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Time to send in the JDF to Antigua and Barbados?

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  • Time to send in the JDF to Antigua and Barbados?

    Perhaps its time to send in the JDF Special Forces to seize some of the immigration officers and bring them to Jamacia for trial.

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    J'cans say they were roughed up and jailed by Antiguan authorities

    Women Cry Foul
    BY COREY ROBINSON Sunday Observer Staff Reporter robinsonc@jamaicaobserver.com
    Sunday, December 18, 2011












    ERICA Atkinson and Shauntell Ferguson sat on a bench outside the arrival area at the Norman Manley International Airport depressed, tired, and infuriated by the treatment they said they received from Antiguan immigration authorities last Thursday evening.

    They had just arrived in Kingston after surviving a visit they described as "hell", which they claimed saw them being jailed, taunted, ridiculed, and exposed to serious health risks in the eastern Caribbean country.
    Shauntell Ferguson (left) and Erica Atkinson, who were among a group of Jamaicans denied entry to Antigua and who said they were verbally abused by immigration officials in that country, stand outside the arrival area after landing at the Norman Manley International Airport on Thursday. (Photo: Garfield Robinson)




    Shauntell Ferguson (left) and Erica Atkinson, who were among a group of Jamaicans denied entry to Antigua and who said they were verbally abused by immigration officials in that country, stand outside the arrival area after landing at the Norman Manley International Airport on Thursday. (Photo: Garfield Robinson)


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    Atkinson, a bar operator, and Ferguson, who is unemployed, said they went to the island "just for the experience". Atkinson, a relatively frequent flyer who celebrated her birthday in September, said the vacation was a belated present to herself.
    Ferguson said the trip was her first time leaving Jamaica.
    Their excitement reportedly turned sour upon arrival at the V C Bird International Airport in Antigua about 9:00 Sunday night.
    There, they were among a group of Jamaicans — mostly females — who were yanked from Immigration checking lines, told to sit on a nearby bench and await the arrival of an airport supervisor, they said.
    Thirty minutes later, a male supervisor arrived with other Immigration workers and began searching the group of Jamaicans. He asked questions about their business in the country, and about the persons who were to receive them.
    Some of these 'receivers' or hosts — as in Atkinson's case — were invited into the interviews, she said.
    "He asked us how long we knew each other and how do we communicate. I told him I knew my receiver for two years, and that we mostly communicated over the telephone," said Atkinson.
    "They then asked if we were going to have sex and I told them that that was our personal business and that it had nothing to do with Immigration," related Atkinson, who said that her response angered the supervisor, who continued hurling disrespectful questions and insults at her and her friend, repeatedly urging them to "tell the truth, man".
    Ferguson, who had booked reservations at a hotel for two weeks, was asked by the Immigration officers how she would finance her visit.
    "I told them that I travelled with US$331 and that I would receive more money from a friend in the United States, who would accompany me on the island two days later," she said, adding that the supervisor, obviously in disbelief, instructed her to return to the bench as he intended to continue his interrogation later.
    It was then, according to the women, that the group recognised that they were in trouble.
    They said about five female Immigration officers who were watching the proceedings started hurling insults at the group of Jamaicans, alleging that they were in the country to "take their men".
    The insults grew louder they said, as more female Immigration officers joined the jeering party, laughing at the Jamaicans as they awaited their fate on the airport bench.
    Said Atkinson: "They (immigration officers) started to jeer us. One of them pointed at me and said 'Look at her, look at her. She coming to take Antiguan women's men. All you Jamaican women do is come here to take our men. We don't want you here,'" she said.
    Up to yesterday, the Sunday Observer tried unsuccessfully to elicit a response from Antiguan Immigration officials regarding the incident.
    Calls to a cellular phone listed as belonging to the Chief Immigration Officer went to voicemail.
    The matter was also reported to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Jamaica, but a response from that Government body was not received in time for publication.
    The statements allegedly made by the Immigration personnel caused many of the Jamaicans to begin questioning the Immigration workers about what they had done wrong and what was to be their fate, Atkinson said.
    But their queries, she alleged, only resulted in more insults.
    Atkinson said one female Immigration officer laughed as she chanted to the tune of a popular Christmas carol: "Jingle bells, jingle bells, down in the cell them a go...," continued Atkinson, who said she began to cry when she heard the word 'jail'.
    The Immigration officers were relentless, despite her tears, she said.
    "Look at her, she acting as if she is a baby. Oh, you want a cotton candy or a chocolate. You think you too pretty to go in the lock-up?" asked the woman, Atkinson said.
    Ferguson backed up her friend's story: "Everyone was just astonished because we did not think that if we were denied stay we would have been jailed. We were put among their prisoners who had committed all kinds of crimes; our lives were in danger," she insisted.
    Worse than the taunting and disrespect they said they received from the Immigration workers, the women said, was the deplorable condition of the single cell they were all placed in at a nearby police station.
    "It had faeces on the wall, there were plastic bags, plastic bottles, dirty water with pee, and used toilet tissue on the ground," said Ferguson, her face a picture of disgust as she spoke.
    An incensed Atkinson said that the bathroom facilities at the police station were even more unsanitary.
    "I told them that I wanted to use the bathroom and they directed me to one directly beside the cell," she said. "It was in the same condition," said Atkinson.
    She said the odour was so bad, police officers covered their nostrils when walking on the cell block.
    "When I asked if I could use another bathroom, a policeman said 'we don't have any female to take you to it, so you might as well use that one,'" she claimed, adding that she eventually chose to use the designated bathroom.
    The policeman reportedly taunted her, saying: "If you hold up the urine, you are going to end up with bladder infection, and if you use that one, you are going to end up with infection anyway. So choose which one of the infections you want'."
    According to Atkinson, she spent one day in the lock-up as she secured a lawyer who got her bail. She was released into the care of her receiver. She said she spent approximately US$135 for travel expenses, bail fees, and lawyer fees.
    Ferguson said her ordeal was worse. She spent four days in the unsanitary jail cell before being granted bail. She claimed she spent more than the equivalent of J$200,000 during her ordeal.
    They say up to now they have not been told what they were charged with.
    The women say the Antiguan lawyer whose services they had engaged took the matter to court on Thursday in a bid to find out why they were detained. However, the judge, they claimed, declared that the Antiguan authorities had a right to deny them entry and any redress would have to be sought on their return to Jamaica.
    The women told the Sunday Observer that following the court appearance they were taken from the courthouse to the nearby airport where they were placed on an aircraft destined for Jamaica.
    Said Atkinson: "We need justice. All of their (Antiguan) secrets need to come out in the light. The people of Jamaica who have faced the same thing that we have faced need to come out. And I am begging our Government to defend us," she said.



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...#ixzz1gtbR1pFK
    The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

  • #2
    ... yuh joking... right?
    "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

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    • #3
      Unemployed? Just went to Antigua for the experience? hmmmm

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      • #4
        I know. Sounds fishy. Bar owner or manager, and one unemployed. Two weeks in a hotel and had only $331US in her pocket. Someone to come from the US with the rest of the money. Mmm. Sounds like people who I would be reluctant to allow into my country. Of course Jamaica has an open-door policy, but others are less open. Don't think I blame them.

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        • #5
          Is that a reason to mistreat them though.

          Yuh done know the man-tiefing fear is real in dem deh places. LoL

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          • #6
            Yup, a car load of men from Tivoli could take of the matter.
            The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

            Comment


            • #7
              One was clearly going to see a man and he was there to pick her up and its not immigration business to ask about her sex plan.

              The other one that was going to the hotel looks like she was there to meet a man from the US but the arragements were not made properly. The man should have arrived before or pre paid for the hotel. If She did not meet the entry requirements then she sould be sent home without mistreating her. None of the women were found with drugs.
              The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

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              • #8
                Hide unno man yes Antiguans, otherwise unno aggo lose dem to even average looking Jakan ladies. LoL

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                • #9
                  Nomination - Joke Post of the Year!

                  Time, much respect boss for making my nomination for the title of, “Joke Post of the Year!”

                  So, you are suggesting that we launch a full-scale war against a sovereign nation state for doing what it feels is necessary for its society. This suggestion should be joke for years and years (although I strongly suspect that you made it “tongue in cheek”)! There is so much I could discuss with you if only I knew you personally -- I am referring here to things that I cannot post on the web.

                  Seriously, though, so many of our Jamaican people have worked overtime to create suspicion, animosity and other negative feelings among other people that this incident is not even worth a discussion here (just check, for example, the YouTube video posted by Mosiah yesterday – everything is connected, believe it or not). Have you ever tried to make a serious comparison with the activities of the two largest migrant people in our region: Guyanese and Jamaicans? The result might be very educational (and I have spent much time in George Town).

                  Now, we can idly chat about “getting man” as much as we want, but the problem is much, much deeper than this simplistic reasoning! Believe me, the word “Jamaican” nowadays does not always conjure connotations of speed, reggae music and jerk chicken!

                  The actions by the Barbados and Antigua immigration departments is merely a tip in the bucket of the problem we face. I suggest that you search for a commentary written by Professor Errol Miller, and published in the Gleaner around ten years ago. It’s entitled “Targeting Jamaicans,” and it provides very interesting reading. I could search for it and post it for you, but I am really, really tired of discussing this vexing topic here.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Historian View Post
                    Time, much respect boss for making my nomination for the title of, “Joke Post of the Year!”

                    So, you are suggesting that we launch a full-scale war against a sovereign nation state for doing what it feels is necessary for its society. This suggestion should be joke for years and years (although I strongly suspect that you made it “tongue in cheek”)! There is so much I could discuss with you if only I knew you personally -- I am referring here to things that I cannot post on the web.

                    Seriously, though, so many of our Jamaican people have worked overtime to create suspicion, animosity and other negative feelings among other people that this incident is not even worth a discussion here (just check, for example, the YouTube video posted by Mosiah yesterday – everything is connected, believe it or not). Have you ever tried to make a serious comparison with the activities of the two largest migrant people in our region: Guyanese and Jamaicans? The result might be very educational (and I have spent much time in George Town).

                    Now, we can idly chat about “getting man” as much as we want, but the problem is much, much deeper than this simplistic reasoning! Believe me, the word “Jamaican” nowadays does not always conjure connotations of speed, reggae music and jerk chicken!

                    The actions by the Barbados and Antigua immigration departments is merely a tip in the bucket of the problem we face. I suggest that you search for a commentary written by Professor Errol Miller, and published in the Gleaner around ten years ago. It’s entitled “Targeting Jamaicans,” and it provides very interesting reading. I could search for it and post it for you, but I am really, really tired of discussing this vexing topic here.
                    To be honest I have not taken this matter seriously. Had I put on my law enforcement thinking hat then I would have wondered if that unemployed woman was there for reasons other than sex. If does not appear that she brought anything in so if she is up to something other that sex then we would have to consider if she was there to take something out. Whatever is the truth they should not have tossed her in jail. She did not commit a crime yet.
                    The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      If they two ladies had come from North America or Europe with the same assets and plans (and of a lighter hue)... they would have passed through immigration with no problem.

                      That being said, genuine tourists they need to understand that traveling with less assets than you need to keep you for the time you intend to stay (regardless of who is meeting you in two days time) is enough reason to send you back home. However, the disrespectful treatment is not called for. They would never try that with North American or European visitors... shameful behaviour by the officers if true (and I am most inclined to believe the ladies' story).
                      Peter R

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                      • #12
                        How many North American ladies smuggle drugs into Antigua every year?

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                        • #13
                          I don't know but it is not unreasonable to think that they (NA women) don't...

                          if these JA ladies were caught with drugs that's one thing... if they weren't , why does lack of funds warrant that kind of treatment? just send them home if you don't want to land them.. why did they have to hire lawyer etc. when they broke no law? (assuming the full story is what we read)
                          Peter R

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                          • #14
                            Tru dat!

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                            • #15
                              Those women are likely sex workers, and mi would a send dem back to Jamaica. True dem were not treated well and there story was fishy...
                              Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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