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Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Britain and Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America and the Caribbean (ALBA): Another Falklands War?

Britain and ALBA: Another Falklands War?

By Rebecca Theodore


Lights! Camera! Action! Yes! A new light is shining on the oil-bearing geological formations in the Falkland Islands’ waters. Light is immediately understood as ‘the true source of all things and the base on which the physicality of the material world is built.’

However, the new light that is shining on British energy companies Rockhopper Exploration, Falkland Oil & Gas, Borders & Southern, Argos Resources and Arcadia et al, flickers rising tension between Britain and Argentina. It is not the light that saturates the living radiance of nature. It is the light of war.

Rebecca Theodore was born on the north coast of the Caribbean island of Dominica and is now based in Atlanta, GA . She writes on national security and political issues and can be reached here.It is a different light that illumines borders and margins when three decades ago, then British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher dispatched the first warships to the Falklands after Argentina’s ruling military government invasion. Argentina surrendered to Britain, but the importance of the Falklands to both Britain and Argentina now echo heated discussions because of the discovery of ‘black gold’ in the surrounding waters.

The Falkland Islands are a British overseas territory in the south-west Atlantic Ocean, where fishing and sheep farming are the main economic activities. Isolated and meagerly populated, it is the subject of a sovereignty dispute between Britain and Argentina. Despite being soundly beaten in 1982 by the British, Argentina maintains that the Falklands and the surrounding waters are theirs, even including them in the Argentine constitution.

The episode seems strange for the Falkland islanders themselves, who have freely chosen, through self-determination, to be an overseas territory of the UK and not a colony of Argentina. With British exploration set to begin in full swing, environmentalists also worry of the challenge it poses to the Falkland Islands government to protect the eco-system since the islands are a breeding ground for millions of penguins.

Now that the Falkland Islands are said to have one of the world's largest reserves of oil, mainly in the north, south and east basin and with British geological surveys estimating the oil at about 60 billion barrels; oil, money and drama not only excite the appetites of the British but that of a leading multitude as well.

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner’s aggressive speech style has invoked the power of the Peróns on the issue, created a rift in Argentinian politics, and continues to fuel the patriotic ambitions of her people to reclaim the island archipelago. The EU, Venezuela's Hugo Chávez, Brazil, Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega and the rest of Latin America have all been seemingly supportive in the duel as well.

With Chavez loudly proclaiming that ‘the time for empire is over,’ he demands the UK hand back the Falklands to Buenos Aires, and condemns Britain for flouting international law by permitting drilling in the surrounding waters.

While Argentina simmers with anger at the possibility of the Falklands becoming an energy source for Britain, on the other side of the dubious coin, an attack by Argentina on the Falklands, would also be considered an attack on the EU, because Britain is part of the EU. This means that France and Germany would have to support a British effort to defend the Falklands in the event of war because Europeans would not accept to lose the Falklands and the oil to the Argentinians.

In fact, as proponents lament, the islands may eventually fall, either directly or indirectly, under the influence of Europe, especially if they emerge as a source for energy. This move would completely erode the monopoly of OPEC (The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries) in determining the price and the growing demand for oil and instill optimism in traders buying shares in Rockhopper Exploration.

Despite Britain’s close coalition with the US, the Obama Administration is determined not to be drawn into the conflict. It has also declined to back Britain’s claim that oil exploration near the islands is sanctioned by international law, saying that the dispute is strictly a bilateral issue choosing instead to back Argentina’s calls for negotiation at the United Nations.

The cause of the commotion is not the islands themselves, but the oil reserves within the Falklands’ territorial waters. This makes the islands a very big deal because whoever owns them would own one of the world’s largest oil reserves. With the rise in oil prices and the worldwide search for new oil and gas services, it has now become more than commercially viable for drilling to begin.

Britain’s large-scale drilling of oil in the Falklands, and its establishment of a military fortress in the south Atlantic provokes a dramatic response from Argentina. Argentina on the other hand, is flying the Argentine flag over Government House in the Falkland Islands' capital, Port Stanley, claiming territorial stake to the islands, which it calls the Malvinas, because it inherited them from the Spanish crown in the early 1800s.

Whether the light shines as a unifying cause in South America, or fans the flames of war into a major political conflict between Britain and Argentina, the outcome is well worth watching. In the meantime, the action for the British is: “Drill, baby, drill.”

February 7, 2012

caribbeannewsnow

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Europe’s problems are now America’s headache... ...So as Washington scrambles to cope with the economic consequences of the euro zone crisis, it must also reassess how much it will be able to depend on Europe as a strategic partner in the future

Why the Euro Crisis Matters

By Bruce Stokes



The euro zone crisis is not simply an economic issue. It is a political problem, one that poses a grave challenge to the foreign policy and security interests of the United States. And its fallout could affect U.S. strategic interests for years to come.

The trans-Atlantic alliance, long the cornerstone of America’s engagement with the world, was already eroding before Europe’s sovereign debt problems came into view, thanks to the alliance’s lack of a clear future mission and the lure of Asia. As the continent’s economic problems accelerate, they accentuate the alliance’s underlying problems, complicating Washington’s ability to deal with its myriad foreign challenges.

Sovereign debt defaults by one or more euro zone countries and the subsequent potential breakup of the euro zone could well lead to stagnant economic growth, debilitating introspection and self-preoccupation in Europe.

“A Europe that is not united,” warns Simon Serfaty, a scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C., “is, by definition, less strong. And a Europe that is less strong will become increasingly less vital to the United States in the 2010s, when American power will need to rely on allies that are not only willing, but capable.”

The U.S.-European partnership and U.S. foreign policy have weathered potentially debilitating challenges in the past, to be sure: France’s withdrawal from NATO in 1966, the Vietnam War of the late 1960s and early 1970s, the basing of American intermediate-range nuclear missiles in the early 1980s, the wars in the Balkans in the 1990s and, most recently, the Iraq War.

Thanks to U.S. strategic leadership, the trans-Atlantic alliance remains solid, suggesting America can weather this storm, too. But past performance is no guarantee of future results. And it would be shortsighted to underestimate the challenges that lie ahead.

The Inconceivable Becomes Possible

The possibility that the euro zone could ever break up was once considered inconceivable, for several reasons. First, the economic cost of such an unraveling was just too high. Moreover, the treaty creating the euro made no provision for a nation leaving. Finally, the political commitment of the continent’s leaders to the project was so strong that it was widely assumed they would never let the euro fail.

But as the crisis has metastasized, the inconceivable has become possible. Last November, a credit rating firm, Moody’s, told its clients: “The probability of multiple defaults by euro area countries is no longer negligible. A series of defaults would also significantly increase the likelihood of one or more members not simply defaulting, but also leaving the euro area.”

This is true even though it has become increasingly clear that if any nation leaves the euro zone, it will probably have to leave the European Union, as well. In the wake of a default on its government debt and the effective devaluation that would accompany a reversion to its former currency, bank deposits, people without jobs and goods would all flee.

In turn, other European governments would likely feel the need to limit those flows to protect their own economies. This would effectively terminate a country’s participation in the European Union.

A Lost Decade?

A splintering Europe would be disastrous for the continent’s economy as a whole. The euro zone, which the European Commission thought would grow by 1.8 percent in 2012, is now expected to increase by no more than 0.5 per cent.

Individual nations could fare even worse: growth for Italy is forecast at just 0.1 per cent, while Portugal’s economy should shrink by 3 percent and Greece’s by 2.8 percent. And even these estimates may prove optimistic.

Accordingly, Europe risks a “lost decade,” not unlike that experienced by Japan in the 1990s — but with far graver consequences for the rest of the world. After all, Tokyo had a deep pool of national savings to draw on. Europe does not. The most immediate strategic problem for the United States created by the euro crisis will be the erosion of Europe’s capacity to share the burden of paying for global public goods. Debt-strapped countries are already tightening their belts, with even greater austerity in their futures. Flatlining growth will also mean decreased revenues, compounding their budgetary woes.

The Impact on Defense

The first casualty of the crisis is likely to be military spending. In 2010, the United States devoted 4.8 percent of its GDP to defense, while the United Kingdom spent 2.7 percent and Germany just 1.3 percent. So a burden-sharing gap already exists — and is growing.

“In Europe, defense spending has dropped almost 2 percent annually for a decade,” noted U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, in a speech in Brussels in early October. And since the financial crisis began in 2008, European nations have cut military spending by an amount equivalent to the entire annual defense budget of Germany.

This translates into real reductions in military capacity. Over the next several years, the United Kingdom plans to curtail defense spending in real terms by 7.5 percent by phasing out its troop deployment in Germany, scrapping the Nimrod reconnaissance aircraft, mothballing one planned aircraft carrier and leaving the other carrier with no planes to land on it for several years.

For its part, Berlin had already announced plans to trim €8.4 billion from its €31.5 billion annual defense budget. It also plans to suspend conscription, reducing armed forces personnel from 250,000 to 185,000. The Luftwaffe will curtail its planned acquisition of Eurofighters and reduce its contingent of Tornado aircraft, and the air force’s fleet of military transport aircraft will be cut back.

All of these measures will reduce Germany’s airlift potential and expeditionary capability. And since all of these cuts had already been announced before the euro crisis hit with full force, more reductions in defense spending can be expected.

The cost of shortchanging defense was already evident during the Libyan conflict, in which Britain and France would not have been able to carry out their successful mission without U.S. munitions. Factoring in America’s own budgetary constraints, with the Pentagon facing tens FOCUS The U.S.-European partnership has weathered potentially debilitating challenges in the past. But future success can’t be taken for granted. 25 of billions of dollars in mandated spending cuts, longstanding American resentment about Europe’s lack of defense burden-sharing is only likely to grow, poisoning future trans-Atlantic military collaboration.

... And on Climate Change Cooperation

European nations are on track to meet their share of the $30 billion goal, but that assessment is based solely on 2010 outlays. Europe will need to pony up equal amounts in 2011 and 2012, and more in later years. If the continent’s economy does not grow, cash-strapped governments may find it difficult to meet that commitment. And with America also facing budgetary and political constraints on such outlays, the West has little hope of leading the international effort to stop global warmEurope’s budget woes are also likely to weaken its commitments to help curb global warming. In December 2009, at the Copenhagen climate change summit, rich nations promised to give poor countries $30 billion in “new and additional” resources by 2012 to cope with climate change. That sum would be a down payment on a pledge to provide $100 billion annually in climate finance by 2020.

A Less Attractive Role Model?

More broadly, the euro crisis is undermining Europe’s pivotal position as a democratic, free-market role model for its immediate neighbors.

“The idea of the E.U. and the euro was that affluence would be created and shared,” notes Charles Kupchan, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “Now, that is fading. Instead of delivering affluence, the E.U. now delivers austerity and pain.”

Nowhere is this more evident than in Greece. One of the main reasons Athens was admitted to the European Union in 1981 was to cement democratic governance in the land where democracy itself first blossomed — but which was ruled by a military dictatorship from 1967 to 1974.

“For the Greeks,” says Serfaty, “getting into the E.U. was a way to end political instability and an undemocratic threat that defined Greece in the past. Being forced out of Europe would resurrect those things. Moreover, it would define an easy way out for other states with potential populist leadership.”

If the technocratic government installed in Athens last November fails, the temptation will be for the Greek electorate to turn to populist politicians who promise less pain. A country where the standard of living declines sharply could also face a growing public backlash in the form of rising nationalism. History teaches that an effective way to distract a disgruntled electorate is to foment external threats. A Greek politician intent on doing so would have ample opportunities to fan latent anti-Turkey sentiment in Cyprus or in the Aegean.

At the same time, association with the European economy is likely to look less and less attractive to Turkey. Already, fewer than half of Turks (48 percent) think joining the European Union would be a good thing for their country, according to the German Marshall Fund’s 2011 Transatlantic Trends survey. And given Europe’s current troubles, such support is likely to shrink over time. In addition, a Turkey that no longer aspires to join the European Union and whose behavior is no longer constrained by the need to meet conditions for admission could well become a more unpredictable, unhelpful free agent in the Middle East.

As the E.U. looks less successful economically and less politically functional, it will also hold less appeal for the former nations of the Soviet Union, which are likely to slip further back into Moscow’s orbit. For that matter, the idea of a united Europe has less allure for the Russians themselves. “Russian liberals used to present the European project as a model for Russia,” notes Dimitri Simes, president of the Center for the National Interest. “Now they cannot say this with a straight face.”

With the future of North Africa up for grabs and the Balkans still unsettled, the last thing Washington should want is for the European Union to become a centrifugal rather than a centripetal force in its own corner of the world.

Compounding the problem, European weakness and self-preoccupation could dash all American hopes for trans-Atlantic cooperation in dealing with the China challenge.

An Opening for China

Beijing is already flexing its muscles in the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean, and extending its influence in Pakistan, Africa and Latin America. In addition, its brand of state capitalism looks more attractive to many governments around the world than the form being practiced in Europe or even in the United States.

Hard-pressed to counter this influence on its own, Washington could find itself without an effective European partner. Already, European governments hoping to sell Beijing their sovereign debt have come under pressure to back off anti-dumping cases aimed at Chinese firms. If Beijing ever contributes to a euro bailout fund, as some in Europe hope, the foreign policy price for its cooperation could be steep. “The downside risk,” said Kupchan, “is that the U.S. will find itself navigating a new East Asia map very much on its own.

Left without an effective strategic partner, America’s drift toward an Asia-centric foreign policy will only accelerate. Already, a majority of Americans (51 percent), including seven in 10 Americans born after the end of the Vietnam War, thinks Asia is more important than Europe to U.S. national interests, according to the German Marshall Fund survey. And as Europe appears more and more dysfunctional, that sentiment is only likely to grow — a development that is in neither America’s nor Europe’s interest.e in Europe hope, the foreign policy price for its cooperation could be steep. “The downside risk,” said Kupchan, “is that the U.S. will find itself navigating a new East Asia map very much on its own.”

For all these reasons, Europe’s problems are now America’s headache, too. So as Washington scrambles to cope with the economic consequences of the euro zone crisis, it must also reassess how much it will be able to depend on Europe as a strategic partner in the future.

Bruce Stokes is a senior transatlantic fellow at the German Marshall Fund in Washington, DC.

February 01, 2012

gmfus

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Amnesty International slams Haitian judiciary for dropping Duvalier case

Amnesty slams Haitian judiciary for dropping Duvalier case


LONDON, England -- Haiti’s judicial authorities have dealt yet another blow to the victims of former leader Jean-Claude Duvalier, Amnesty International said this week after the criminal case against the former “president-for-life” for grave human rights violations was dropped.

Jean-Claude DuvalierAn investigating judge in Port-au-Prince on Monday announced that Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier will not stand trial for alleged crimes against humanity – including torture, disappearances and extrajudicial executions – but only for embezzlement of public funds committed during his rule between 1971 and 1986. The text of the judge’s decision has not been made public.

Duvalier has been under investigation in Haiti since he returned from exile in France in January 2011, after a group of victims filed complaints accusing him of crimes against humanity as well as corruption and theft.

The victims can appeal the judge’s decision and Amnesty International has vowed to continue supporting their search for justice.

“The conclusion of the sham investigation into Duvalier is a disgrace and will further entrench impunity in Haiti. No serious effort was made to determine the truth despite the multiple complaints and abundant evidence about the crimes committed and the victims,” said Javier Zúñiga, special adviser at Amnesty International, who researched the crimes of Jean-Claude Duvalier in the 1980s.

“The handful of victims that have been interviewed had been subjected to intimidation by Duvalier supporters and his lawyers. It is clear that the investigating judge left out invaluable evidence and decided not to interview all the victims that filed complaints. This is a dark day for Haiti and for justice.

“Duvalier benefited from a safe haven in France for 25 years until he returned to Haiti, where the authorities have failed to hold him to account for the crimes under international law perpetrated by his subordinates while he was in power.”

In January 2011, Amnesty International submitted extensive documentation on the grave human rights violations committed under Duvalier, none of which was considered by the magistrate.

Under international law, torture, enforced disappearances, extrajudicial executions and arbitrary arrests are considered crimes against humanity when committed as part of a systematic or widespread attack against the civilian population.

No statute of limitations may apply to crimes against humanity and the alleged perpetrators cannot benefit from amnesties, even in the case of former heads of state.

Amnesty International has expressed concern that the current Haitian government lacks the will to bring Duvalier to justice.

“Recent public statements from President Martelly hinted at pardoning Duvalier. This could amount to unacceptable pressure and interference with the investigation. Inviting Jean-Claude Duvalier to take part in public official ceremonies clearly showed that the government wanted to rehabilitate Duvalier instead of holding him to account,” said Zúñiga.

“Haiti has failed to live up to its international obligations to investigate all allegations of crimes against humanity and bring their perpetrators to justice. Victims have been awaiting justice for more than 25 years, and today’s decision is a major setback to them and all Haitians. But this is not the end of the road – we will continue to support the victims at the appeal stage and in international instances if necessary.”

February 2, 2012

caribbeannewsnow

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

The number of Bahamian households surviving on less than $5,000 per year has increased by an "alarming" 83 per cent in the past four years in The Bahamas... ...indicating that the recession has most impacted those who "could least afford to be affected"

FAMILIES EARNING UNDER $5K YEARLY INCREASE BY 83%

By NEIL HARTNELL
Tribune Business Editor

Nassau, The Bahamas


THE NUMBER of Bahamian households surviving on less than $5,000 per year has increased by an "alarming" 83 per cent in the past four years, Department of Statistics data shows, indicating the recession has most impacted those who "could least afford to be affected".

Figures taken from the Department's 2007 and 2011 Labour Force surveys, and supplied to Tribune Business yesterday by a private sector contact, show that at all income brackets - from $100,000-plus to between $0-$5,000 - there had been a steady fall of Bahamian families into a lower earning category, further evidence of the recession's toll on pay and earnings.

By far the most striking comparison between the years 2007 and 2011, the former representing the recession's start, is the 3,620 jump in the number of Bahamian families surviving on less than $5,000 per year. This jump - from 4,355 in 2007 to 7,975 in 2011 - represents a startling increase.

"By any reasonable measure, that is poverty," Tribune Business's source said of those earning less than $5,000 per annum. Winston Rolle, the Bahamas Chamber of Commerce and Employers Confederation's (BCCEC) chairman, also described this as "very alarming" when contacted by this newspaper.

Agreeing that the data comparisons showed the impact of the recession, and the rise in unemployment and reduced incomes, on Bahamian society and the family unit, Mr Rolle added: "A lot of those households are driven by a single income for the most part, so any loss of income for that bread winner has a drastic effect on the income of the household, which is a big issue.

"It also goes to show the persons most affected by the recession were those who could most ill-afford to be affected.... The persons at the bottom end are feeling it the most, because there's nowhere else to go to."

When it came to the number of Bahamian households earning $20,000 or less, comparisons between 2007 and 2011 showed they had increased from 24,780 to 33,015 - a increase of one-third or 33 per cent.

Suggesting this was further evidence of the squeeze being imposed on the Bahamian middle class, the Tribune Business contact who provided the data said: "This is hardly a level of income which can support a middle class standard of living. This would appear to be evidence of a significant reversal in the upward movement of households towards the middle class, and away from abject poverty."

The income bracket that has been the most stable during the recession was the largest, the $20,000-$40,000 per annum income category. Populated by 30,305 families in the 2007 Labour Force survey, their numbers had only dropped to 29,110 by 2011.

This suggests, based on the data seen and corroborated by Tribune Business, that while many Bahamian families may have dropped out of the middle class, their ranks have been replenished by falling higher income earners.

The number of families earning incomes higher than $40,000 fell from 48,370 to 38,305 between 2007 and 2011, a decrease of some 21 per cent, the Department of Statistics data shows.

Mr Rolle told Tribune Business that the household income declines showed the vicious circle that held the Bahamian business community squarely in its grip. Consumers, because they had less disposable income, were spending less with Bahamian firms. In turn, those firms were earning less, forcing them to cut working hours and lay-off more employees.

"This has a direct impact on consumers' ability to spend and support businesses that are locally based," the BCCEC chairman told Tribune Business. "The very few monies or reduced income they have has to be spent on basic needs. It obviously impacts the overall business community as a whole.

"It also goes to show the widespread impact of the whole recession. It's evident that persons from all walks of life appear to have been affected by it."

Mr Rolle said there was little sign of "a significant reversal" in the economic climate taking place currently. But he added that all other countries, not just the Bahamas, were being impacted by the global economic climate.

January 31, 2012

tribune242

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

The political campaign season is well underway in The Islands... ...The governing Free National Movement (FNM) has officially launched its full slate of candidates for the upcoming general election... ...Its apparent messages were ‘We Deliver!” and that the FNM is, ‘Best for Bahamians and Better for The Bahamas’

Will the FNM deliver?



Erica Wells
Guardian Managing Editor
erica@nasguard.com

Nassau, The Bahamas




When Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham addressed the nation last week in his annual New Year’s address, there was something decidedly different about the tone of his presentation.

Outside of political rallies, formal communications such as an address to the nation are often relatively void of emotion.

Last Wednesday’s address was different.  It sought to give Bahamians a reason to believe.  At a time when many are struggling under the weight of a sluggish economy, and some are simply hopeless, it could not have been more appropriate.

Ingraham assured Bahamians that despite the tumultuous times brought on by the global economic downturn in 2008, and the impact that it has had — and continues to have — on The Bahamas, the country is headed in the right direction.

“Despite the severe economic shock of 2008 and the challenges of tomorrow, we are a fortunate country and we are moving in the right direction,” the prime minister said.

“So I say to you... that as a people, we can rightly feel a spirit of gratitude for the many blessings of our Creator.  Let us build on this spirit of gratitude with a spirit of hope.  Let us do so in grateful acknowledgment of the many blessings and the promise of our beautiful Bahamaland.”

This could turn out to be a hard sell for the hundreds of unemployed and underemployed Bahamians who are finding it difficult to meet the most basic of necessities.  Many cannot afford to pay their utility bills and are laboring hard to buy groceries.  Some have lost their homes.  Others have given up any hope of finding a job after months and months of searching.

Convincing Bahamians that the country is headed in the right direction may prove to be a difficult task.  Yet, as a general election looms, convincing voters that the country is headed in the right direction will be crucial to the Free National Movement’s success at the polls.

Progress

Even Ingraham’s harshest critics would have to admit that the Free National Movement in the last five years has accomplished a number of items on its ‘to do’ list.

Whether it has been enough to secure another term in office, and whether the party has been effective in communicating what it views as its major accomplishments, remains to be seen.

In his New Year’s address last week, Ingraham took the opportunity to remind Bahamians of the FNM’s accomplishments.  The New Year’s address reads a lot like a progress report.

The list of accomplishments highlighted by Ingraham was extensive.

It included job preservation and creation, the re-development of Lynden Pindling International Airport, the Airport Gateway project, the New Providence Road Improvement Project, an increase in funding for the resources for formal education, an increase in youth development programs, and sports funding.

Ingraham’s list also cited transforming the country’s crime fighting and judicial legislative structure and facilities, investment in healthcare through the prescription drug benefit and the upgrade of facilities at the Princess Margaret and Rand Memorial Hospitals, improved public educational facilities, the relocation of the downtown container port, the dredging of Nassau Harbour, the construction of a new straw market, and infrastructural improvements in various Family Islands, among others.

While Ingraham has not articulated the ‘national plan’ that many have called for, the significant infrastructure projects on which he has placed a priority in this term in office provide some insight into his vision for the country.

“Investing in infrastructure is a means to achieving essential national goals and creating jobs,” said Ingraham.  “Investing in infrastructure and in housing is an investment in people and communities.  It is an investment in the quality of life, livelihoods and life spans.  It is an investment in the future of The Bahamas.”

But some of the significant infrastructure projects, such as the New Providence Road Improvement Project, may do more harm than good when it comes to the party’s re-election prospects.

This point has not been lost on the prime minister, seen in his public apology to motorists during last week’s address.  Many have been greatly angered and inconvenienced by the extensive roadworks undertaken in the troubled project.

“I again thank you for your patience and apologize on behalf of the Government of The Bahamas for the delays, inconveniences and disruptions,” said Ingraham.

“Despite these challenges, we believe that in the end it will be well worth the sacrifice.”

But by the end of the project will it be too late for some voters?

The message

The address also provided an insight into how the party plans to convince the voting public that it deserves another term in office.

It attempted to drive home a message of action, a message of an administration that “gets the job done”, in comparison to a PLP administration which the FNM has labeled as indecisive and slow to act.

Referring to what he described as a response to “urgent infrastructure requirements” in the context of the global economic crisis, Ingraham said in the address: “No responsible government could have followed the path of delay, indecision and half measures.  We had to act decisively and comprehensively.  Not only was a collapse (of the Bahamian economy) prevented.  We are now moving forward.”

The campaign season is well underway.  The Free National Movement officially launched its slate of candidates for the entire Bahamas last night.  Its apparent messages were ‘We Deliver!” and that the FNM is, ‘Best for Bahamians and Better for The Bahamas’.

One is a familiar refrain from the “Delivery Boy” slogan used when Ingraham first joined the FNM as its leader.  The other seems a clear strategy not to cede any ground to the PLP on which party is more committed to the interests of Bahamians.

But it remains to be seen if these messages will deliver to the FNM and Hubert Ingraham a fourth election victory.

 

• Log on to thenassauguardian.com and take part in our regular web poll: Do you agree with Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham that the country is headed in the right direction?


Jan 30, 2012

thenassauguardian

Sunday, January 29, 2012

What an end to 2011 for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people in Jamaica!

Let's Do More To Protect Gay Rights For Jamaica 50





By Corbin Gordon and Tyler Thomas, Contributors- Jamaica Gleaner

What an end to 2011 for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people in Jamaica! For the first time in Jamaica's history, on the occasion of our 50th year of Independence, there is a prime minister who has publicly stated that people should not be discriminated against because of their sexual orientation or gender identity.
This is evidence of the strides we have made as a people in promoting respect and tolerance for the human rights of LGBT Jamaicans. We all deserve applause.
Today, approximately seven per cent of HIV/AIDS organisations in Jamaica are working with men who have sex with men (MSM); more and more research is being done on homosexuality and homophobia in Jamaica; there are social and entertainment spaces that are friendly and for LGBT people; and there are more than five LGBT-focused organisations and many support groups islandwide.
Notwithstanding all of that, the concerns about the continued discrimination and of acts of violence being perpetrated against the LGBT community are still legitimate. In 2011, 84 incidents of human-rights abuses on the grounds of real or perceived sexual orientation and gender identity were reported to J-FLAG. This included murder, home evictions, mob attacks, sexual violence, extortion, blackmail and other forms of harassment meted out mainly to young males. Family members, friends, landlords, mobs and even the police perpetrated these.
Recently, in November 2011, the United Nations Human Rights Committee recommended that Jamaica "send a clear message that it does not tolerate any form of harassment, discrimination or violence against persons [because of] their sexual orientation, and should ensure that individuals who incite violence against homosexuals are investigated, prosecuted and properly sanctioned".
Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller's bold historic statement did just that. It should be seen as a step in the right direction, at the right time, as we celebrate our Jubilee year of Independence. Her statement will go down in history and there is much hope for the future of LGBT persons living in Jamaica.
Achievements
LGBT persons, their families, friends and allies have a lot to celebrate and be thankful for. Many positive things happened last year. Here is a rundown of the top seven positive statements and actions, progress, and achievements in 2011.
1. In August, Police Commissioner Owen Ellington, in the Jamaica Constabulary's Force Orders 3,351, instructed police personnel to respect the human rights of persons, inter alia, their sexual orientation. There were also clear instructions on how to proceed with investigations and arrests to bring perpetrators to justice. And in July, the commissioner withdrew Senior Superintendent Fitz Bailey's controversial claims suggesting links between homosexual men and organised crime.
2. Throughout the year 2011, there were many objective media outputs, both print and electronic, about the human rights of LGBT persons, the buggery law, and having gays in the Cabinet.
3. There were a number of incident-free gay-rights public stands in front of Devon House, Emancipation Park, and The Little Theatre, as well as near the Office of the Prime Minister.
4. In April, former president of the Senate, Professor Oswald Harding, spoke out against the Parliament's continued stance of ignoring discourse around the issues of repealing the buggery law and protection based on sexual orientation.
5. In June, the National Youth Survey, conducted by then Ministry of Youth, Sports and Culture, found that street youth are far more tolerant and accepting of gays. Earlier in May, the first National Survey on Attitudes and Perceptions of Jamaicans towards same-sex relationship highlighted that 20 per cent of Jamaicans are tolerant.
6. Coca-Cola apologised to Jamaica for sponsoring a music event with anti-gay lyrics sung by Sizzla.
7. In October, the first legal challenge to the buggery law was launched by Jamaican gay-rights activist Maurice Tomlinson through AIDS-Free World.
These achievements were possible because more and more of us are realising that human rights belong to every one of us, without exception. More of us are promoting human rights. However, much more needs to be done to make Jamaica a cohesive and just society where everyone can live, work and raise his or her family.
Therefore, unless we know them, unless we demand that they be respected, and unless we defend our rights to love and care for each other, without distinction, these rights will be just words in decades-old documents.
As then Health Minister Rudyard Spencer declared on December 1, 2011 at the Leaders' Breakfast on HIV and AIDS, "We should not ignore the cries of those who continue to suffer because we fail to do what is right. It is time to be courageous and to be strong. It is time to usher our country into a new day where justice, liberty, and freedom prevail for all."
It is important that we begin recognising and respecting the rights and beliefs of others.
This jubilee year, more of us must demonstrate our respect for the rights of our friends and loved ones, as well as others we come in contact with. We must be ready to support the Government in demonstrating its commitments to protect and promote the human rights of all Jamaicans, regardless of their socio-economic status, sexual orientation, health status, disability, work, and political and religious persuasions.

Corbin Gordon is the programme and advocacy coordinator at the Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals & Gays (J-FLAG). Tyler Thomas is a young gay university student.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Majority Rule and the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) in The Bahamas

Majority Rule and the PLP



By KHALILA NICOLLS
khalilanicolls@gmail.com

Nassau, NP
The Bahamas



EVERY year when January 10 rolls around, I often feel as though the Progressive Liberal Party's glorification of Majority Rule Day is a political strategy to guilt me into pledging my allegiance to the PLP as a show of respect for all they did to bring about the liberation of the black masses in the Bahamas.

As an African woman who should surely see the importance of Majority Rule, the feelings are troubling. Not because the political strategy, if it were one, is tasteless, but because I believe contrarily that the PLP has failed to bring about true advance for black Bahamians as a collective body.

That is not to say I deny the contributions of our nation-builders and the significance of their accomplishments. But that is to say I do not think the PLP is exempt from the scrutiny of black Bahamians. The political organisation has a 59-year-old history, and it seems to me, all of their black cred(ibility) is based on pre-1980s glory.

Furthermore, I believe a true test of national progress is not to be found by assessing the best of us, speaking here in terms of economics and access, but the least of us.

And one only needs eyes to see that the underdevelopment of black Bahamians over the past 30 years has been and continues to be a national disgrace.

Surely there has been progress, but many examples are anomalous: black Bahamians who received handouts under Sir Lynden Pindling's arm of influence; who profited from illicit activity, whether drugs or gambling; who benefited from political connections or exceptional educational opportunities; and black Bahamians with destiny working in their favour.

Outside of those examples, the PLP would have to admit that economic progress for black Bahamians predated the PLP. By the time Majority Rule slipped through, there was already a thriving black middle class, for which the PLP cannot lay claim. This progress was achieved under the United Bahamian Party (UBP) government, albeit in spite of the UBPs efforts.

Within the black middle class. there was the Adderley family of Wilford Parliament Adderley, which was comprised of lawyers, politicians and doctors; the Bethel family of Marcus Bethel consisting of undertakers and politicians; Sir Milo Butler, patron of Milo B Butler and Sons, who produced a line of grocery merchants; Jackson Burnside, a dentist, who paved the way for his future lineage of professionals; noted patron of the Eneas clan, Bishop Wilmore Eneas, who was a religious leader.

Others in the black middle class included Dr CR Walker, restaurateur James Russel, banker A Leon McKinney, candy maker Ulrick Mortimer, and clothing retailer Erdley Moss. Irwin McCartney and Dwit Thompson owned a custom brokerage business; Audley C Kemp was in the liquor business, as were Charles and George McKinney; Hugh Campbell Cleare owned an East Bay Street bicycle shop; and Harcourt Carter sold Japanese electrical appliances.

The PLP did not make these men. On the contrary. Many of these men made the PLP. And since then, what? What progress has there been for black Bahamians who are not counted amongst the established lot.

On balance, as a collective community, black Bahamians are still in an economic and social quandary despite the hope-filled promises of better for blacks and the idealism of the Majority Rule era.

Although the PLP is still the most vocal champion of Majority Rule, whatever momentum it had as a galvanising force for the black community back then, today it has no credible basis to portray itself as the people's party.

For all of its former glory, the PLP has turned into just another political party, arguably no better or worse than any of the others, white, black, red or green. Far from being revolutionary, the PLP has been a mere "tweaker of the status quo". So what then is the meaning of Majority Rule, the PLP's symbol of black liberation?

Many of the people who take exception to the concept of majority rule at the same time promote the concept of One Bahamas. But both constructs are based on race. Proponents of One Bahamas try to express a raceless reality, but there is no such thing.

One Bahamas simply expresses an identity based on the negation of race. Majority Rule on the other hand does so based on the affirmation of race. In either case, without a racial consciousness One Bahamas and Majority Rule would be meaningless, redundant phrases.

For One Bahamas to have relevance and validity, it needs to express a vision of racial cohesion in the Bahamas, not based on the denial of race but on the acceptance of race.

Racial difference is not something to shun. It is part of our cultural diversity, and it is an important to understanding our cultural heritage. We should not seek to deny or inflate race, which exposes us to insult and political manipulation. We should accept it.

In one sense, Majority Rule is an inherently paradoxical concept, because in a system of political representation, presumed to be democratic, any elected government is a majority government. Therefore, even under the UPB's tenure there was majority rule.

One could argue that based on the UBP's racially discriminating laws that privileged white people, men and land owners, the body of eligible voters represented a national minority. If this were statistically true, then any claim to majority rule prior to the 1962 election could stand to be challenged. But even still, within the legal framework of governance, the UBP was without question a legitimate majority government.

So what then do we make of the 1962 election, which represented the first vote in which there was universal suffrage, and the 1967 election, which represented first time in Bahamian representational politics that the racial composition of the House of Assembly reflected the racial composition of the Bahamas society?

In order to give majority rule significance beyond its racial character, some point to the fact that in 1967 for the first time, "the will of the majority was finally expressed and converted into political power".

After all, in 1962, the PLP won 32,399 votes. But because of seat distribution, with only 26,826 votes, the UBP retained its power and went on to lead the next government.

However, the argument does not stand scrutiny. First, the 1962 conundrum was a flaw of the political system, not the racial dynamics or a kind of social imbalance peculiar to the age.
Although the gerrymandering related to seat distribution was a major obstacle, the fundamental flaw in the system was inherent. It still exists today, and it is globally felt.

In the modern democratic system, a government can form a majority even without the popular vote. Arguably it happened in 1967 - which questions the very basis of the PLP's claim to majority rule.
In 1967, the PLP won only 18,452 votes. Collectively, the PLP opposition secured 24,633 seats.
That hardly represents a popular majority. And in terms of seat distribution, the PLP came out even with the UBP: 18 seats each.

It was only after forming an alliance with Randol Fawkes of the Labour Party and independent candidate Alvin Braynen that the PLP was able to secure a majority. So what does that really say about Majority Rule?
From the standpoint of a popular uprising or black advancement then, 1962 was a much more impressive showing, because at least then the PLP won the popular vote hands down.

Given all that has been said, clearly Majority Rule requires further examination to separate fact from fantasy, and to arrive at true meaning over myth.

Another element that flies in the face of Majority Rule's traditional narrative is the PLPs struggle with an ideology of black empowerment.

Compared to the likes of black nationalists in the United States like Kwame Ture (Stokley Carmichael) or Marcus Garvey, the PLP's concept of race was very tame. And the accomplishment of Majority Rule was no sign of black power. It represented change, yes, even political progress, but a revolutionary concept of black empowerment, no.

So what I find interesting and often overlooked is that, for all of its rhetoric, the political leadership who led blacks into an era of majority rule did so while at the same time running away from its black identity. Although it used race as a political tool to galvanise its constituents, the PLP did not use an affirmative ideology of blackness.

I spoke to one of the few living black parliamentarians of the 1967 election, and he admitted that black Bahamians were not joined in their common struggle for equal rights and justice, by an affirmative black power struggle. There was no such concept within the PLP's public platform.
I found further proof of this in an account of Sir Arthur Foulkes, who documented in short what he called the "PLP's long lie about race".

"Miriam Makeba, the celebrated black South African singer, was among a number of prominent blacks in America who wanted to do business in the new Bahamas.

"But Sir Lynden stopped her when he heard she was romantically linked with black power firebrand Stokely Carmichael. She left Sir Lynden's office in tears and never came back. The new Bahamas was having nothing to do with that," stated Sir Arthur.

He also recounted the story of Lady Marguerite Pindling, African American songstress Nina Simone and Bahamian journalist, Oswald Brown. Nina Simone, a known activist who used her music to share the struggles of black people and spread black protest songs, performed a concert in Nassau with Lady Marguerite and Mr Brown in attendance.
Mr Brown was so moved by the performance that he ran on stage and kissed Ms Simone's feet. By his own account, it was a sign of support, because there were some in the audience who started to boo her.
Lady Marguerite was reportedly unimpressed with Mr Brown and Ms Simone. According to Sir Arthur, Mr Brown was rebuked and chastised by the party.

Some would argue that the PLP supported black power, just a moderate version of it, but I wonder if the documented contradictions call this into question.

The PLP was not alone in this contradiction. The black dilemma was most notably played out in the United States between the differing ideological stances of Martin Luther King Jr and Malcom X.

However, what is often overlooked is that even Martin Luther King became more radical in his latter years. His famous lament was, "I fear I have integrated my people into a burning house".
In the white community, Sir Lynden is vilified as a being a black radical who racialised the country. In the black community he is heralded as a pragmatic moderate who knew how to balance delicate dynamics.

To me, there are any number of anecdotes that speak to a black government that was simply conscious of its inherent lack of power.

Nothing can invalidate the fact that Majority Rule represented the shattering of a glass ceiling for black Bahamians seeking political office. But there is much to question about some of the traditional narratives of Majority Rule: that it represented the expressed will of the majority; that it represented a form of black liberation; and that it established some incontrovertible black cred for the PLP.

It is not that I have a problem accepting Majority Rule as a mammoth accomplishment for black Bahamians. I believe Majority Rule marks an important political milestone; it recognises the political progress of black Bahamians in breaking a new barrier. I do not, however, believe it is a sign of black liberation or progress.

History has shown that black representation failed to bring about progress for black Bahamians as a collective body. The Bahamas still has an economic structure that favours the merchant class. Now, instead of profiting families like the Moskos and Pinders, the policies profit the likes of Franklyn Wilson and Tennyson Wells.

Although there was growth in the black middle class in the 70s and 80s, it has remained virtually stagnant since then. In the industries of merit, finance and tourism, Bahamians still have little ownership, and struggle to assume some of the top posts.

For Majority Rule to have had meaning beyond a recognition of progress for blacks in political representation, the PLP would have needed a true black mandate rooted in the affirmation of blackness.

In its 1968 constitution, the PLP stated as one of its objectives "to strive for and maintain the political emancipation of all the people of the Bahamas". For a political organisation, this would seem appropriate. After all, black people were under-represented in the House of Assembly. Looking skin deep, that was obvious.

What would have been more visionary and appropriate as an objective for a black majority government rooted in a shared ideology of blackness was the emancipation of every black person from the shackles of mental slavery. It is a task no white individual or white government can achieve for black people, and to this day, few if any black governments have undertaken the task with institutional purpose or strength.

A black government undertaking a black mandate would have examined all of the institutions of black oppression and represented the self-interests of black people.

To me, the promise of Majority Rule suggested that now we are going to make black people better off. Not just those at the top, but as a nation of black people we are going to grow. And no matter how much the PLP boasts, I just cannot see how it has lived up to that promise.

* Pan-African writer and cultural critic Noelle Khalila Nicolls is a practising journalist in The Bahamas.

January 25, 2012

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