From an Time magazine article on rampant and violent homophobia in the Carribean.
In the past two years, two of the island’s most prominent gay activists, Brian Williamson and Steve Harvey, have been murdered — and a crowd even celebrated over Williamson’s mutilated body. Perhaps most disturbing, many anti-gay assaults have been acts of mob violence. In 2004, a teen was almost killed when his father learned his son was gay and invited a group to lynch the boy at his school. Months later, witnesses say, police egged on another mob that stabbed and stoned a gay man to death in Montego Bay. And this year a Kingston man, Nokia Cowan, drowned after a crowd shouting “batty boy” (a Jamaican epithet for homosexual) chased him off a pier. “Jamaica is the worst any of us has ever seen,” says Rebecca Schleifer of the U.S.-based Human Rights Watch and author of a scathing report on the island’s anti-gay hostility.
Banton’s lyrics are hardly unique among reggae artists today. Another popular artist, Elephant Man (O’Neil Bryant, 29) declares in one song, “When you hear a lesbian getting raped/ It’s not our fault … Two women in bed/ That’s two Sodomites who should be dead.” Another, Bounty Killer (Rodney Price, 33), urges listeners to burn “Mister Fagoty” and make him “wince in agony.”
Last week two CBS News producers, both Americans, were beaten with tire irons by a gay-bashing mob while vacationing on St. Martin. One of the victims, Ryan Smith, was airbused to a Miami hospital, where he remains in intensive care with a fractured skull.
A friend of mine currently lives in Jamaica while he figures out how he’s going to get American citizenship (despite the fact he lived in the US for 14 years as a student). He said that it’s a really homophobic place to live and he’s had to remain closeted there, but I had no idea it was that bad.