Dwayne Jones was relentlessly teased
 in high school for being effeminate until he dropped out. His father 
not only kicked him out of the house at the age of 14 but also helped 
jeering neighbors push the youngster from the rough Jamaican slum where 
he grew up. By age 16, the teenager was dead - beaten, stabbed, shot and run 
over by a car when he showed up at a street party dressed as a woman. 
His mistake: confiding to a friend that he was attending a "straight" 
party as a girl for the first time in his life.
"When I saw 
Dwayne's body, I started shaking and crying," said Khloe, one of three 
transgendered friends who shared a derelict house with the teenager in 
the hills above the north coast city of Montego Bay. Like most 
transgenders and gays in Jamaica, Khloe wouldn't give a full name out of
 fear. "It was horrible. It was so, so painful to see him like that."
International
 advocacy groups often portray this Caribbean island as the most hostile
 country in the Western Hemisphere for gays and transgendered people. 
After two prominent gay rights activists were murdered, a researcher 
with the US-based Human Rights Watch in 2006 called the environment in 
Jamaica for such groups "the worst any of us has ever seen."
Local activists have since disputed that label, but still say 
homophobia is pervasive. Dwayne's horrific July 22 murder has made 
headlines in newspapers on the island and stirred calls in some quarters
 for doing more to protect Jamaica's gay community, especially those who
 live on the streets and resort to sex work.
Advocates say much of
 the homophobia is fuelled by a nearly 150-year-old anti-sodomy law that
 bans anal sex as well as by dancehall reggae performers who flaunt 
anti-gay themes. The island's main gay rights group estimated that two 
homosexual men were killed for their sexual orientation last year, and 
36 were the victims of mob violence.
For years, Jamaica's gay 
community has lived so far underground that their parties and church 
services were held in secret locations. Most gays have stuck to a "don't
 ask, don't tell" policy of keeping their sexual orientation hidden to 
avoid scrutiny or protect loved ones.
"Judging by comments made on
 social media, most Jamaicans think Dwayne Jones brought his death on 
himself for wearing a dress and dancing in a society that has made it 
abundantly clear that homosexuals are neither to be seen nor heard," 
said Annie Paul, a blogger and publications officer at Jamaica's campus 
of the University of the West Indies.
Some say the hostility 
partly stems from the legacy of slavery when black men were sometimes 
sodomised as punishment or humiliation. Some historians believe that 
practice carried over into a general dread of homosexuality. But 
in recent years, emboldened young people such as Dwayne have helped 
bring the island's gay and transgender community out of the shadows. A 
small group of gay runaways now rowdily congregates on the streets of 
Kingston's financial district.
Prime Minister Portia Simpson 
Miller's government has also vowed to put the anti-sodomy law to a 
"conscience vote" in Parliament, and she said during her 2011 campaign 
that only merit would decide who got a Cabinet position in her 
government. By contrast, former Prime Minister Bruce Golding said in 
2008 that he would never allow homosexuals in his Cabinet. Dane 
Lewis, executive director of the Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals
 & Gays, said there were increasing "pockets of tolerance" on the 
island.
"We can say that we are becoming more tolerant. And 
thankfully that's because of people like Dwayne who have helped push the
 envelope," said Lewis, one of the few Jamaican gays who will publicly 
disclose his full name. Yet rights groups still complain of the 
slow pace of the investigation into Jones' murder, despite the justice 
minister calling for a full probe.
Police spokesman Steve Brown 
said detectives working the case are struggling to overcome a chronic 
problem: a strong anti-informant culture that makes eyewitnesses to 
murders and other crimes too afraid or simply unwilling to come forward. Even
 though some 300 people were at the dance party in the small riverside 
community of Irwin, police have yet to make a single arrest in Dwayne's 
murder. Police say witnesses have said they couldn't see the attackers' 
faces.
Dwayne was the center of attraction shortly after arriving 
in a taxi at 2am with his two 23-year-old housemates, Khloe and Keke. 
Dwayne's expert dance moves, long legs and high cheekbones quickly made 
him the one that all the guys were trying to get next to. Like 
most Jamaican homosexuals, Dwayne was careful about confiding in others 
about his sexual orientation. But when he saw a girl he had known from 
church, he told her he was attending the party in drag.
Minutes 
later, according to Khloe and Keke, the girl's male friends gathered 
around Dwayne in the dimly-lit street asking: "Are you a woman or a 
man?" One man waved a lighter's flame near Dwayne's sneakers, asking 
whether a girl could have such big feet. Then, his friends said, 
another man grabbed a lantern from an outdoor bar and walked over to 
Dwayne, shining the bright light over him from head to toe. "It's a 
man," he concluded, while the others hissed "batty boy" and other 
anti-gay epithets.
Khloe says she tried to steer him away from the
 crowd, whispering in Dwayne's ear: "Walk with me, walk with me." But 
Dwayne pulled away, loudly insisting to partygoers that he was a girl. 
When someone behind him snapped his bra strap, the teen panicked and 
raced down the street.
But he couldn't run fast enough to escape the mob. The
 teenager was viciously assaulted and apparently half-conscious for some
 two hours before another sustained attack finished him off, according 
to Khloe, who was also beaten and nearly raped. She hid in a nearby 
church and then the surrounding woods, unable to call for help because 
she didn't have her cellphone.
Dwayne's father in the Montego Bay 
slum of North Gully didn't want to talk about his son's life or death. 
The teen's family wouldn't even claim the body, according to Dwayne's 
friends. They remembered him as a spirited boy with a contagious 
laugh who dreamt of becoming a performer like Lady Gaga. He was also a 
street-smart hustler who resorted to sleeping in the bushes or on 
beaches when he became homeless. He won a local dancing competition 
during his time on the streets and was affectionately nicknamed "Gully 
Queen."
"He was the youngest of us but he was a diva," Khloe said. "He was always very feisty and joking around." Inside their squatter house, Khloe and Keke said, they still talk to their dead friend.
"I'll
 be cooking in the kitchen and I'll say, 'Dwayne, you hungry?' or 
something like that," said Keke while sitting on the old mattress in her
 bedroom, flinching as neighborhood dogs barked outside. "We just miss 
him all the time. Sometimes I think I see him."
But down the hall, Dwayne's room is empty except for pink window curtains decorated with roses, his favorite flower.
Culled from Associated Press. 



What a sad news, so this babaric act is not practiced in Nigeria alone. I wonder what joy people derive in killing a human being like them in cold blood without feeling any sympathy in their heart. I wonder how they sleep at night after conducting or partaking in this terrible act. Everyone that partakes in any of these terrible act wil never go unpunished, their punishment will start here on earth so that they will also experience worst pains than the person they killed. What-so-ever a man soweth, so shall he reap. RIP young one. >>Millicleo<<
ReplyDeleteI'm not in support of homosexuality but killing someone for their sexual preference is so wrong. I hope they bring his killers to justice. RIP man.
ReplyDelete