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Shanique Myrie
Shanique Myrie

Trade –Britainโ€™s links with the EU are holding back its focus on emerging marketsโ€ฆLeaving would allow the UK to diversify its international linksโ€ฆ

Immigration โ€“ Britain can never control immigration until it leaves the EU, because freedom of movement gives other EU citizens an automatic right to live hereโ€ฆ

Law โ€“Too many of Britainโ€™s laws are made overseas by dictates passed down by Brussels and rulings upheld by the European Court of Justice. UK courts must become sovereign againโ€ฆ

The Daily Telegraph โ€“The key argumentsโ€ฆagainst staying in the EU โ€“April 15, 2016

It ought not be thought that any culpability for the seeming reluctance in the region for a closer integration should be ascribed to the political directorate only as opposed to the people themselves. Mr (as he then was) Errol Barrowโ€™s famous assertion that โ€œโ€ฆif we (the leaders) have failed to comprehend the essence of the regional integration movement, the truth is that thousands of ordinary Caribbean people do, in fact, live that reality everydayโ€ฆโ€ might have been overtaken by subsequent developments that have served to diminish severely the incidence of that lived reality.

So that while Mr Andrew Holnessโ€™s 2013 statement as Opposition Leader in the Jamaican Parliament that Jamaica should consider suspending its relationship with CARICOM on the ground that โ€œJamaicaโ€™s interests were not necessarily being fully served by CARICOMโ€ may be regarded as symptomatic of the former, the reaction of some individual commentators on this extended essay (that they have clearly misunderstood as a cheerleader for integration as opposed to an objective analysis of its current status) would suggest that it may not now be as popular or as lived among CARICOM nationals as Mr Barrow assumed it was in 1986.

Indeed, one submission went so far as to belittle the importance of the three major examples of regional unity; predicting the imminent demise of UWI, suggesting the mostly compelled existence of the cricket team and proclaiming the inutility of CARICOM itself.

But no development appears to have rankled some regional nationals [and not all ordinary citizens] more than the Caribbean Court of Justiceโ€™s (CCJ) observations on the rights of CARICOM nationals on arrival in another regional jurisdiction and, especially, the constraints on a refusal to permit them further access into the host jurisdiction.

As may be recalled, these dicta were uttered in its October 2013 judgment in the case of Shanique Myrie v Barbados. There, their Lordships, principally on the basis of Article 45 of the Revised Treaty (RTC) and a 2007 Heads of Government Conference Decision, determined that a CARICOM national was prima facie entitled to be granted an automatic six months stay upon arrival into a host regional jurisdiction.

It should be noted that this decision was not met with immediate popular acclaim. Some, in vain, questioned the CCJโ€™s finding of the facts, although this was exclusively within its jurisdiction. Others suggested that the decision was an instance of judicial activism intended to bolster regional integration, Few, however, disputed the legal foundation of the decision which would have been equally useless, given that there can be no appeal from its judgment.

And it was not that the Court held that this right to freedom of movement was absolute. The CCJ did indicate that the host jurisdiction retained its rights to deny entry to individuals on the bases of undesirability โ€“posing a substantial threat to public morals, national security and national health; and their liability to becoming a charge on public funds โ€“ possessing insufficient means or having likely access to sufficient funs to support themselves for the requisite period.

Neither of these substantive grounds infringes the sovereignty of the State to determine who should be permitted entry and, to the extent that they may, any blame should lie squarely with the head(s) of government who acceded to the relevant instruments, rather than the Court that was simply interpreting the clear purport of the 2007 Agreement and the signed undertaking in Article 45 of the RTC.

However, there appears to be a populist notion in the region that sovereignty, especially over border security, cannot be diluted even by voluntary state agreement and therefore, while the substantive limitations might have been grudgingly accepted, the procedural requirements on their exercise seem to have proven distasteful.

First, according to the ruling, the state official should inform the refused entrant in writing โ€œnot only of the reasons for the refusal but also of his or her right to challenge that decisionโ€. Second, the Court noted, it would also be reasonable to allow refused visitors to consult an opportunity to consult an attorney or a consular official of their country or, in any event, to contact a family member.

โ€œNahโ€ฆat allโ€, one can almost hear the anguished cry of some, โ€œtoo much trouble in that. How dare anyone tell us who should trespass on our borders and how?โ€

It is this same sentiment that may have fuelled the current constitutional litigation in the US against President Obamaโ€™s plan to shield millions of undocumented immigrants from deportation and to allow them to work in the country legally under his Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents programme [DAPA]; that might be one of the reasons for Britainโ€™s desire to exit the European Union; that might account for the phenomenal popularity of Donald Trump among Republicans; and that may explain the recent alleged treatment of a number of Jamaican nationals in Trinidad & Tobago. It clearly did not inform the Popeโ€™s recent treatment of the Syrian refugees in Lesbos.

In the present context, the time may have come for a referendum on the future of CARICOM. I am fully aware that this call amounts nearly to heresy for some and I sincerely wish that it did not have to come to this. However, my cynical instincts tell me that despite its successes, regional integration, as foreseen by the founding fathers over five decades ago, has now been so substantially altered as a felt imperative as to warrant a popular plebiscite on its continued existence in its present form. The sentiments in the epigraph may not be far removed from a sizeable body of regional opinion. So unless we can have some soonest recommitment to the process, a renaissance of regionalism if you wish, then I fear we will continue merely to talk the talk. And this from an unrepentant regionalist.


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82 responses to “The Jeff Cumberbatch Column – The Mirage of Integration (iii)”

  1. Caswell Franklyn Avatar
    Caswell Franklyn

    Without the intervention of politicians the people of of this region would have integrated without any fuss. Take me for example, two of my children are also Guyanese; my wife drew her first breath in St. Lucia; one of my best friends is Trinidadian; and one of the lawyers that I prefer to do business with was born in Jamaica.

    Political independence of individual countries and politicians ruined any chance meaningful integration in this region. Remember one from ten leaves nought.


  2. @Jeff
    There was always opposition within Britain to its membership in the EEC so it is no surprise that its coming to the fore once again with the English worry about loss of sovereignty, terrorism and a general feeling that we donโ€™t need Europe, Europe need us and a nostalgic Rule Britannia.

    In the Caribbean there is also a fear of loss of sovereignty and a general feeling that one country is better than the other and if the regulations regarding movement of people are relaxed some countries will be overrun by people who are fleeing one economic hellhole in search of a mythical better existence. Then there is the understated notion that every politician wants to be the dominant fish is his local pond and a resurgent Caricom will diminish his/ her star.

    Recently I was speaking with a Nigerian friend and she told me that they (Nigeria) had to expel the Ghanaians because they were so many in Lagos that they were afraid they were going to take over the country. Nigeria just happens to be the most populous country in Africa so the number of Ghanaians wouldnโ€™t have made an impact in Nigeria (donโ€™t forget Barbados also expelled Ghanaians).

    Your arguments for the benefits of regional unity donโ€™t mean squat when they are against a mindset which is the same as the Nigerians, we are one and you are the other never the twain shall meet, history, economic, political and social realities be damned.

    http://www.nytimes.com/1985/05/12/world/ghanaians-expelled-by-nigeria-return-home-to-start-over.html


  3. I too am a bred,born,educated and lived regionalist……we live in cycles and the time will come again as it did in the days upto the expiration of the Federal Palm&Maple when we were very close,when individuals would hop on a schooner and settle in another island as has happened here by the hundreds/thousands……….cometh the time,cometh the happening.


  4. @Caswell

    What you have referred to has not stopped. It is putting formal arrangements to facilitate trade, settlement, common airspace, governance for pan Caribbean companies etc.

  5. Caswell Franklyn Avatar
    Caswell Franklyn

    David

    What I am referring to has stopped. We have become xenophobic and has made life extremely difficult for people who we refer to as foreigners, especially black foreigners from the Caribbean.

    Sent from my iPad

    >

  6. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    But David, your 1:43 PM post is exactly the dilemma: position A (Caswell’s comments) does not rationally or smoothly lead to position B ( …formal arrangements to facilitate trade, settlement, common airspace…).

    As has been said here in a different context re Grenville’s rhetoric: one cannot run a country as one may run a company. So indeed one cannot manage personal affairs as one would manage those of nations!

    And as an aside, as a boy growing up I actually thought that in order to be PM of this country one had to be married to a non-Bajan (LOLL)….and then for a a time I thought it had to be a Jamaican non-Bajan.

    But many have explored Caswell’s form of regional integration … some with the same distressing Caricom disruption too!!!

  7. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Oh dear, my remarks referred to Caswell’s 7:18 AM remarks…

  8. Georgie Porgie Avatar

    RE And as an aside, as a boy growing up I actually thought that in order to be PM of this country one had to be married to a non-Bajan (LOLL)โ€ฆ.and then for a a time I thought it had to be a Jamaican non-Bajan.
    HOW BETZPAENIC!


  9. @Dee Word

    That was the influence of Mona?

  10. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Indeed David that it might…the Mona Lisa smile has befuddled men for centuries (smile)…but the place of academia also had an impact too no doubt!

    Certainly after travelling to Jam and visiting places like Dunns River falls I clearly understood the beauteous, bewitching charm of the country.


  11. @ Jeff,

    I do have a major problem with your article. You and those many technocrats appear in a hasty rush to railroad Caricom into becoming one political entity. Yet you fail to realise the elephant in the room: the Negro man and the Negro woman who reside in the Caribbean.

    You may have noticed that this demographic constitutes the majority population throughout our region; and that a fair percentage of these wretched people have not progressed since the independence of their respective islands.

    No conscience effort has been made by Caribbean governments to lift there Negro population out of poverty. There has been no legislation passed which has attempted to remove the assets of those whites and their light-skinned Negro family members who would have benefitted from the exploitation of their dark-skinned Negro population throughout the ages.

    How can we talk about further integration when we refuse to discuss the plight of dark-skinned Negros. How in God’s name will these people be better of should we form closer ties with our neighbours.

    Jeff,

    I had placed this link in another post:
    http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/peopleandpower/2010/04/2010427122334575952.html



  12. Story of cities #9: Kingston, Jamaica โ€“ a city born of ‘wickedness’ and disaster

    When the devastating earthquake of 1692 ripped through Port Royal, aka the โ€˜richest and wickedest city in the worldโ€™, a very different Caribbean capital rose up in its place. But could Kingstonโ€™s rigid grid plan impose order after the chaos?”

    http://www.theguardian.com/cities/2016/mar/24/story-cities-9-kingston-jamaica-richest-wickedest-city-world

  13. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Mr Exclaimer, you amaze me. How could you deduce from my article above that I want to “railroad” anyone into anything? Did I not suggest a referendum? Or did you not read to the end? I may be an “unrepentant regionalist” but I am also a democrat. Hence my suggestion.

    Also, perhaps I am perhaps not clever enough to catch your argument but, are you saying that you are against regional integration because no government has made “a conscious effort” to lift their Negro population out of poverty? And you think that if they stay apart, this will be accomplished by each of them? Or is it that you do not see it ever happening at all?

    Then, my friend, us “Negroes” had better look out for ourselves!


  14. @ Jeff,

    I’m making a simple and a valid argument that we should abandon all talk of integration with our neighbours until we resolve the plight of the Negro throughout the Caribbean. It is a disgrace that even in a country like South Africa which practised the apartheid system over a number of years that the Negro post-apartheid is making more rapid progress than his counterpart in Barbados.

    Coming from the UK, I fail to understand why this problem of race that you have in Barbados is never discussed. What a disgrace!

    I have said several times before that we should get our house in order before we attempt any integration with our neighbours. Further integration will have the effect of marginalising farther the Negro masses.

  15. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    How many years has it been, Exclaimer? And you really think that we will one day resolve “the plight of the Negro throughout the Caribbean? Like the kingdom of God, resolution of that plight is within you yourself, my brother!


  16. @ Jeff,

    I may have a strong constitution. I praise the Lord that my Mother and Father did well and rescued me from what would have been a difficult live if I had been conceived on that island. Besides this is not about me our you. It is the plight of our brothers and sisters that we should be discussing.

    Sadly your answer does not offer any hope to the many disenfranchised.


  17. Caribbean Countries Looking East for Trade and Investment
    by caribbeantradelaw

    Alicia Nicholls This week the Barbados Chamber of Commerce & Industry (BCCI) signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the  Foreign Economic Relations Board of Turkey. Further north, Jamaica recently announced that it is appointing investment ambassadors to the Middle East and India and Europe to explore business opportunities for Jamaicans. A few weeks ago Antigua [โ€ฆ]

    Read more of this post


  18. Mr Cumberbatch

    As a graduate of UWI, I would not belittle its importance. However, the trend is clear. The three campuses are moving apart. I fear that Cave Hill maybe doomed given the population size and encroaching poverty of the country (both of finance and of ideas). The same forces would tear our cricket team apart but for the fact that India is not going to be interested in playing say Grenada. As for CARICOM, I like your word “inutility”.

    It is possible that the problem may be one of definition. Just what does integration mean? I am all for functional cooperation (UWI, CDB, CXC, CDEMA, CCJ etc) but a supranational Caribbean government seems like a waste of time and money.

    I would like to propose a really radical idea. Barbados should like Malta or Cyprus seek to become part of Europe. If Martinique can be part of Europe why not Barbados? Think big!! LOL.


  19. At the mention of CDEMA BU notes heavy mention of this regional organization last week in the media by the AG about the constant need to beg for money to pay salaries.

  20. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Ping Pong, Martinique is part of Europe because it is an overseas department (extension) of France.. Are you suggesting we become a colony of England again? This t’ing serious! We should have a referendum


  21. Martinique and Guadeloupe belong to the French republic. Which should be regarded as an anachronism especially in a region where the majority of these islands are independent and some like Barbados are looking to become a Republic.

    In Jeff’s previous post, I mentioned that we should look at forming new relationships with other countries. I cited Norway, Haiti, some African countries, et al.

    Why would Barbados want to align herself with a declining, old, racist, slave-owning Europe. Am I missing something?

    Why not go the whole way and ask Britain to recolonise our island!


  22. @ Jeff,

    Ping Pong presented a good reason why the UWI should be scrapped! LOL.

    I


  23. Both Malta and Cyprus are small, independent, island republics, commonwealth countries and part of the EU. I only mentioned Martinique because it’s in our neighborhood so geography is not a limitation. I want to be part of something big, not a collection of pissant cul-de-sacs. If Barbados is going to integrate then let’s at least integrate with something useful.


  24. @ Jeff,

    I believe passionately that Caricom is a busted flush led by pygmies. Let’s seek new alliances. Time for others to join this debate. I need to retire to bed.


  25. By the way, Exclaimer do you know the expression “tongue in cheek”?


  26. @ Ping Pong,

    Both of these countries are going through extremely difficult times. They are viewed as low hanging fruit and are held in low esteem by the larger nations. Why would a small tiny nation want to ally herself with the big-boys. She will never be taken seriously.


  27. Just curious why would any Black person of West Indian descent want to remain in “a declining, old, racist, slave-owning Europe(an) ” country like the UK?


  28. Interesting article by CTL.
    Just wondering when these small island establish all these different relationships, what will they be exporting? Or will we be looking for larger countries to invest and set up businesses/industries in these islands? This would be good as it would employ local people, but who will be our market?

    We will become a dumping ground for products from these larger countries or even worse; become importers of cheap stuff, stamp a “Made in the Caribbean” sign on it and then try to send it to the US. Outmaneuvered/outfoxed again; some smart foreign business make use of our relationship to the US to make money for his country and its citizens

    Sometimes, I wish we would get away from doing things because that what is what governments do and instead put some concrete information on the table. Most of our islands are too small, or lack natural resources, or manufacturing industries or new technologies that allow us to mutually benefit from these treaties.

    At some stage, we have to take a hard good look at ourselves; we have to identify our capabilities and our limitation and work in that framework. At times, we are just going through the motion and making local news. Our inflated egos make us appear delusional or a actors in a lousy political play.

    I may appear negative at times, but that is because a lot of what is said and done sound like white noise and not a course of action.


  29. *some smart fioreign businessmen making use of our relationship ….”


  30. Good question. I neither hate nor love the UK. There are many things that I admire and many things that turn me off with this country. No country is perfect. For the record I have interests in Africa and plan to spend periods in that continent in the near future.

    I am a Pan-Africanist and care deeply for my Negro brothers and sisters wherever they reside. For me the Caribbean is a black-hole. Her people are rootless, cut off from their ancestors and not in the least bit interested in trying to reach out to discover more about their African side.


  31. @ Gazer,

    “At some stage, we have to take a hard good look at ourselves; we have to identify our capabilities and our limitation and work in that framework. At times, we are just going through the motion and making local news. Our inflated egos make us appear delusional or a actors in a lousy political play.”

    You are talking my language. Why is this view not shared by our politicians and the masses?


  32. @Exclaimer

    The next generation in the Caribbean identify with their Euro-centric heritage. As a Pan Africanist it appears you will be a frustrated man.


  33. @ David,

    From the amount of fingers down that I’m receiving I believe that you are stating the obvious!


  34. @The Gazer, thanks for your comments. I understand your cynicism but remember exporting is not just about goods but services as well. I also believe, and I mentioned in the article, that there are opportunities for greater cultural industries trade between ourselves and the East. The fact is that we cannot afford to keep focusing on trade with the US, Europe and Canada exclusively. We need to strategically explore new markets as we have begun to do.

    Of course, it is one thing for our governments to create market access opportunities and relationships. But Governments don’t trade. Businesses do. So it will be up to business people and firms to capitalise on these opportunities. Some of this is already happening. I know of someone who is doing business with a Japanese company over the internet. Unfortunately, much of this services trade is unable to be captured in official data so we underestimate the potential that exists.


  35. @Alicia

    CARIFORUM paints a picture of the current state of things.


  36. Look I was just practicing shite talk.

    Don’t mind that our health care is declining, our economies are faltering, our natural environments are becoming polluted, our education and training prospects are diminishing, our infrastructure is crumbling, crime and violence is increasing, illicit drugs and human trafficking are increasingly seen as job options for our people, corruption is rife in both public and private sectors and that life in these islands is becoming increasingly nasty, brutish and short for the common man …. let’s indulge in some pompous talk about integration etc. I wish I was a wordsmith and shite talker. These are the people who are living the sweet life, with their tax free salaries, gorging on the rich food and drinks of the many conferences, producing nothing but hot air, making sure their children are educated in the “declining, racist, slave owning countries”, possessing their dual citizenships of the same old declining racist etc countries while looking down their noses at the “poor black man” that they all say they care so deeply about.

    Man leh we talk bout integreyshun and referrendum.

    “His ways of counter mobilization have been very simple: wine down and touch your toes; wine back and jam; hand in the air, get on bad. Come clean and basic. We simply do not trust your pretensions to civilizing, scientific or edifying mission. You offer us free education and places in schools but everything else you say and you do serves only to make us wonder. โ€“ Lloyd Best, Laventille Man: Wine and Jam (newspaper column Trinidad Express, 06 November, 1994)”


  37. @David, there is a lot to that CARIFORUM dynamic. Not to mention that CARICOM countries’ relationship with the DR has had strained not just because of fears that the DR’s products would swamp our markets but also the political situation between the DR and Haiti.

    Aside from that, we need to stop being so insular. It is killing us. I am a regionalist and don’t apologise for my views. I believe we are stronger together than apart. Insularity is not doing us any favours.


  38. @Alicia

    No need to defend your position. Many will ask why islands with a common heritage find it so difficulty to cooperate on the low hanging issues, trade, governance, settlement etc. A legit question.

    Why has the RNM struggled to close out the CARIFORUM CAN?


  39. @David, unfortunately I am not aware of all of the details but from what I understand there were fundamental differences between CARICOM and Canada on key aspects during the negotiations. The negotiations are now stalled. I suppose since CARIBCAN’s waiver has been extended by the WTO’s membership we are still guaranteed unilateral preferences for some time, unless the Canadian government decides to end them. Either way, the main value added for us would have been the market access openings for our services providers to the Canadian market, as CARIBCAN only covers goods not services.

    As to your first point re our failure to cooperate in some areas, it all comes down to mistrust among each other and a misguided view that we are losing sovereignty. A study conducted by IIR a few years ago found overwhelming support for regional integration among the Caribbean populace. The problem was that people were becoming jaded over the slow pace of integration and also the failure by our governments to follow through with the reforms. Some of it is lack of political will. The other has to do with limited capacity.


  40. @Alicia

    Maybe you are right, who knows. A clear signal to the BU household we cannot be serious about regional cooperation/integration is to observe how the vast number of Caricom members have spurned membership in the CCJ. This should given horrific insight.


  41. @David, I forgot to mention that COTED met this week and CSME was one of the topics discussed: http://today.caricom.org/2016/04/22/our-people-want-to-see-results-caricom-deputy-secretary-general-on-csme/


  42. @David, agreed. It is quite shameful that more than a decade after its establishment only Barbados, Guyana, Belize and Dominica have signed on to the CCJ’s appellate jurisdiction.

    In some countries where a referendum is needed to replace the Privy Council as their highest court of appeal, the CCJ has been used as a political football by the opposition. Besides partisan politics, there is a lot of misinformation about the CCJ and let’s not forget that sadly there are still many Caribbean people who believe a UK judge can render a better decision than a Caribbean judge. Judging from the fact that some still espouse the view that we would have been better off as colonies of the UK, just shows me we still have far to go in the decolonisation process.


  43. @Alicia

    As a side point, didn’t minister Innis promised to carry the beer issue with St. Lucia to COTED? Do you know the outcome?


  44. @David, I haven’t heard anything about it since. If I recall correctly, they had placed a levy on several Barbadian products, not just beer. Their argument was that they were justified to do it since they are an lesser developed countries per the RTC. I am not sure if the duty is still being imposed but seeing that the local private sector hasn’t raised it recently (to my knowledge), it could be that it no longer is in place. I will ask a question.


  45. *a lesser developed country


  46. Thanks Alicia, this is part of the problem we have in the region, no follow through with the intent by public officials and media to keep citizens informed. It was blasted all over the media when the issue dropped and like many of the issues allowed to fade. They should be keeping us updated to status, resolved or not.


  47. In the English-speaking Caribbean, at least five states — Jamaica, Guyana, Trinidad, Antigua and Grenada — can now be described as criminal enterprises, where corruption and lawlessness have become pervasive, and cynicism has replaced decency and sincerity in the lives of ordinary citizens.
    Barbados should be doing everything in its power to save itself by parting company with these societies. But we have stubborn elites, many of them educated at the UWI, who believe their career prospects are best served by the Regional Project. Many of these people are lawyers, who are certainly better off with a regional system of justice, but we must not allow these people to pursue their self-interest at the expense of the rest of us.
    The typical Trinidadian from Caroni is not my friend. Ditto the typical Guyanese. To the contrary, they see me as an enemy, and they will tell anyone who asks that we “oppressed” them in the past. The typical Jamaican is an embarrassment. Too aggressive. Too likely to work around the law. Don’t let me get started on the Antiguans and the Grenadians.
    Get out while you can, Barbados.

  48. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Re: trade agreements…generally a bunch of political hogwash. Photo ops and lots of work for the paper pushers.
    Canada, as one example, has more hidden barriers to trade than one can imagine. NAFTA? It may have removed duties and some taxes…but…
    In chemicals as one example, where they are used say in a variety of building products one has a whole bunch of Canadian Standards and Codes. It is called protecting Canadian jobs and manufacturers. One has CCMC, NRC and more regulatory bodies than one can count on the fingers of your hands and mine. It is 3 years plus $400,000 in testing for several fairly basic products. You might be able to pay to avoid a few by “engineering assessments”, then they hit you with a $150,000 1-1.5 year Advanced Weathering test for which there is no equal. A concoction of some PhD in a government Department in the name of “protecting the consumer”, for which they accept no liability whatsoever.
    And the USA isn’t much better, they too have a myriad of “approved bodies” beginning with the Army Corps of Engineers.
    So they shake hands, sign agreements, say a few nice words, and take a few pictures. What they lose in duties, they ding you for elsewhere.

  49. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    โ€œBesides partisan politics, there is a lot of misinformation about the CCJ and letโ€™s not forget that sadly there are still many Caribbean people who believe a UK judge can render a better decision than a Caribbean judge. Judging from the fact that some still espouse the view that we would have been better off as colonies of the UK, just shows me we still have far to go in the decolonisation process.โ€

    Isn’t that view also widely held by some very senior members of the legal profession (QC’s included)?
    The de facto chief legal adviser to the Bajan PM is on record for showing his consternation and pouring scorn on the CCJ’s ability to be the โ€˜finalโ€™ arbiter in regional jurisprudence.

    If these so-called big-up legal luminaries have little or no faith in their own homegrown project why should the ordinary citizen?

    At least a British judge would display much greater efficiency. He or she also would not be politically appointed by a bunch of corrupt politicians and easily susceptible to bribes or political manipulation.

    Barbadosโ€™s move to full-blown republican status will certainly eliminate any chances of it ever ditching the CCJ and a return to the fold of the Judicial Committee of the British Privy Council.

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