Carnival Cruise Line promotes itself as inclusive, progressive, and LGBTQ+-friendly. It celebrates Pride Month and flies rainbow flags. But in July 2025, it launched Celebration Key—a $600 million private cruise destination on Grand Bahama Island, located in a country where:
LGBTQ+ people lack legal protection
Migrants are detained and deported without hearings
Fox Hill Prison is condemned for inhumane conditions
Police use expired warrants, with little access to legal counsel
Religious leaders openly oppose queer visitors and Pride tourism
Until Carnival acts to protect human dignity, it must be boycotted.
❗ 1. Celebration Key: A $600M “Inclusive” Investment with Exclusive Consequences
Celebration Key officially opened on July 19, 2025, welcoming 5,000+ cruise passengers on day one.
The development is projected to bring in 2 million visitors annually, reaching 4 million by 2028.
Carnival also announced a $100 million pier expansion to accommodate four Excel-class ships.
Christine Duffy, Carnival’s president, praised the project as “transformative for Grand Bahama.”
But transformative for whom?
“The guests will see paradise. But for many here, it’s just a well-guarded stage.” — LGBTQ+ activist, Alexus D’Marco, Nassau
🌈 2. LGBTQ+ Rights in the Bahamas: Legal, but Only on Paper
While same-sex activity was decriminalized in 1991, there are no anti-discrimination protections, no legal recognition of relationships, and no gender identity protections.
Age of consent remains unequal: 18 for same-sex, 16 for opposite-sex relationships.
Public hostility is rampant: 85.5% of Bahamians oppose same-sex marriage (2015 survey).
Activists like Erin Greene have warned that LGBTQ+ residents face “social exclusion, police distrust, and career discrimination.”
⚖️ 3. Justice & Policing: Arbitrary Arrests, No Defense, No Reform
Freedom House (2024) reports widespread abuse of outdated warrants, no public defenders except in capital cases, and delayed or denied access to justice.
LGBTQ+ individuals face harassment and violence, with little faith in police response.
Discrimination in employment, housing, and healthcare remains legal and common.
🚨 4. Migration & Immigration Abuse: Detention, Bribes, and Expulsions
988+ migrants were arrested in 2022 for overstaying or unlawful entry.
Most were detained without legal counsel. 640 were convicted and deported—often in fast-track proceedings.
A 2023 joint UN submission by CEJIL, GDP, and OBMICA detailed months-long detentions without hearings at Carmichael Road Detention Centre.
Migrants reported being solicited for bribes (B$2,000–3,000) to avoid deportation.
The UNHCR has repeatedly criticized these practices as violations of international law.
🏝 5. Celebration Key: A Veneer of Inclusion on a Foundation of Repression
Despite its promises of “inclusive cruising,” Carnival now profits from:
A state with zero protections for LGBTQ+ people
A prison system described by the U.S. State Department as cruel and degrading
A judiciary unfit to protect migrants or minorities
A religious lobby that continues to mobilize against LGBTQ+ tourists
“We’re not asking Carnival to fix a country. But don’t reward a regime that punishes who we are.” — Former employee of Carnival (anonymous, 2024)
📋 Carnival’s Claim vs. the Bahamian Reality
Carnival’s Promise
Destination Reality
“Gay-Friendly” Pride branding
No LGBTQ+ rights, no protections, active societal hostility
Inclusive tourism vision
State-sanctioned migrant abuse, no queer legal safeguards
Celebration Key = opportunity
Celebration Key = complicity in repression
📞 Formal Request to Carnival Cruise Line
On June 10, 2025, Broken Paradise formally requested a statement from Carnival’s PR Office (Attn: Christine Duffy). The request included:
A summary of human rights concerns in the Bahamas
Specific questions about Celebration Key’s compliance with UN guidelines
A request for Carnival’s plan to address inclusion beyond marketing
As of July 26, 2025, no response has been received.
🧭 What We Demand
Until Carnival Cruise Line:
Publicly acknowledges the LGBTQ+ and migrant rights situation in the Bahamas
Implements human rights clauses in port partnerships
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