraj Narine.

Photo Credits: Philip Drayton for DrayStudioGY