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This morning the blogmaster entered the local newsfeed from traditional media to be swamped with the predictable-news about the selection of General Secretary of the Barbados Workers Union (BWU) Toni More to represent the BLP in St. George North in the upcoming by-election. The proposal by the government to rename the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill in Owen Arthur’s name. The pros and cons of going republic and others. Some if us do not forget that the traditional media has a weighty responsibly to report news as it happens AND to present issues of the day to the general public. A professional and educated cadre of journalists has the awesome power to influence the citizenry.

However, one of the biggest threats to a stable society is rising CRIME, in the case of tiny Barbados; increasing gun violence. Both political parties have been targeted in the fight against crime and today the country is reaping the whirl wind. Successive governments AND private sector have not harmonized policies to sustain the economic well being of the country to address the economic and social needs of Barbadians, especially our young people. Many Barbadian families have not managed households well enough to inculcate wholesome values because they lack meaningful support.

The late Randy “Nutman” Selman

In recent hours the blogmaster updated the Murder Tracker in the sidebar to 33 to include the body found last week on the rocks at the Animal Flower Cave and last night the random killing of a young man know as ‘Nutman’. Barbadian pedestrians and motorists should recall the mannerly young man who sold nuts at the junction of Pine Road. From all reports he happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

The effect of crime on working class neighbourhoods like the Pine, Silver Hill and others must be given priority by the society. The consistent high unemployment in working class neighbourhoods in Barbados because of a lack of economic opportunity has created an underclass. Yesterday members of the BU intelligentsia reiterated a call to gentrify Bridgetown. We need similar calls to implement programs to uplift our working class neighbourhoods; improve the economic opportunities, improve the housing, eliminate the crime bosses who take advantage of this vulnerable class of society. Recently Zack Robert Nadur, an upper class 74 year old man was arrested and charged with possession of 50 rounds of .32 ammunition at his residence without a licence. We need to see more!

Shopkeeper Shirley Lynch is pleading for help as she watches her livelihood fall victim to crime. The pensioner has been operating a shop in Golden Rock, The Pine, St Michael, since 1994. (Video by Sandy Pitt)#MeAndMyNation#YourNewsYourTimeYourWay#Barbados#LoveMyNation

The Nation Barbados

Just last month the blogmaster read the impassioned cry from Shirley Lynch (quoted above) who operates a village shop in the area where ‘Nutman’ was reported to be liming outside his home last night. So many Barbadians including our politicians live in an alternate universe. There must be a fit for purpose Crime and Social Plan to arrest what is playing out at Golden Rock the Pine and similar working class neighbourhoods across Barbados. The social and economic cost is rising a la inner city Chicago. The time has come for Barbadians to reject the usual platitudes from the police, politicians, pretend social practitioners and NGOs et al. We allocate millions of dollars to implement trite projects and forget about the importance of developing meaningful social programs to assist our most vulnerable. What do we think will happen eventually if so many of our children underperform in the Barbados Secondary Schools’ Entrance Examination? What do we think will happen if our parents who need help are not supported?

Rising crime affects us all people.

 

 


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119 responses to “What About CRIME Stupid”


  1. it is telling that that MAM goes all over Bim, appears on radio and TV and addresses all sorts of issues, economic, immigration, republicanism, same sex marriages but never speaks to the issue of murders and gun related crime that has increased since the BLP came to office. the one embarrassing attempt the BLP made was in the early stages when they held a press conference with the CoP to address the British lady who allegedly was attacked in her home.

    but i am not surprised. this is a PM who invited known drug dealers to the opening of parliament to celebrate her becoming PM much to the chagrin of the police. this a PM who was referred to, according to Caswell Franklyn, by said drug dealers and criminal underlords on their facebook page as General Mia. what a thing.

    at the retirement of Gline Clarke the AG said that the BLP was supporting the police 100% by giving them the best equipment to do their job e.g body cameras. whilst that is good better support would come in the form of increase pay so that the police could attract better recruits on the way to becoming a professional unit so that they could stave off the attractiveness of bribery etc. and could concentrate on catching and placing these criminals before the courts in a timely manner and with the accompanying paper work.

    none of these issues are being addressed by MAM or the AG and if they are it is not made known to the public which is quite unusual for a PR loving party. for all the hoopla that the BLP likes to bestow upon themselves whether it proposing to rename Cave Hill Campus, going republic, bringing in civil unions, the many attempts at stabilising the economy and when things go awry resorting to blame the lost decade, they have not made any serious attempt at combatting murders and gun crimes.

    one has to wonder why? or perhaps not?


  2. Gentrification is a bad word associated with the displacement of Black and poor people for moneyed real estate interests, Whites and upper classes.

    It has been the single most actively used measure in Western societies as an instrument of racism, economic domination and displacement.

    It has nothing to do with the empowerment of poor Black people living in depressed neighbourhoods.

    Certainly, this could not be what is meant.


  3. The deliberately depressed communities kept that way to feed the prison industry and greedy lawyers…promoting mental slavery, low income wage earners and unaware spineless voters, growing endless generational cornbeef and biscuit yardfowls, to further degrade the already poisonous colonial system, just like the tipos des alves we see on BU.


  4. @Pacha

    Barbados is a 95% Black country. The use of the word gentrify must therefore be applied in context.


  5. David
    Again today, you would have built additional social capital as a buttress against detractors.

    Maybe, just maybe, tomorrow you maybe persuaded to editorialize the need for a radical land reform in Barbados. For this is the only salvatory way out.

    Let’s stop the tinkering and the fingering and get to the meat of the matter, pun intended.


  6. @Greene

    You have amplified the point made by the blogmaster purely in a political and police enforcement context. What we are witnessing with a growing underclass in Barbados is being precipitated by greater forces and will require a massive mobilization of resources from all actors in civil society.


  7. @David,

    that is only part 1. i will address more of your lede as the blog progresses


  8. David
    Barbados is also a crypto-racist society notorious for finding ways to maintain that status. This is why a radical land reform is so necessary. It is also impossible for Black people to build stable community without an economic base controlled totally by us.

    All attemps by Black people including those returning from Panama a hundred years ago wid nuff money and with the intention of altering imbalances were legislated as unlawful.

    The Parliament of Barbados at that time passed laws making it illegal for them to buy more than one single acre.

    Northern Observer can find this reference in the original laws at the records department.


  9. @ David
    A fine piece. Brilliant linkage of failing educational system with deepening social morass.


  10. @Pacha

    As you have correctly opined a small percent of the population represent the wealth in the country. This small group is located in the minority segment. The dominant political class in a parasitic way is dependent on said minority for funding and access to its power structures to fund greed, ignorance, corruption i.e consumption behaviour. To dismantle or to uncouple from such an entanglement is born in revolution.


  11. Sir David

    Music to our ears. Now, arise Sir David!


  12. @William

    It has not eluded you that the minister of education Santia Bradshaw is the MP for the Pine where Nutsman was dropped by a stray bullet. Also the reference to platitudes is illustrated by her comment on the video quoted.


  13. David
    On the matter of Ms Toni Moore.

    We believe that she has her eyes set on the prime minister’s office.

    This, solely on a series of encounters with her predecessor around the issues of 1994. A man suffering from short man’s disease, imbued by a political ruthlessness unequaled in Barbados and an obsequious relationship with White corporate interests.

    Maybe protege is unlike mentor but we are unconvinced.


  14. @David

    what is your definition of a revolution? what should it look like?


  15. @Pacha

    One thing is sure, Toni was his anointed.


  16. This crime wave will continue as long as the IMF has a hand to control the economic affairs of this country
    These poor small island nations would never be able to put its social environment as a priority against the economic
    international affairs of these loan agencies
    Govt can put all the spin they want to the crime but the bottom line comes down to certain sectors of society who have been left behind whilst govt fed the fatted calf called Tourism.
    This group were thrown out to sea without a life line and having to tread stormy waters to survive
    Now the tide has rolled in and what all are seeing are dead bodies all over the place
    Time govt realise that barbados is more than an economy it is a society
    Time to kiss the blp govt goodbye


  17. @ William

    We have just had CXC exam results which shoed that 48 per cent of the 16 yr olds who took the CSEC failed to get a reasonable grade. In any other society this would have been a crisis, for the ministry, the schools, teachers, and parents, not to speak oaf the children. In Barbados there is near total silence.
    There is enormous evidence that there are the years in human development that will decide the quality of a person’s life for the rest of their lives. Also, the majority of active criminals (thefts, burglary, violence) will come from this cohort.
    In fact, some criminologists believe that by the age of three (the first 1000 years) the future of children can be marked out. Some even think that a deviant child/adult can be detected before birth.
    @William, we are going back to the pre-war years of eugenics. Will this belief lead to compulsory abortions, or even sterilisation as Trump is accused of inflicting on Latinas at the borders?
    These are serious times. I have just
    Where ar our so-called criminologists? Our police chiefs? Our politicians? Our community activists? been reading Dale Marshall, in a previous life as attorney general, talking about crime. Who takes this man seriously?


  18. From all reports he happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.
    &
    Just last month the blogmaster read the impassioned cry from Shirley Lynch (quoted above) who operates a village shop in the area where ‘Nutman’ was reported to be liming outside his home last night.
    ++++++++++++++
    Those two sentences are all in the same article, what is the wrong place if he was outside his home?


  19. Herb is not a drug
    it is a plant.
    No harm,
    No crime.
    ▶ Stand By Me, Stand By Shaka Dubs, Jah Shakin
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdE6YG-5Vnk
    Honorary Citizen Saint Peter Mcintosh the Intelligent Diplomat Reasoning
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1wGNgI91pdU


  20. For the ignorant among us….even scholarship winners GOT ROBBED..

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2020/09/24/teachers-parents-and-students-cry-foul-at-this-years-cxc-results/

    “A massive online campaign has been launched in Barbados and across the rest of the region demanding a thorough review of the 2020 Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) results.

    The campaign, started by a Kim Harper in the form of a petition to the CARICOM Secretariat, is alleging that the Barbados-based CXC has made a mistake with regards to graded results distributed to candidates via the online student portals.

    With a target of 7,500 signatures, up 4.45 pm today, 7,528 had signed the petition agreeing that many students’ grades distributed do not accurately reflect their performance in the exams.

    The backers of the online campaign are therefore requesting immediate reconsideration and review of all the results.

    Yesterday the Council released the results of the Caribbean Certificate of Secondary Level Competence (CCSLC), the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) examinations and Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examination (CAPE).

    Hundreds of parents and guardians pulled no punches as they vented their dissatisfaction at the results via the online initiative facilitated by Change.org, a Delaware-based petition website which has over 390 million users and hosts sponsored campaigns for organisations.”.


  21. Hello David, As a citizen, patriot and a woman – I really take offense with the ending of this article title and the previous one. The use of the word ‘Stupid’ is totally out of context. It’s extremely disrespectful. And perhaps also puts you in a bad light.

    Kind regards, Leslie


  22. @ David
    I no longer see Bradshaw as having the ability to do better than those who went before. Style is not substance. In recent weeks her language has been arrogant and insensitive. I do not adhere to divide and rule leadership especially in Education.
    I always maintain that dealing with our most precious resource is not dealing with buses and garbage trucks. Transferring successful principals because of political considerations is not the same as changing bus routes or garbage schedules.
    Peace.
    Many years ago, I suggested that the Minister of Education should be a selected office that is approved by the government and opposition on a contractural basis. Name change should be Director of Education and job evaluation should be the method used to renew contract.
    Peace.


  23. “It’s extremely disrespectful. And perhaps also puts you in a bad light.”

    steupppss….the DISRESPECT shown by negro governments toward the BLACK MAJORITY, the Africans descended from colonial slavery and mistreated for over 60 years puts the house negros and the whole country in a bad light…

    SUCK IT UP


  24. Then again with unemployment out of control poverty levels continuing to climb
    Govt having no answer crime will persist
    An innocent man gun down tells a story of a society releasing its frustration on any one
    Good luck barbados yuh ask for change now you are seeing the results
    Ever since the growing signs of increasing signs raised its head the media houses refused to hold govt feet to fire and demand answers
    Mia says many hands make for light work but one can easily say the media hands have been chopped off in their effort to pen articles demanding answers from govt


  25. @Pacha 6:44
    Agreed with your submission.

    Sometimes we lift events from the American playbook and wrapourselves in them.

    The most egregious example of this was when one blogger began to talk of our ‘ founding fathers’


  26. I really dislike the ignorant mentally enslaved as*holes that Mia complained about in her interview with ITV for the world to see and hear that they do exist in all their “mental slavery” glory in Barbados as we have been complaining on the blog for years, they only aspire to be yardfowls to corrupt governments and now even the government is exposing them..


  27. @Lesley Taylor

    You need to apply context:

    The economy, stupid” is a phrase coined by James Carville in 1992. It is often quoted from a televised quip by Carville as “It’s the economy, stupid.” Carville was a strategist in Bill Clinton’s successful 1992 presidential campaign against incumbent George H. W. Bush.

    It’s the economy, stupid – Wikipedia


  28. @ Hal
    It’s obvious that the country is at the cross roads. The government has done a good job with the COVID but it’s also obvious that it had no progressive , innovative and creative plans in the aftermath of the pandemic.
    The Throne Speech turned out to be a political , campaign speech. It did not lift the consciousness of the nation.
    That’s why Comrade Prescod is lamenting how the “cronies and parasites” have invaded the body politic and his party.
    Right now the 2023 campaign has started and to the BLPDLP that’s all that matters.
    I am a Barbadian living overseas and I have no right commenting on anything but I hope the good people in St.George North, will go in the booth and just vote for anybody other than whoever the BLPDLP brings.
    I wish the UPP; PdP ; Solutions Barbados; other parties and independents all the best.

    Peace.


  29. @Greene

    A heavy question.

    Does anyone have the answer, it is not a binary matter to solve.

    Triggering and managing reform or as Pacha will suggest forcing a transformational event is based on many activities working in concert. Sometimes unforecast events will trigger the ‘uprising’ most times it will call for hard work coopting groups and individuals across different segments/agencies by stoking like minds to rally around a single cause.


  30. As part of their websites these organizations should list reasons why exams may be ungraded or missing.

    There should also be an estimate of the yearly percentage of occurrences. This should be a low number.

    When queried these sites should then provide to each person the specific reason for missing or absent exams.

    We need to remove some of these black boxes and make processes more transparent


  31. CXC is a regional institution based in Barbados. COVID possibly has challenged the system. Give the agency some time to review requests before ascribing a nefarious motive.


  32. @ William

    Congratulations on being a Bajan. I wonder what it feels like. I believe I came from Mars and know nothing about our little island. Bloody foreigner.
    You make a point about Mr Prescod; he remains a class conscious member of a parliament of opportunist and fits in like a square peg in a round hole.
    I still believe his strength is the support he gets from people in the Ivy and surrounding area, which should make it very difficult for the president to remove him.
    I have said on numerous occasions, we do not have a political culture in which policy analysis plays a central part. We make it up as we go along, from foreigners lounging out on our shores while remote working, to begging the Chinese for handouts. As a result, it is how the public and our media interpret what passes as social policy.


  33. green

    What is wrong with them blaming the lost decade which finished about 2.5 yrs ago?
    recently you tried to explain the lost decade by blaming the 1.5 decades (before) that finished approximately 12.5 yrs ago?

    propaganda is propaganda no matter where it comes from.


  34. Sometimes, it is like trying to fix a machine with 100 interdependent problems; some under your control and some that you have no control over.

    So you decide to start with the big ones first and then there is a leakage elsewhere that needs immediate attention.

    There is low-hanging fruit that can be picked, but the big problems really need attention and more than lip-service.

    I admire those who genuinely want to serve. It must be a frustrating that after being elected they realize that most things are out of their control.

    What can they do? Talk a good talk and hope some things fall into place.

    B or D, I wish you well.


  35. No nefarious motives were assigned.

    Just asking for greater transparency on the website before students touch the first exam.


  36. @John2

    You are bringing narrow arguments. All will accept it is a complex issue. You are more intelligent than what you are offering here. Forget the man and play the ball. Do you recall what Dale Marshall said about local policemen being recruited to Bermuda and Cayman when he was AG in the Arthur administration? Do you recall the last administration did not invest in scanners at the port to detect guns in containers? There is enough blame to go around.

    Have a serious discussion!

    >


  37. Social theorists in Barbados, if any exit, would or should be chomping at the bit to link social disorder with low cost housing or try to interrogate whether there is a correlation. For the purposes of this paper social disorder relates to gun related murders and attempted murders that is currently visiting Barbados.

    The sale of illegal drugs and the gang culture that is constructed around it seems to be incubator of the gun violence.

    Gun related murders seem to take place or have a genesis in such areas as the Pine Housing area, Gall Hill / Silver Hill, Ch Ch, and Haynesville St James. Nevertheless many killings have been perpetrated in the rural areas of St Philip and St Lucy. This may or may not reflect a gang rivalry as one of the so called drug lords is said to have a base in St Philip and the same goes for St Lucy where another well known one resides. So, there seems to be a link between gun crime and subsidized housing or at least depressed housing areas apart from Government sponsored blocks or ghettos as they are commonly called.

    In 1942 Shaw and McKay took into account the socioeconomic characteristics of a neighborhood, family dynamics and delinquency among youth, and came up with a theory called social disorganization, which led to a breakdown in social order and crime. So, it is nothing new.

    Such activities have plagued low cost housing areas in the rest of the Caribbean, the USA (Chicago and NY) and the UK. Although this appears to be worldwide (Cukier and Sidel, 2006: 12-18), it is devastating to communities because of the loss of lives, particularly among young men and the consequences are more intensified in small place like Barbados.

    Montoute and Anyanwa (2009:1) said that as a society transitions through its various stages, a social phenomenon is crime. They went on to say that that crime especially by young people may reflect their struggle against their social status. Comparing this with what is happening in Bim specifically in these depressed housing areas, that seems to have an element of truth. If one is to further compare the Ferniehurst lower middle income housing area in Black Rock and others of that socioeconomic nature, one would see that they do not follow the same crime related trends as low cost clustered housing.

    So it seems to that concentrated low cost housing and the linkage with crime position crime with class. Lower poorer classes, beleaguered by substandard education, dysfunctional family situation and little prospect of meaningful employment are drawn to the embrace of gangs, which provide a family type safe haven. What emerges is a class differential paradoxically perpetuated by and perpetuating the division between the haves and the have-nots.

    It should be pointed out that there is no crime free society. A “crime free society is an impossible dream. There has always been crime; there will always be crime”, is how Alderson (1979:111) puts it. Nevertheless, most people see crime particularly murders as contrary to societal norms. In addition crime itself is a legal construct and a delimiting device that tries to maintain certain actions within defined boundaries. Whereas white-collar crime is viewed in a certain manner murders and gun related crime are frowned upon by society.

    Acknowledging that law enforcement alone is not an all-encompassing solution to crime, Alderson encourages a holistic approach involving, social, victim, offender, economic, and moral considerations. I agree.


  38. @Greene

    This comment was posted by the mother of Nutsman to social media last night. It gives the opportunity for some who are unable to relate to a reality how individuals residing in working class communities in Barbados mentioned in your treatise have to exist.

    My heart is bleeding, I lost my third child to gun shots, my son sitting in our front yard on his phone and drinking a beer and them cowardly scums of the earth killed him, my child works hard for his children and don’t do a soul nothing and them get and kill my child…


  39. Are you suggesting the PM inviting “known drug dealers to the opening of parliament to celebrate her becoming PM,” has emboldened criminals and is responsible for an upsurge in crime?

    Is this another one of your ‘political platform speeches’ or do you have any evidence to substantiate your claim?

    I’ve read where you suggested “increase pay so that the police could attract better recruits on the way to becoming a professional unit so that they could stave off the attractiveness of bribery etc. and could concentrate on catching and placing these criminals before the courts in a timely manner and with the accompanying paper work.”

    First, let me state I agree with you wholeheartedly police officers should should be paid more money. However, an increase in pay does not necessarily mean attracting better recruits. Some people would apply based on the salary or want of employment……… and not because of a fondness of the career.
    If, for example, we’re of the opinion Ministers are well paid, then, how come being well paid could not help Donville Inniss “stave off the attractiveness of bribery?”
    However, RBPF is doing a fantastic job solving crimes, including murders. Surely you must realize this issue goes beyond ‘increasing pay.’

    Do you believe pay is the only reason why young men don’t want to join the police force? Why are young men not interested in pursuing a career in law enforcement? Why 90% of applications to join the force are from females?

    The police catch and place criminals before the Courts. Then, what? We read about a guy who was granted bail on 2 murder charges, committing another murder. And, he’s not the only individual. There are several men who have committed crimes similar to the ones for which they’re on bail. In other words, several crimes are being committed by repeat offenders.

    Last week I read about 62 year old Anthony Rudolph Thorpe, who was imprisoned after chalking up conviction #102, for shoplifting items from Carter’s General Stores.
    “Looking at your card it seems as soon as you are out, you are back in,” Magistrate Renee said, adding that based on the convicted man’s history only a sentence of imprisonment would do.
    And this is a man who believes his only problems are, according to what he told the Magistrate, were “I am unfortunate and unlucky . . . I suffer from diabetes and hypertension.”
    This guy was stealing during the 1980s when I was attending secondary school. I remember seeing him stab the owner of Naime’s store in Swan Street, when he tried to stop him (Thorpe) from stealing a shirt.
    What do you suggest should have been done to help Thorpe or people of his ilk in the ‘early stages of their criminal careers,’ who are incarcerated simply because they are kleptomaniacs and known to the court?

    Then, there’s a case involving a youngster who was caught after breaking and entering a few houses. He proudly told the Magistrate he was taught how to break locks in prison by the ‘Dead Bolt Man.’ Perhaps he learnt by rote.

    What is the RECIDIVISM RATE in Barbados and what is being done to reduce it? What could be done to improve our Judicial System?

    What roles do criminologists and the Criminal Justice Research and Planning Unit play in the ‘fight against crime?’

    Greene, tell me what Mottley or Dale Marshall could say or do to prevent a man from killing his estranged girlfriend or wife, after seeing her with another man…….. or a woman from poisoning her cheating boyfriend? How about the guy who caught his wife, a police officer, in bed with a policeman, whom he killed and then posted a video of his naked wife on social media?
    What could they say to prevent a ‘spur of the moment killing’ as a result of an argument or altercation?

    You are POLITICIZING crime and giving the impression this administration is responsible for its increase, which serves your political agenda. You have not presented us with any meaningful SOLUTIONS……only the usual rhetorical political diatribe.
    In previous contributions and GIVING EXAMPLES, I highlighted how crime was progressively increasing from around 2015 when there were several ‘hits’ on known drug dealers and ‘hit men,’ as well as retaliatory and gang related murders.

    The pattern was evident……. I could likewise ask, where was Adriel Brathwaite? Perhaps he was busy telling the media he had friends in his constituency who were breaking the law by squatting at Rock Hall.

    Similarly to both AGs from BLP and DLP administrations, your only suggestions to addressing the crime situation is increasing pay, providing equipment and vehicles to the police, while IGNORING to ADDRESS the FACTORS responsible for the progressive increase in crime.

    You will keep on mentioning what MAM and Marshall have not done, while the guys in the BEES’ camp will respond by mentioning what Stuart and Adriel Brathwaite did not do. And around the mulberry bush we go……….


  40. David
    You would do well to unpack what the government has or has not done since coming to office and then see what fits into your “Crime and Social Plan”.


  41. What crime?

    Our government has succeeded in getting the American citizen Donville Inniss convicted in New York. With that, everything has been achieved.


  42. @enuff

    We should not have to unpack anything, it should be visible and measurable.


  43. Davey 👦 Oh boy…

    Money, money, money 💰

    Only in Barbados can a lawyer steal a client’s money, go to prison and continue to practise. Lord have mercy on us Bajans.

    “Like everything else there is a due process that has to be undertaken. Now there is a limit to how much I can say about certain things, but I will say that the BAR Council has engaged its mind on these matters.

    There are some authorities who could, as of right, take action, who seemed to have declined to do so, and now it will be for the BAR to take the necessary action, but you don’t just wake up one day and it just happens,” Smith Millar explained.

    “There is a process that has to be gone through. We would have to get permission first to do what others can do without first asking for permission and we are engaged in that process.”

    When pressed if it meant the BAR Association was looking to take action against Pile and prevent her from practising law she responded: “There are certain actions the BAR can take but the disbarment of an attorney-at-law lies at the door of the Court of Appeal. The BAR cannot disbar anybody. We have to go through the process and it will eventually get to the Court of Appeal. I hope it will not take a long time, but we can’t disbar anyone, we can only start the process and try and hurry it along as far as we can.”

    Speaking on the recent conviction of another lawyer, Cheraine Parris, who was sentenced to four years in prison on Friday for stealing over $300,000 from a client, Smith Millar condemned her actions.

    While she said Pile and Parris’ convictions did not qualify as a trend, she admitted they were two convictions too many.

    Lord have mercy on them too 🙏


  44. These judges and magistrates etc WORK FOR THE TAXPAYERS who pay their monthly salaries, housing and car allowances with ADDITIONAL PERKS…they should KNOW that there should be no discrimination or corruption directed at the PEOPLE..even the law books they read guide them on HOW TO DISPENSE JUSTICE…so what do they need any training in that regard for again…they are not toddlers and many of them are uppity and arrogant like hell..

    BTW these judges are STILL VIOLATING the San Jose Charter on the rights of THE ELDERLY…60 years and over to an expeditious judicial process…maybe someone can TRAIN THEM ON THAT TOO..

    “LOOPNEWS
    – by Linda Branch

    Judicial officers in Barbados working with counterparts across the region are taking an introspective look at their approaches to administering justice for all without barriers of gender bias or other impediments.

    “I think we are going in the right direction,” observed Acting Chief Magistrate Ian Weekes during remarks on Saturday, December 7, 2019, at the closing ceremony of the Gender Sensitive Adjudication & Training workshop. The training, held December 6-7, was organized by the Canadian-funded Judicial Reform and Institutional Strengthening (JURIST) Project in the Caribbean in partnership with the Judiciary of Barbados. It was the second of a three-part training program, with the third scheduled for early next year.

    Weekes, one of the 10 magistrates, 18 judges and other participants who took part in the training held at the Radisson Aquatica Resort, described the interactive sessions as “refreshing” and beneficial to have a more open-minded approach “as to what we can achieve as judicial officers.”

    Registrar of the Barbados Supreme Court Barbara Cooke-Alleyne noted the training presentations and discussions assisted in helping participants explore and address the potential personal bias that could impact the administering of the judicial system.

    “We are making a difference together in the lives of the people we serve,” stated High Commissioner of Canada to Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean Marie Legault, in her remarks.

    Speaking further to Loop, Legault cited the strong commitment of the Canadian Government in supporting the improvement of regional court governance and administration. She noted the JURIST Project received close to CDN$20 million in funding and was a collaborative initiative with judiciary stakeholders, including the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ), across the region to tackle varied areas for judicial reform and enhancements.

    JURIST Project Director Gloria Richards-Johnson indicated that the ongoing training provided a forum for the exchange of information, challenges and solutions. She noted it was a key ingredient to judicial reform efforts throughout the region, along with policy formation. The aim was to provide for more equitable judiciary systems that efficiently responded to the needs of community members, including women, girls and marginalized groups.

    “We are committed to self-introspection, committed to acquiring knowledge and committed to putting that knowledge into practice,” added Justice Jacqueline Cornelius who is a Judge of the High Court of Barbados and one of the workshop trainers. Cornelius, along with colleague Justice Lisa Ramsumair-Hinds who is a Judge of the High Court of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, also recently returned from South Africa where she and Ramsumair-Hinds shared their knowledge on gender protocols and sexual violence against women and girls.

    Ramsumair-Hinds, another trainer, pointed out the appropriateness of the JURIST Project training session being held during the “16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence”, an annual international campaign initiative supported by UN Women and UN Women Caribbean that pushes for the end of violence against women and girls. She cited the importance of ensuring “equal access to justice” for those persons who might face barriers against justice.

    Acting Chief Justice William J. Chandler, who attended the closing ceremony on behalf of Barbados’ Chief Justice Sir Marston Gibson, expressed gratitude to the Canadian Government for its financial support of the program, and praised the training presenters for their stellar efforts in sharing their expertise with participants.”


  45. “While she said Pile and Parris’ convictions did not qualify as a trend, she admitted they were two convictions too many.”

    The hypocrisy and dishonesty of the Bar Rats..


  46. “COVID possibly has challenged the system.”

    that excuse is not washing in this instance, the only difference this year, we are all wearing masks, but all other systems REMAIN THE SAME…


  47. It is high time CXC answer the public regarding its ‘mode of operations’ and provide proper information on how it evaluates the work of candidates. I pity the students & parents due to the current fiasco. Schools, Colleges, & Universities are already open and those awaiting results are missing classes. What do they do if they now have to wait on a Request for a Re-mark? Another month for their results?

    Q1: Are the Multiple Choice papers corrected by machine or man…. or both? If by machine, what Quality Control is used to verify the machine accuracy?

    Q2: Due to Covid, Paper 2 for most subjects was scrapped. How therefore, was the final % calculated?

    Q3: Due to the current uproar by students & parents, kindly shed some light on the procedures involved if a student request (pay for) a re-mark. Popular opinion is that it’s a waste of money for the student requesting, as the mark seldom changes…. and most often remains the same, or decreases!

    Q4: How are SBA’s standardised? If Teacher A, in Country X, is prone to marking ‘easy’ and awards high marks whereas Teacher B, in Country Y, is a ‘hard’ marker …… how do you resolve such a possibility? This factor is even more important this year without a Paper 2 contribution.

    Q5: How does CXC deal with the fact that sometimes there are errors in the Answer Marking Schemes thus, penalising students unfairly?

    Q6: How does CXC deal with the fact that sometimes questions are unambiguous and there is more than one correct answer among the multiple choices?

    I am sure there are more questions that readers can post….. but the CXC website FAQ seems to only provide answers to their “look good” operations ….. and leaves out the real details!!!


  48. In the UK marks are decided centrally. Let us take maths, for example, if a total of three marks per question are given, then it is decided centrally that one mark goes for the under standing of the question; one mark for the workout; and one mark for the correct answer. Individual teachers cannot change that.
    May I suggest that we hire Pearson’s or some other examining board to work closely with the CXC for at least one year to iron out these wrinkles


  49. The most important part of GCSE exams is that the pass mark is decided before the exam. For example, a 45 per cent mark will get you a Grade 5, etc up to and including a 9, or A*. There are three papers (one non- calculator and two calculators), each giving a total of 80 marks. So, 36 marks per paper will give a Grade 5.
    To go on to A level the student must get at least a Grade 7.


  50. One thing’s for, the colonial slaves at CXC and CAPE will NOT be branding these hardworking kids in Barbados and the Caribbean as FAILURES…the house slaves and house negros have always been failures and always will be, they will not be projecting their LOSER FAILURE SELVES on these children.

    So far it appears as being told that Guyana has overturned the failing grades that were maliciously applied to the kids, they got more than enuff problems and don’t need anymore..

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