Barbados Advocate Editorial brings into focus the challenge that will come if the Sexual Harassment (Prevention) Bill is proclaimed in the existing text.

mesaFor all the gender neutrality of its express provisions, a statute that provides protection against sexual harassment, such as the local draft Sexual Harassment (Prevention) Bill, now in public circulation, may still be popularly regarded as punishing primarily male conduct that is antagonistic to women mainly. There might be some justification for this, at least at the level of quid pro quo sexual harassment where relatively few women occupy positions that might be capable of effecting an advantage or disadvantage on a subordinate victim at work, depending on the latter’s reaction to the proposal for favours of a sexual nature.

Moreover, overt conduct of a sexual nature such as that covered in the Bill, including asking a person intrusive questions of a sexual nature that pertain to that person’s private life, making sexually offensive phone calls to another person and transmitting offensive written or other material to an individual is not traditionally associated with ladylike behaviour.

In this context, one may appreciate the eagerness of the local Men’s Educational Support [MESA] to be seen as solicitous of the male concern in the Bill so as to ensure some degree of balance in the final legislative document. To this end, MESA has been raising certain objections to the Bill in its present form. These have ranged from the querying the standing of a man wrongfully accused of sexual harassment to be able to seek legal recourse against his accuser to its discomfort with the specialist body appointed to hear cases where sexual harassment is alleged.

Most recently, the body has questioned whether a single instance of sexual harassment should suffice for a valid claim or whether it should be merely sanctioned with an oral or written warning before any claim could be maintained.

According to the Chairman of MESA, referring to the workplace“ It is here that acquaintances are made, friendships moulded, advances made, -accepted or rejected, courtships begun and families created. Many through first encounters, first sight, and first conversation…so we don’t think that the first incident should be sexual harassment, We are putting forward that any first incident should be noted and followed with a warning, after that warning sexual harassment proceedings can start…”

This approach is reminiscent of the legal position in liability for animals where there is both a strict liability rule where the owner of an animal is liable for whatever damage it may cause and the scienter rule whereby the owner is liable only where the animal has previously displayed a dangerous propensity, for example where a dog has already bitten an individual. The gist of the analogy is lost however, where some acts of sexual harassment are so egregiously offensive that it could not be seriously argued that the perpetrator thought that the victim might have been consenting to such an act.

For example, whatever might be said for the workplace being a place for initial romantic approaches, grabbing the genitals of an individual would scarcely be considered such and this act, whether first or later, should constitute sexual harassment on any objective criteria. If by first incidents, the Chairman is referring to polite invitations to dinner or a dance, then, even if the invitation is refused, there will be no need for a warning. This does not constitute sexual harassment in the absence of a previous warning that such invitations from the individual concerned were totally unwelcome and caused the invitee some consternation.

104 responses to “A Nettlesome Draft”


  1. Another common scenario in North America: A man and a woman get drunk at an office party or after a long day of work. The woman gets frisky. The man responds. They have sexual intercourse.
    Two days later, the man hears he is accused of rape. The woman “can’t remember” what happened because she admits she was drunk. According to feminist doctrine, accepted by the courts, a drunk woman is incapable of giving consent. The man is convicted as a rapist even though he was as drunk as she was.
    In feminist societies, women have the rights. Men have the responsibilities. Barbados beware.

  2. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Talking about glass ceilings….in the 90s females officially shattered ALL the glass ceilings in the corpoate world in the US…..but the chauvinists were determined…so they are the ones got hit with the harassment and sexism lawsuits, which cost corporations hundreds of millions…..a great deterrent.

    From what I understand, in Barbados, men tie their harassment of females to jobs for sex….very nasty in it’s execution…then they blame the victims of course…who are defenseless, with children to feed.

    Peter…because of the rampant sexism in Barbados…which is so plain to see, old dirty men, young dirty men and middle aged dirty men buying sex from women, young girls and children….has become the accepted norm….

    …….I much preferred my daughters and sons grew up in the City without Pity, than the pit of nastiness that surrounds young boys and girls in Barbados…..one dude was telling me back in 2008 about a politician who had twin 12 year old girls parading around with and they were always identically dressed and how much he boasted, to make matters worse he had mothers selling their daughters to him….women with no moral code…..in the St. George area…just before the government changed in 2008…, everyone knows who he is, no need to call names…..

    I did give him a very nasty look for putting his gaze on my then 12 year old daughter when we visited the island……children or not safe in Barbados….I cant for the life of me understand why people who claim to be sensible would even consider a population explosion of births to create more innocent victims.

    So you see Peter….some of those in parliament should also be arrested….the nastiness and crimes starts with the leaders.


  3. @ PLT
    It puzzles me that you talk about combating the abuse of young girls “by teaching them VALUES about self-respect…” but make no mention of teaching their grown up abusers the same “VALUES about self-respect and family responsibilities.” Part of the teaching methodology should include incarceration.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    No surprise there…
    Everything about Bushie puzzles you….and with good reason.

    While Bushie is talking about a process designed for grooming ‘diamonds’ in a high pressure cauldron of character-testing temptations, you are talking shiite about punishing the temptations…. and about their ‘incarceration’…..
    Do you not understand that these ‘demons’ are NEEDED in the process of creating saints…?
    A ‘saint’ is not someone who managed to avoid temptations, but one who met them …and overcame…

    Steupsss…
    Do you know that your gravatar looks somewhat like Carl Moore…..?
    Did you know Ossie?


  4. Chad9999
    In feminist societies, women have the rights. Men have the responsibilities. Barbados beware.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Barbados beware? …surely you jest!!
    Boss, Barbados probably passed that stage long ago…

    Look, we have MOTHERS who routinely discontinue court cases against men, alleged to have raped their underaged daughters, after agreed sums of money change hands. Courts then dismiss charges for ‘lack of prosecution’…
    Try to extrapolate the number of these matters that are settled BEFORE court and police are involved… Some say it is an INDUSTRY…but don’t expect to see an exposé in the Nation…

    What we have is the situation where the weeds are growing out of control and there are VERY few diamonds left to be refined…leaving a veritable forest of demons…. and BBE has a tried and true methodology for dealing with such situations…. It is beyond whackers.

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