Olivia Grange | |
|---|---|
| Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport | |
| Assumed office 2016 | |
| Prime Minister | Andrew Holness |
| Minister of Sports, Youth and Culture | |
| In office 2007–2011 | |
| Succeeded by | Lisa Hanna |
| Member of Parliament forSaint Catherine Central | |
| Assumed office 1997 | |
| Preceded by | Lisa Hanna |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Olivia Atavia Grange (1946-04-27)27 April 1946 (age 79) |
| Political party | JLP |
| Children | 1 daughter |
| Alma mater | Ryerson Polytechnical Institute |
Olivia Atavia "Babsy" Grange[1]OJ,CD,DSE[2] (born 27 April 1946) is aJamaican politician. She has served asMember of Parliament forSaint Catherine Central since1997 and as Jamaica's Minister of Sports, Youth and Culture for the duration of theJamaica Labour Party government from2007 to2011 andMinister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport since 2016.
Grange was born on 27 April 1946[3] in Luke Lane, West Kingston, Jamaica. Her father was a shoemaker and her mother was a dressmaker.[4] She attended All Saints Primary, Gainstead High, andRyerson Polytechnical Institute in Canada.[3]
From 1983 to 1985, Grange served as Government Senator and Parliamentary Secretary for Information and Culture. From 1985 to 1989, she was the Minister of State in the Office of the Prime Minister. Running as aJamaica Labour Party (JLP) candidate for St. Catherine Central, Grange was elected into parliament in 1997. In 2007, she was appointed as Minister of Information, Youth, Sports & Culture. She is currently the Minister of Sports, Culture, Entertainment and Gender Affairs after the JLP was elected to office in2016. A reggae enthusiast, Grange is also a founding member of the Jamaica Association of Composers, Authors and Publishers (JACAP). She also co-founded Canada's "first black community newspaper", Contrast.[5]
In July 2004, police seized a Honda Civic after One Order leader Oliver “Bubba” Smith was shot dead along Festival Road; vehicle registration documents showed Olivia “Babsy” Grange and Andrew “Bunman” Hope as co-owners of the car Smith was driving at the time of his killing.[6]
In October 2005, detectives re-questioned Grange following a shooting at Church and Wellington Streets that left Omar Campbell alias “Tickerus” dead; records revealed she was co-owner of the vehicle in which the gang member was killed, prompting further police scrutiny of her ties to constituents under criminal investigation.[7]
In February 2004, during a Peace Management Initiative tour of violence-torn Spanish Town, residents from the neighbouring South Central constituency publicly accused Grange of siding with the powerful “One Order” gang. They charged that her constituency’s gang members were behind recent shootings and extortion, a claim she emphatically denied on the spot.[10]
Following a peace dialogue with gang representatives at the parish council offices, Grange’s car was riddled with bullets at Church and Wellington Streets in Spanish Town. The attack underscored both the volatility of local gang politics and the personal risks she faced as mediator and MP.[11]
In March 2022, Maroon entertainer Horus “LA” Lewis filed assault charges against Culture Minister Olivia “Babsy” Grange, alleging that during a live social-media interview at Trench Town’s Culture Yard she ordered him removed, dug her fingernails into his left shoulder blade and caused a bruise consistent with blunt‐force trauma—injuries documented in a medical report and prompting police detectives to open an inquiry and re-question the minister.[12][13]
Grange has one daughter and three granddaughters.[5]
In 1997, Grange was nominated as Woman of the Year in Jamaica.[14] In June 2009, she was named as the Caribbean Community's first Champion for Culture. In 2015, Grange was awarded the rank of Commander (CD) in the Order of Distinction for her contributions to the country's music scene and cultural development.[5] In her capacity as the Gender Minister of Jamaica, Grange was presented with the annual DUSUSU Awards in 2019 for her contribution to the development of girls affairs in Jamaica, especially tackling the issue of teenage pregnancy. The annual award founded by girl education advocate and film makerZuriel Oduwole, recognizes the work of a First Lady and a Gender Minister across the 54 African countries and their diaspora. Olivia Grange became the first recipient of the award, outside of the African continent[15][16][17][18]