Time To Rally Around Prime Minister David Thompson

Rickey Singh

Rickey Singh

Prime Minister David Thompson promised when he assumed office that he would established a Cabinet sub-committee to investigate the Immigration problem which was visibly evident in Barbados.  In keeping with his promise he issued a Ministerial Statement last week which focused on a new policy to tackle the problem. The issue of immigration is one being battled all over the world, Barbados no exception. Since issuing the statement all hell has broken lose with the most pointed yet covert attack coming from Prime Minister of St. Vincent Ralph Gonzales who elected to issue his own Ministerial Statement in response.

Prime Minister David Thompson although a rookie Prime Minister is a seasoned politician, and we are confident that he will make the right moves to protect the borders of Barbados and by extension the well being of the society which Barbadians have laboured to build in a post independence era.

Prime Minister Patrick Manning had earlier requested a CARICOM Heads of Summit to discuss the global financial crisis but we

Roxanne Gibbs - Executive Editor Nation Newspaper

Roxanne Gibbs

suspect that a lot of the time will be spent addressing the decision by the Barbados government to document immigrants. Already Prime Minister David Thompson can expect that Prime Minister Gonzalves et al will be frothing  at the mouth come Sunday in Trinidad to attack the government of Barbados’ decision to arrest the large number of undocumented workers in Barbados. It was yesterday we read Secretary General Edwin Carrington of CARICOM suggesting that the matter will be discussed. He was at pains to point out that member countries in CARICOM had a right to make decisions with respect to sovereignty but he was concerned with how they do it. This we consider to be a most inappropriate comment even before this matter has been discussed given the obvious inference to Barbados.

For those who accuse Barbados of adopting an anti-CSME posture historical events disprove this notion. Was it not Barbados which the late Prime Minister Eugenia Charles turned to mobilize support to rescue Grenada when the New Jewel Movement imploded in 1983? Prime Minister Tom Adams responded without hesitation. What about the CARICOM Multilateral Clearing

David Commissiong

David Commissiong

Facility? This was an arrangement between Central Banks of the region to settle payments where the net surplus of one country could be used to offset a deficit it had with another country. Can anyone guess what happened? Barbados was left owed millions by Guyana and other countries. Not sure if the Barbados government has written the amount off. The point is Barbados remained faithful to the facility to the end while others jumped ship. Was there a furore when the OECS sub-region announced an alliance recently with Trinidad to establish a political and economic union? Wasn’t that a clear threat to the CSME movement? The current global economic crisis seems to have put that arrangement on ice for the moment.

The point is Barbados in our brief post-independence period has continued to demonstrate commitment to the ideals of CARICOM integration in the past and in the present.

Minister Maxine McClean when she had responsibility for immigration publicly acknowledged that her best estimate was that we had about thirty thousand Guyanese alone in Barbados. She indicated that the tracking system at the Immigration Department was poor and it had taken a lot of effort to determine the number of legal and illegal immigrants in Barbados.

Guyana Consul to Barbados Norman Faria

Norman Faria

Minister McClean’s admission is instructive because it came against a background of Mia Mottley’s refusal to address the issue when she had responsibility for Home Affairs when in government. Barbadians have always shown quiet concern at the large numbers of immigrants flowing into Barbados. BU can safely say it is what prompted us to blog about the open immigration policy of the previous government. At the same time Guyana Consul Norman Faria on several occasions when pointedly asked about the number of Guyanese immigrants who were flowing into Barbados commented to the effect that it was for the government to speak to that issue. The PEOPLE waited in vain.

For almost a decade the Owen Arthur government, the media and others in Barbados frustrated all attempts to broach concerns about the obvious open door immigration policy. Callers to the radio shows especially Voice of Barbados were unceremoniously censored, the Nation Newspaper published only soft stories about immigration. The fact that the Chief Editor Roxanne Gibbs at the Nation Newspaper is of Guyanese extraction speaks to credibility and she should be fired over how she has manipulated the Nation coverage of the immigration issue.

Leader of the Opposition Mia Mottley

Leader of the Opposition Mia Mottley

To our surprise the Mia Mottley led opposition has publicly opposed the government’s effort to beef up the immigration system to plug the big hole left by them. Not one BLP Member of Parliament has broken ranks on this issue. The PEOPLE will remember their actions for sure. Even if we used the argument by the BLP that if Barbados is to expand GDP it will need to increase labour capacity, how can that argument apply at this time when our economy has been forced to contract against the global economic crisis? We will not dignify David Commisong and his tribe with too much of a response. They have long ago lost credibility over the Ghanaian affair. Their actions to frustrate the government in that episode has probably resulted in a few Ghanaians still on the run in Barbados.

All across the Caribbean, Bahamas, Antigua, Trinidad, Jamaica, Dominican Republic and others have been deporting illegals but our regional journalist Rickey Singh has been silent. Barbados a tiny country attempts to secure its borders and protect the infrastructure which has made it attractive to the immigrants in the first instance and Singh and his cohorts Peter Wickhan, Annahlee Davis, David Commisong et al grab their foghorns. Funny thing, in all the countries mentioned above the opposition parties and key stakeholders have been mostly supportive of their respective governments actions. It was seen as a national issue and not one to play politics. We want to ask the Bajan Blogosphere to rally around Prime Minister as he fights the diabolical forces in our midst.

For BU the legacy of the media and the Barbados Labour Party in the last ten years will be how they created the monster which Prime Minister David Thompson has to wrestle back into the cage. To compound the problem they had a chance to make amends by supporting the government and PEOPLE of Barbados in the struggle but elected not to risk dismantling the legacy of former Prime Minister Owen Arthur.

248 Responses to Time To Rally Around Prime Minister David Thompson

  1. Should future P.M Mia Mottley win we can expect more of this.

    http://www.stabroeknews.com/images/2009/05/20090528habit1-221×300.jpg

  2.  

    And in related news:

    New immigration policy to be released

    By Stabroek staff | May 30, 2009 in Regional News

    (Antigua Sun) – The Immigration and the Labour Department through the Ministry of National Security are looking at several ways of tracking visitors to the island from the time they enter to when they are expected to leave.

    The ruling United Progressive Party (UPP) spokesman, Winston Henry said this is part of the government’s efforts to secure Antigua and Barbuda’s border in the interest of national security.

    “We have between 5,000 to 15,000 persons living in Antigua and their status needs to be regularised,” Henry told the Antigua Sun. “This is just using a figure but it can very well be a possibility and we need to do something about it.”

    Henry also said that in a few weeks, the ministry would be releasing the details of a new immigration policy.

    Full Article

  3. Ruel Daniels

    Kissoon is not the only Guyanese condemning Jagdeo’s response to Barbados Sovereign immigration policies. Most of the people who are not associated with the PPP, while obviously expressing some sympathy with the plight of their country men and country women, place the blame where it belongs. Right at the feet of the Guyana Government. Here is one such letter.

    Anyone concerned about the consequences of the Guyanese exodus to Barbados should be concerned about its causes

    Dear Editor,

    The reaction to the recent anti-illegal immigration policies by the Government of Barbados from the PPP was as can be expected. Vituperative, shallow, facetious, the usual rancorous noise designed to obfuscate truth and reality. We witnessed the same response to the report of the UN independent expert on minorities. A whole heap of noise about the expert not examining the issues of the indigenous peoples, when the UN has special arrangements for issues relating to indigenous peoples, and McDougal’s mandate did not include that charge. Today we are witnessing the same facetious rantings designed to detour attention from the source of the problem relating to an exodus of Guyanese fleeing to Barbados and other small Commonwealth Caribbean territories. Rather than giving attention to the reasons for the exodus, they beat on their chest in public and vent hypocritically about how bad the Bajans are

    Every Guyanese should be in sympathy with the plight of our brothers and sisters, who are merely seeking a means of survival for themselves and their families in these sojourns in Barbados and elsewhere in the Caribbean. And every Guyanese should use what influence they have with the authorities in Barbados, or with any international agency, to obtain relief from these new immigration measures for our countrymen and countrywomen, whether they are illegal or not. For in fact they have become innocent victims in a tragedy of two nations, one very small but economically, socially and politically viable, and the other large, resource rich, but socially, economically and politically hanging on the ropes from low blows by selfish, arrogant and visionless politicians.

    For those of us with ancestral links to Barbados what is transpiring today is a tragedy of immense proportions. The link between us as Guyanese, and Barbados, goes much deeper than a relationship between geographic or political neighbors. That link is too important for us to become mice congregating behind the discordant melodies emanating from the propaganda flutes of modern-day political Pied Pipers of Hamelin.

    Basic commonsense examination of this issue, will invariably lead one to the conclusion that there has to be something seriously wrong with a society that impels so many of our brothers and sisters to seek a means of survival elsewhere. Yes, people emigrate all the time. But ours is not a case of emigration. When the population of a nation that has been involved in no major wars is almost the same today as it was 20 years ago, the departures amount to an exodus. And the exodus of Guyanese from a nation that, in size, dwarfs the combined Commonwealth territories, to some of these small islands, amounts to an indictment of the administration of our nation. The exodus of people from a nation with infinite arable land, abundant sweet water resources, building materials like lumber, timber, sand, stone and gravel galore, and other untapped resources, is indicative of a serious problem with the management of the nation. That would be the call of the very pundits waxing antipathetically against Barbados today, if their opposition was in power. Their views have become classic examples of moral and ethical relativity, fluctuating in synchrony with the tune of partisan political convenience. For how can any compos mentis individual examine the consequence of the Guyanese exodus to Barbados without being equally concerned over the causes for such exodus? Guyanese at home and abroad need to ensure that they do not fall into the trap of abandoning what is before their eyes, in favour of the shallow and anaemic examinations that pass for political analysis provided by some in Guyana.

    Yours faithfully,
    Robin Williams

  4. It appears like our P.M was the only regional leader with enouygh balls to stand up to Jagdeo and Gonsalves, both of them with dark shadows over their heads. Now that P.M Thompson has belled the cat, other administrators are speaking out. It is time the regional leaders read the riot act to these two renegade leaders especially Jagdeo

  5. I wonder what kind of tune Ricky Singh and Faria as well as Gonslves will sing now!

    Jagdeo has got ot answer to his conutrymen’s cries!!!!

    I think he should STEP DOWN!

    As for Gonsalves, he already gone!!!!

    Despicable bunch!

  6. Sorry that I had to dig up this posting again but only today I was catching up on some old news. I came across an article in the Nation with an accompanied pic of garbage floating in the careenage. Immediately, I remembered that there is a number of guyanese that lime on the careenage on evenings, especially Friday and Saturday and then I remember that this is exactly what they do with the garbage in GT. The canals in GT are so full of garbage that sometimes you can’t even see water in the canal. I remember walking pass the canal right next to Guyana stores and heard some voices, when I looked carefully, I almost puked. There was an indo-guyanese supervising two black guyanese women, who were in this mirky canal full of garbage. These women were in it a little above waist deep shovelling out the garbage and this thing smelt soooo stink. I am not saying that bajans don’t litter but only those who travel to Guyana especially GT would know what I’m talking about. Our health standards in Barbados is being allowed to deteriorate and we must put a stop to it NOW. A dirty city is a big distraction to visitors/tourists.

  7. The East Indians are the people that have turned Georgetown the Garden City of all Guyana and South America into the Garbage City. They city was fine until they arrived from the country side, have you ever seen a city in India, just horrid, well it is the same thing in Guyana now, sad but true, didn’t you read the Kaieteur News about the East Indian from Guyana brushing his teeth in the front yard at a home in downtown New York City to sounds of blaring coolie music and dressed in a dhoti.

  8. Have you seen Regent Street, the place looks like Calcutta, signage in every which direction, one coolie store on Regent Street has his building painted up with the logos of the products he sells, example, Nestcafe, Carnation milk, Cadbury, Brunswick sardines, it looks horrid, coolie have no concept of asetics, it is anything goes, they just out for money.

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