Home
 TV6 News & Events
   - Exchange Rates
   - Share Prices
   - Mutual Funds
   - Directory
 Letters
Type:
Keyword:
- Barbados Nation
- Jamaïca Observer
- Stabroek News
- VI DailyNews
- Voice of Barbados
 One Caribbean Media
 Reach Caribbean
 Children's Fund
 Privacy Policy





E-mail this story to a friend E-mail to a friend
View printable version

Unjust Ramphal bashing on 'ethnic cleansing' talk


outstanding Caribbean man: Shridath Ramphal

TALK OF ’ethnic cleansing’ and ’genocide’, used occasionally by reckless or frustrated political elements in our Caribbean Community, belong to the lexicon of a diseased political culture that have had horrible manifestations in what was once Yugoslavia and in a few African states.

In our region, we are accustomed to learning, or worse, experiencing, cases of discrimination based on ethnicity and, to a lesser extent, nationality. However strong the claims of such discrimination, the familiar refrain from officialdom has been ’not true’. Wherever and whenever discrimination, based either on race, religion, nationality or gender occurs, it makes a mockery of provisisons in national constitutions that ensure us of our fundamental rights and of national mottos that salute our unity in diversity, our ’oneness’ as a people.

Regionally, the ’founding fathers’ of our Caribbean Community (Caricom), now in its 37th year, had the vision and common sense to record among the first words of the Treaty of Chaguaramas their determination ’to consolidate and strengthen the bonds which have historically existed among their people...’

Among the very outstanding West Indian nationals to provide valuable assistance to the region’s political directorate to make a reality of Caricom were the likes of William Demas, Shridath Ramphal and Alister McIntyre.

Ramphal was subsequently chosen to lead The West Indian Commission that comprised some of the finest intellectuals and scholars of Caricom and did so while serving as Chancellor of the University of the West Indies.

Those acquainted with his numerous writings and public discourses, the various roles he has fulfilled on behalf this multi-ethnic, culturally diverse region to which his dedication is legendary, would have been quite surprised to learn that Shridath Ramphal was being accused of having engaged in ’ethnic cleansing’ talk when, in reality he has made no such accusation against any government, any organisation or group.

Yet, without providing text or context, he has been damned with such an utterance in sections of the region’s media and even called upon to take back ’those words’. He remains steadfast in his public silence, privately revealing a mix of amusement and disappointment with his accusers.

Immigration backdrop

The backdrop to this development was the controversial treatment of ’illegal’ Caricom immigrants in Barbados where a six-month amnesty is in place for them to regularise their status by year end.

I have been personally misrepresented by one media contributor for an ’allusion to apartheid’, which he claimed I had made in criticising the treatment to which some of those ’illegal immigrants’ were subjected. The contributor subsequently responded in the media to say ’sorry’ for that error..

But I continue to be surprised by how anxious some people are to publicly malign, or simply engage the attention of Shridath Ramphal about comments being attributed to him in sections of the regional media about ’ethnic cleansing’ in the wake of a crackdown by Barbados immigration authorities against illegal immigrants.

If I know anything about the public life of Ramphal, one of the most pre-eminent of our West Indian icons, it is his reluctance to be drawn into public controversies over personal statements or positions adopted by him.

I am, therefore, not holding my breath that Sir Shridath will any time soon, if ever, reply to media reports associating him with ’ethnic cleansing’ talk and, consequently, ’disqualifying’ himself as ’a voice of reason’ on the immigration impasse between Barbados and Guyana.

Nor, do I expect a response from him to the more recent call by former Barbados Central Bank Governor, Sir Courtney Blackman-as reported by journalist Tony Best on July 31-to ’consider withdrawing the ’ethnic cleansing words’ in relation to the immigration impasse, as if he did make such a specific accusation against any country or government.

It would be even more surprising if the author of Inseparable Humanity (an anthology of reflections to mark the ’150th Anniversary of the Abolition of Slavery’ and the ’Beginning of Indian Indenture’) responds to an ’open letter’ in the Barbados Nation of August 4, from the Guyanese trade unionist and political activist Lincoln Lewis, urging him to ’intervene’ in allegations of human rights abuses in Guyana. I suspect Sir Shridath knows Lewis even better than I do.

However, during this past week, I sought to interest Sir Shridath in a response to his critics over the reported ’ethnic cleansing’ remark. He restricted himself to pointing me to his address of June 26, at the Inaugural Conference of the Caribbean Association of Judicial Officers, held under the auspices of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ). He also drew my attention to an editorial in the Barbados Midweek Nation of last June 17, on the immigration controversy.

Context/message

The topic of Ramphal’s address was ’Caribbean Judiciaries in an Era of Globalisation-Meeting the Challenges’. In it, he had also referred, with ’sadness’, as he said, to the reported treatment of Caricom immigrants in Barbados without any mention to either their ethnicity or nationality.

He quoted the Barbadian visual artist (Annalee Davis, currently involved in a regional project on problems of Caricom immigrants), who had lamented in a media article how West Indians were at times cast as ’outsiders’ and become ’locked into nationalist crevices and exclusive cultural legitimacy.’

Ramphal then noted that ’we are at such a time; and both policies and practices are deepening Caribbean divides. The knock on the door at night is not within our regional culture; still less are intimations of ’ethnic cleansing’.

’No Caribbean leader,’ he stressed, ’would countenance such departure from our norms and values; but all must not only believe, but also act as if they believe, that we forget our oneness at our peril; whether the ’otherness’ that displaces it is an accidental place of our regional birth, or otherness of any kind...’

So why, I asked, was he questioned by a journalist in Georgetown during last month’s 30th Caricom Summit, about his reference to ’intimations’ (the operative word) of ’ethnic cleansing’?

Ramphal replied by pointing to the Nation’s editorial of June 17, in which was located a surprised warning against ’a disturbance of the existing equilibrium among races, a hallmark of Barbadian life’.

Perhaps, said Ramphal, rather than ’becoming very emotional and judgemental’ about his reference to ’intimations of ethnic cleansing’, those really interested may wish to inquire of the Nation what led to its editorial comment about ’a disturbance of the existing equilibrium among races in Barbados’.

In that address in June before leading jurists and others of the region, Ramphal, currently engaged in mediating a resolution to the dispute between the West Indies Cricket Board and the West Indies Players Association, was to quote the late Barbadian Prime Minister Errol Barrow, to emphasise ’our regional togetherness’ as citizens of Caricom.

’My great-great grandfather on my mother’s side’, he recalled, ’came to Guyana from Barbados looking for land and settlement and found them; and so it has been, up and down the chain of island societies that free movement fused into one; freedom curbed, ironically, with the arrival of our separate ’national’ freedoms...

’But the roots of those family trees’, he added, ’are now spread out in the sub-soil of the Caribbean. Social antipathy and divisiveness deny them; but DNAs defy even Constitutions...’


 Comments: Unjust Ramphal bashing on 'ethnic cleansing' talk
The fact Posted: 2009-08-09 00:52:00 AM
The fact remains that racism which was meant by 'ethnic cleansing' is taking place in Trinidad, from the government to the lowest ranks of the country whereever the current PM so wishes for it to take place. If this man wants to bash it, let him bash it because he is not being affected by it.
A few African states Posted: 2009-08-09 11:41:00 AM
Genocide and ethnic cleansing occurred in "a few African states." How dismissive. It could not have been that difficult nor timer-consuming to find out their names.

  • HUNT MUST GO!
  • ’No plans to resign’
  • Opposition forces calling for minister’s head
  • PM talks again of plot to kill him
  • Kamla: Bill to privatise TTRA
  • Lara’s housekeeper charged with theft
  • Couva North executive members quit
  • ...Bas: A lot of buying, selling taking place
  • EMA grants ’noise’ permit for Beyonce
  • No water for 10,000
  •  Home   News   Features   Opinion   Sports   Cartoon   Search   Woman 
     MIX   Classified   Business   Market   TV6   Privacy Policy   Advertising    
    Site designed and managed by CCN New Ventures. Managing Editor: Omatie Lyder, Head of TV News; Dominic Kalipersad, Copyright 2009 All rights reserved. Trinidad Express 35 Independence Sq, Port of Spain, Trinidad. Express newspaper and TV6 are subsidiaries of One Caribbean Media (www.onecaribbeanmedia.net)
    Powered by www.cpsgsoftware.com