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I have previously written an article about the need to have a Federal Government in the Caribbean. CARICOM is but an economic union and was never intended to resolve political and social problems of the region. The reasons to revisit this topic are varied and the single most import that strike home today is that Barbados is experiencing a crisis of gun related crime. In addition to this, there is an unprecedented level of corruption that has been increasing since independence. Despite laws, rules and regulations, there is no body with the authority for oversight and implementation of action against the previous administration in Barbados. The notion that the political class may not have the desire to out each other is also a current reality. The underlying fact is that these island states are too small; everyone knows each other or their family; our court system is in shambles, files go missing, so does evidence and the length of time that it takes to pursue action in some instances signifies that justice being denied.

So where did we go wrong?

It was our failure to implement the WI Federation. It was four long years of struggle from 1958 to 1962 that ended up with the then leaders of the Federation walking away from a project that held the best intentions for the region. That action that led to Eric William’s famous words “one from ten leaves zero,” is currently responsible for 80% of the region’s social and political problems. Short sightedness and the struggle for power way back then set us up for failure. The failure of oversight to halt the actions of corrupt politicians, the failure to address the present crisis with action on gun related crime, the failure to have laws to address unique cases like land disputes, fraud and the recall of politicians.

From around the region there are a few cases that come to mind that makes one wonder if we had a federal government if such outrage would have occurred without punishment or redress. One was the Yugee Farrell case in St Vincent, where a young woman’s quality of life was at the mercy of political action; there is a mortgage crisis in Barbados which no one seems to be addressing; Scotiabank leaving the region, having sold its mortgages to a foreign entity that does not reside in the CARICOM and only the Antiguan Prime Minister Gaston Browne is fighting on his own; treasonous acts by the speaker of the house in Guyana; there is a politician in St Lucia whom the people wanted to recall; the callous acts of corruption of the last Administration in Barbados; businessmen who are mysteriously awarded overpriced contracts and bribery; and the allegation of land fraud which seem to have found a home on the Barbadian landscape. In addition, we have gun related crime in islands that do not manufacture or import guns, yet they are not only available on the street but are daily committing murder.

Despite holding jurisdiction local police forces are simply not equipped to combat these types of crimes. In the USA, while each state has its own government and police force, there is also a federal government for the entire country which has its own policing force known as the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the FBI. The FBI steps in and takes over various types of cases where a local violation fits into a category for which it holds jurisdiction.

This is what is required for CARICOM states, a Federal government with its own police force and a Federal Court system. There would be a local court system and a federal court in each jurisdiction. Recruits from across the region would be utilized effectively by having them serve where they are not domiciled, and persons moved periodically to prevent contamination of the system.

Putting the Task Force on the streets in affected areas in Barbados will not resolve the problem. When they are gone the guns will re appear as they have year after year. Although his presence among the affected is welcomed, the Attorney General’s pictures giving golden handshakes and smiles no longer cuts it. These are just knee-jerk reactions. None of these are a short- term plans. It should have been announced by the Attorney General that he is going after the importers of the guns and the persons who let them bring the guns into the country, with the intent to prosecute them. The source of the problem is not being addressed. One must ask themselves how many times we must come back to this cross road and go away knowing that nothing will change. We are currently using the same old methods to resolve crime and expect to obtain different results.

Putting the Task Force on the streets in affected areas in Barbados will not resolve the problem.  When they are gone the guns will re appear as they have year after year.  Although his presence among the affected is welcomed, the Attorney General’s pictures giving golden handshakes and smiles no longer cuts it.  These are just knee-jerk reactions.  However, finally he has announced that he is going after the importers of the guns and by extension this should include the persons who let them bring the guns into the country.  One must ask themselves how many times we must come back to this cross road and in the pass nothing has been done to effect change. We cannot use the same old methods to resolve crime and expect to obtain different results.

We may have missed that boat fifty-seven years ago but that does not mean that a new attempt of implementing a Federal Government will not work. The region will always be constrained by its size and must work to together to overcome its challenges. Now that we know of the source of the problems and their long-term effects, the challenge is to put in place an effective institution to effect remedy. The challenge will also include the heads of Government of all the islands realizing that there are facing the same old problems but needing new solutions; and not to be focused on insularity. Just as they believe that the islands are one economic union and some utilize the Caribbean Court of Justice as their Appellate Court, they must overcome the fear of becoming a political union.

It is time to move on to a higher level of regional integration with an aim to resolve the political and social problems by creating the institutions that are meant to do this. We cannot go back to 1962 and make the then batch of leaders change their minds of putting four years to waste. We have a current crop of leaders who have new ideas about the development of this region and its people and with new ideas come opportunities.

Herein lies an opportunity. The simple requirement is to have a heavy weight champion for this cause not to resuscitate the old but to create a Federal Government for CARICOM states. A Federal Government that will as part of its mandate, maintain a police force and a court system to investigate and redress a range of violations for which it will have jurisdiction. The only person that comes to mind is our own trail blazer. Despite the fact of a 30 to 0 victory being a great achievement, the icing on the cake would be for our Prime Minister, The Honourable Mia Amor Mottley to not only create and implement a Federal Government of individual States of CARICOM but to also become its first head. It would truly define her legacy, as the vision of ‘Building The Best Barbados Together’ can translate into building the best political union of the CARICOM states together.


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222 responses to “A Heather Cole Article – Did We Miss the Boat?”


  1. What a load of rank drivel. I only got as far as the ‘need’ for a Caribbean federal government to realise the author is an escapee from Jenkins. Send for the men in white coats.
    What is the point of propagating this madness ???


  2. Heather Cole

    What makes you think that the West Indian Federation would have solved the problems in the region?

    Moreover, I have noticed that the biggest misconception we still carry as West Indians is that we somehow think that our unification is going to solved all our problems and bring us infinite plentitudes …

    Nevertheless, we must also understand and acknowledge the fact that there is strength in our diversity as well as in our unity…

  3. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    “That action that led to Eric William’s famous words “three from ten leaves zero,””

    I think it was “one from 10 leaves zero”…is what Williams said.

    And nothing being done about DLP corruption and theft of taxpayers.,, and pensioners funds or any attempt to recover the stolen. money is because BLP leadership is ALSO CORRUPT…they also spent years stealing from the same vulnerable people with the help of the same minority criminals and business people….ya think it is only Donville took bribes from ICBL or CGI Insurance…etc……..they have all been taking bribes from insurance companies for decades, ask the former Chief Justice…Mia’s cousin..

    BLP is also chomping at the bit to SELLOUT…the same people who elected them, the same people they also robbed for years…they just like DLP cannot be trusted by the people…

    BLP is the problem..the only problem left to be REMOVED..out of the people’s lives.

    right Enuff..

    Caribbean governments main problem lies in believing that when they are elected by the people it somehow makes them special and far removed from carrying out their duties/jobs that they were HIRED BY THE PEOPLE…to perform…they get uppity, arrogant and believe themselves untouchable no matter what crimes they commit against the people…they are the true definition of backward and miseducated…useless creatures with empty titles.


  4. WARU

    We might as well not prided ourselves on having the best education system in the region when the acquiescence of the people continues to perpetuate this cycle of wrongdoing on the part of our political leaders.


  5. “Caribbean governments main problem lies in believing that when they are elected by the people it somehow makes them special and far removed from carrying out their duties/jobs that they were HIRED BY THE PEOPLE…to perform…they get uppity, arrogant and believe themselves untouchable no matter what crimes they commit against the people…they are the true definition of backward and miseducated…useless creatures with empty titles.”

    Not just Caribbean governments – just look at the crimes being committed against the British people over Brexit, and the American electorate over their choice of POTUS. The ruling elites have had it their own way for so long, they simply cannot comprehend that they have been rumbled, and the people have had enough of them.

    None of them are prepared to live by the same rules as they impose on their employers, and are quite shameless about it.
    A glaring example of the loss of any sense of shame has just been provided by a Nigerian criminal in Britain’s House of Commons…she employed her own convicted drug dealing son as a taxpayer funded aide (presumably distributing his wares to the filth therein), and has herself just been convicted of an egregious criminal offence, has actually been thrown out of her party YET still refuses to resign. She likes the money.

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/jan/03/fiona-onasanya-mp-brexit-westminster


  6. Barbados has made good strides in the post independence period. We have to continue to find ways to sustain success however it is nationally defined. Life is a struggle and contrary to what some project the answers are not clear cut.


  7. @ H|eather,

    Plse explain, including the CSME, in what way is CARICOM an economic union. Plse detail the features of economic union.


  8. Barbados has made good strides in the post independence period. We have to continue to find ways to sustain success however it is nationally defined. Life is a struggle and contrary to what some project the answers are not clear cut.(Quote)

    Plse put meat on the bones and explain in what way has Barbados made great post-independence strides. Or is this another example of punching above our weight?


  9. @45Govt,

    You are getting your Labour MPs mixed up. You have seriously libelled one of them.


  10. No I haven’t Hal – the criminal is named Fiona Onasanya, and she has been convicted., as has her son.


  11. @45Govt,

    You are conflating two different cases – both of Nigerian heritage. Stop taking the Guardian as experts. They cannot even spell their title right. That is why Private Eye calls them the Graaniad.


  12. Teach your grandmother to suck eggs Hal – you are WRONG, and I am RIGHT..

    I have mentioned ONE case, and while I share your views of the Guardian, it is not just them…

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2018/12/20/labour-mp-convicted-lying-police-speeding-offence-compares-plight/


  13. You may apologise now!


  14. I wouldn’t be surprised if 45gov is a Black man … because his is the kind of attitude that got John Brown killed … the very sort that undermined abolitionist struggle … and the one who continues to perpetuate the Uncle Tom Syndrome…


  15. @45Govt,

    I am sure you are right. After all you are a white Bajan. How dare a black Bajan tell you you are wrong. One case involved the MP for Peterborough (a motoring offence) and the other the son of a north London MP (a drug offence). Onasanya is the Peterborough MP.
    I sometimes think that Bajans enjoy being stubborn. You Google the Guardian and that must be right (I think you have misunderstood what you read in your haste to condemn the Nigerians).
    I repeat, you are conflating two different cases. In a strange way, I think they should both have resigned. Instead, one had the Labour whip withdrawn ( Onasanya, the lawyer); while the other, the daughter of Martha Osamor and a lifelong Corbyn supporter (and a trae unionist), simply returned to the back bench. As far as I know she still employs her son.


  16. A glaring example of the loss of any sense of shame has just been provided by a Nigerian criminal in Britain’s House of Commons…she employed her own convicted drug dealing son as a taxpayer funded aide (presumably distributing his wares to the filth therein), and has herself just been convicted of an egregious criminal offence, has actually been thrown out of her party YET still refuses to resign. She likes the money. (Quote)

    Can’t you see that you are conflating two different cases, or are all black people the same? In one case the MP committed the offence (speeding), while in the other it is the son of the MP (drugs). Those people who perceive me as being rude now see so0me of the appalling ignorance that comes on BU masquerading as common sense and I have to be ‘polite’ and reason with them.
    In one day we have a moronic suggestion that prime minister Mottley should lead a West Indian federation; .that Barrow is the father of independence; and previously that Barbados, the nation that Barrow led to independence, is a democratic Republic with a foreign Monarch; that Rawdon Adams has ‘Political’ heritage with his MA in something called political sociology (he should have re-trained as a car mechanic).


  17. Hal Austin

    I did not know 45gov was an Ecky Becky from St. John?


  18. I repeat Hal – I HAVE MENTIONED ONLY ONE CASE. Why is that so difficult for you to comprehend.
    You are also wrong claiming it was simply a motoring offence, It started out that way, but when her constant lying and attempts to blame first some Russian, then her own brother caught up witrh her, she was conviceted of the FAR more serious offence of perverting the course of justice. Hopefully the judge will not give her a pass for her colour, and give her more than 12 months, which would mean automatic expulsion from Parliament….ALONG with her drug dealing son.

    Now, I didn’t know you were black, couldn’t care less, cannot see the relevance, but you ARE wrong. I know nothing of this other case you claim that I am confusing Onasanya with. Yes – Nigerians, like Pakistanis, have a predilection for mendacity and fraud….and playing the race card.

    Time for that apology?


  19. Ecky-becky? Now, if I called you the n-word, would that make me the racist, or you?


  20. @45 Govt,

    You have conflated two cases, one involving a former Labour MP convicted for speeding, and the other the convicted son of another Labour MP. Take it as you will. I do not expect you to admit you got it wrong. It is in your culture. To admit to a black man that you got a simple fact wrong would be a come down.
    You can call me what you like. Do you think I have reached my age without being called as the N word, the P word or whatever. You are a silly, stubborn man. I rest my case. You are so keen to condemn Nigerians that the facts do not matter. That is why even the white British think white Bajans are silly.


  21. 45gov

    “Nigerian like Pakistanis have predilection for mendacity and fraud”

    Your ignorance betrays you… because you out of all people ought to know better than to used an absolute to describe a race of people … because as you well know there is always an exception to the general rule…

    So then it is fair to say that all Bajan males have proclivity from homosexuality and White all males have tendency to be racist…?


  22. Heather’s post must be read critically.

    One can focus on the solution she prescribed or one can extract that she has little confidence in the rearranging of the deck chairs.
    Her slight deviation from the party line and her reluctance to just sing “kumbaya my Lord” with the rest of the choir is surprising. Her dissonance is reassuring.


  23. Have you heard of Taqqiya Lexi?

    Hal – you are just nuts – and a racist.

  24. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Hal, 45govt, this argument is unnecessary. 45govt, none of the materials you have provided so far corroborates your claim of her complicity in drug trafficking.Conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, though serious, is a completely different charge.


  25. @Jeff,

    It is silly. All I did was to point out that he is conflating two different cases, one involving an actual MP, and the other the SON of an MP. But he won’t hear of it. I know the mother of one of the MPs (Martha Osamor, who has been active in black politics for decades) and the other I have only read about. As I said, I think both MPs should have resigned, but this is the new age.
    @45Govt, call me a racist, call me what you like.

  26. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    Proof that both DLP and BLP leaders are both CORRUPT SELLOUTS…

    https://www.facebook.com/caswell.franklyn/videos/10210282577259635/?t=6


  27. Jeff – I NEVER said Osanya was complicit in drug trafficking – merely that she employed her son, a convicted drug-dealer as her aide with access to the HoC. She herself was convicted of conspiring to pervert the course of justice.

    Hal has completely lost his marbles, insisting that I have mixed the Osanya family cases up with some other one. I HAVE NOT – HE HAS., HE HAS BRAIN FADE.


  28. @45Govt,

    You are wrong. The convicted drug offender is the son of another Labour MP, also of Nigerian heritage. His mother was the Shadow International Development secretary. The other one was a backbencher. Stop being stubborn with me because you won’t frustrate me in to giving up. YOU ARE WRONG.
    @45Govt, my brain may be fading, but at its most dim it is sharper than you can ever be.


  29. Can we not just agree Nigerians are bad people ….except that one guy who died with 29 billion dollars in cash in his apt who was trying to give it away for years and no-one would take it.


  30. Revealed: Disgraced Labour MP Kate Osamor used her shadow minister status as she begged judge to keep her ‘beautiful son’ out of jail over £2,500 festival drug deal(Quote)

    Peterborough MP Fiona Onasanya ‘lied persistently and deliberately’ court told

    Peterborough MP Fiona Onasanya’s own campaign manager exposed her as a liar who had plotted with her brother to dodge a speeding ticket, a court heard today (Wednesday). Labour MP Ms Onasanya, (35), claimed a Russian man was behind the wheel when her Micra was caught travelling at 41mph in a 30mph zone in Thorney (Quote)


  31. I take it all back Hal – I AM WRONG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I was mixing up Osanya’s brother with Osamor’s son – they all, act alike you see.


  32. @45Govt,

    Is English your first language or have you been drinking? Stop Googling and educate yourself. Onasanya and Osamor are two different people – both black and of Nigerian heritage – but different. Is this the best that Harrison College can produce?

  33. William Skinner Avatar

    When did Eric Williams say; “ three from ten leaves zero?” Stars


  34. @45Govt,

    Apology accepted. Even if they all act alike. That is the trouble with black people. I will tell you a little story about that: As a young man, a new recruit to the Home office, I was standing in the reception area of Wormwood Scrubs prison at about 6pm, when the prisoners usually come in from the courts.
    There I was in a brown suit (I remember because I have not worn a brown suit since) with a Home Office badge on my jacket pocket, when one of the prison officers came in, saw me walking around, and tried to force me in to a cell as a wandering prisoner.
    One of the other officers had to step in and told him not that one. It was a good lesson for a new black recruit in the criminal justice system. Whatever badge you wear, you are all the same.

  35. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    *The i can’t even be bothered to identify the MP correctly. Instead of Osamor, the paper used a picture of the Labour whip and Peterborough MP Fiona Onasanya, supplied by a news agency. “Jeremy Corbyn with Kate Osamor, who is accused of threatening a reporter,” says the i. Whoops!”

    45govt, This piece clarifies it for me. It should for you too and The Sun…


  36. “Your ignorance betrays you… because you out of all people ought to know better than to use an absolute to describe a race of people … because as you well know there is always an exception to the general rule…”

    Mr. Lexicon

    Perhaps “your ignorance betrays you” as well.

    How could you, on one hand, seek to admonish 45govt for, according to you, “using an absolute to describe a race of people”……

    ……..but on the other hand, in your 7:03 AM contribution, you mentioned not knowing he was an “Ecky Becky from St. John?”

    As the old saying goes: “two wrongs don’t make it right.”

  37. William Skinner Avatar

    It’s amazing that the European Union or whatever it is called is breaking up; yet we have those amongst us, who continue to pour scorn on the call for full Caribbean Unity and expect miracles in a relatively short historical journey to true Caribbean nationhood.
    At least Heather Cole , has some positives in her piece and it presents a more enlightened view of the region, than the negativity offered by the self appointed BU intelegentsia.

  38. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    @forty-five my friend…stay out of the yacht club..

    Heather has no clue what is really going on…yall think this thing was not by design from the very beginning, re Caribbean islands never being able to unite…well think again..

    The black leaders are useless creatures put in place to keep things exactly as they are…keeping the majority black population, miseducated and perpetual sacrificial lambs….struggling to survive…they have their handlers in the minority community to misguide them EVERY step of the way…with bib as their REWARD…..that too is by design…

    “Kyffin, in your teens ( late 50’s early 60’s ) you were a low paid shelf-packer at Simpson Supermarket in Worthing: opposite where Robert Tempro started RT’s…..you know?…

    Robert died in strange circumstances…….

    same as David Hindley…….

    and Miles Rothwell……….

    Cliff Hammond?

    NOW…..you are a MULTI BILLIONAIRE.

    Back in I think April / May 2018 you or Sir COW instructed a connected person to invite me by email to lunch at Barbados Yacht Club (BYC) with the intent of then poisoning and killing me….as you have tried so many times……but I heard a whisper!

    One of that connected person’s sons is one of Sir Kyffin’s immediate Accountants / finance controllers…..i trained several of the others.”

  39. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    they have their handlers in the minority community to misguide them EVERY step of the way…WITH BRIBERY AND CORRUPTION as their REWARDS for selling out their black people..…..that too is by design…

    eg..Maloney is now tainted goods, he has been fronting for the demon crooks Cow et al for many years…just look out for the new wave, new age frontmen and women for the real demon cockroaches hiding in the shadows, engineering these well crafted deceits and thefts from the majority population…

  40. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    @lawson January 22, 2019 7:56 AM “Can we not just agree Nigerians are bad people.”

    No we can’t.

    Millions, and millions of good Nigerians, and some of them are my friends and family.

    Millions and millions of good Canadians too, and some of them are also my friends and family.


  41. WARU – Robert Tempro died of prostate cancer, Miles Rothwell, the vile old bastard died in a British nursing home for the insane. These are FACTS that I KNOW, notwithstanding my earlier exposure by Hal Austin as a fool.

    The rest sounds like paranoia to me, not that I wouldn’t admit you to be a dangerous enemy!! Wuhloss.


  42. lawson
    January 22, 2019 7:56 AM

    Can we not just agree Nigerians are bad people ….except that one guy who died with 29 billion dollars in cash in his apt who was trying to give it away for years and no-one would take it.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Careful how you go scandalizing Nigerians … many Bajans. including possibly myself and the Right Excellent General Bussa may hearken therefrom!!


  43. SSSPC – of course there are – there are also presumably millions of Pakistanis who are not stone-age perverts….but the PROPENSITY is undeniable.
    Have you ever heard of anyone getting a letter wanting to transfer millions to them from say, an Icelander?

  44. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    @Forty-Five…ya do see the quotation marks…it encourages corrections…from anyone who knows differently…I do not what is true in some instances, seen the proof myself years ago…


  45. @45Govt,

    We are all good people. Just stop taking Google as an accurate historical record; use it as a guide and confirm independently what it says.

  46. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    I mean do we seek to judge the tens of millions of good decent Canadians by the actions of this old white Canadian man?

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/jun/23/bruce-mcarthur-toronto-gay-serial-killer

    No. We do not. He is NOT representative of most Canadians.

    A few or a lot of bad Nigerians are not representative of the tens of millions of good decent Nigerians. I mean there are 198,577,125 Nigerians, so even if 5% are bad people, what about the other 190 million good people?

  47. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    Ordinary good people rarely make the headlines.

  48. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    I DO KNOW WHAT is true in SOME instances, seen the proof myself years ago…

    ….ah know it makes me dangerous to the cabal of demons…but they have not experienced TRUE DANGER yet…an experience they do need.

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