Hands off Red Thread!  Touch one! Touch All!

Editor’s Note: Over the last four to five months, Red Thread has received a number of threatening emails; the most recent was sent last week. The women have reported the threats to the police. They also issued a press release and shared information with women and organisations they work and are connected with in Guyanam the Caribbean, Latin America and the diaspora.  On July 28, a letter of support was issued by Guyanese.

On July 31, a second statement, which has been translated into Spanish, Kreyol and French, was issued from women’s organizations and individual women of the Caribbean and its diaspora. It has also been endorsed by the climate justice movement 350.0rg (https://350.org/) and Instituto Climainfo in Brazil (https://climainfo.org.br/). The statement’s title, ‘Touch One, Touch All,’ was used by Guyanese activist Andaiye in 2017 in a regional campaign against sexual violence.

This week we carry the Caribbean statement and initial list of signatories who have declared solidarity with Red Thread. For further information and to add your name for updates, email Touchall2023@gmail.com

This statement is issued in response to death threats and other attempts to silence activists in Guyana who have spoken out against mining, fossil fuel extraction and sexual violence.  Red Thread is a women’s development organization that has been specifically targeted.

1.            We, women of the Caribbean, condemn all threats on the lives of the women of Red Thread in Guyana.   

2.            We also condemn all threats and all attempts to silence Caribbean people who report or protest sexual violence and all other forms of extractive violence that menace the region.  

3.            The struggle of the women of Red Thread to defend women, indigenous people and the environment is a Caribbean struggle, not just a national one.  Sexual violence and gender-based violence is rampant across the region.  The UN has reported that Jamaica has the second highest rate of femicide in the world at 11 per 100,000. Trinidad and Tobago stands at 6.6 per 100,000. We therefore all stand to gain from struggles against sexual violence wherever we are in our region.   

4.            At the same time the natural landscape of the entire Caribbean is at risk. Our beaches disappear daily. Our lands are deforested. Our people are uprooted from their homes. Our water and air is polluted. Our fish die and our livelihoods are at risk.   As the world burns, it is obvious that we are all called upon to struggle to prevent the destruction of our environment through mining, fossil fuel extractivism, deforestation, pollution and dispossession whether we are located in Jamaica, Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago all the other many beautiful Caribbean islands, Suriname, Belize or Guyana. 

We remind our governments that we are watching how you respond to those whose fearless defence against sexual violence and extractive violence to our land is a model for all of us throughout the region. 

5.            We stand in solidarity with our sisters in Guyana. You inspire all people of conscience in our region to defend our bodies and our land.   

6.            Hands off the women of Red Thread. Touch one! Touch all! 

Signatories: