President Jagdeo is the
biggest dunce in the PPPC's Government. The problem was created by
former
dictator, Burnham,
and Sir Shridath Ramphal with
"rigged elections". After they ruined beautiful Guyana,
they created "contra-band traders", which were/are
nuisance to regular airline passengers and immigration officers.
He was avoiding to tell
the WORLD about Afro Guyanese terrorism on mainly People of Indian
Origin in Guyana. Immigration officers at Grantley Adams
International Airport are taking precautions to avoid choke and
robbers, kick down the doors bandits and drug pushers from entering
Barbados.
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Guyanese
still being treated crudely at Barbados airport
-Jagdeo tells New York press conference
(Barbados
Nation)
The way Guyanese are being treated by immigration
officers at Grantley Adams International Airport
remains a serious problem, despite assurances from Government.
Bharrat
Jagdeo
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That’s according to Guyana’s President
Bharrat Jagdeo, who said in New York that although the
Barbados Government had given his administration assurances that it
wasn’t the country’s policy to target Guyanese, the treatment
they received at the hands of some immigration officers persisted
and he vowed not to remain silent until it was corrected.
“We have raised a number of issues with the Government of
Barbados,” he told a news conference in response to a question
from the SUNDAY SUN.
“The Government assures me that this is not their policy, but it
continues to happen because I think the immigration officers have a
lot of discretionary powers.”
Hence, his decision last year to raise it at a CARICOM meeting held
in Barbados.
“I made it an issue because you just can’t deal with it at a
government-to-government level if it’s not being addressed. I have
to speak out against it and I did,” he said.
What was interesting, he continued, was that shortly after he went
public with his complaint, Gary Voss, president of the Caribbean
Association of Industry and Commerce, a prominent business executive
from Trinidad and Tobago, raised similar concerns about the
treatment of aircraft passengers at Grantley Adams.
“In Trinidad and Tobago, Prime Minister (Ralph) Gonsalves of St
Vincent & the Grenadines spoke out in support of my position at
a lecture he gave at the University of the West Indies,” said
Jagdeo. “So, we are glad that is gathering momentum.”
The Guyanese leader voiced support for Owen Arthur, Barbados’
Prime Minister, who said recently that people in Barbados and the
rest of the region must be prepared to accept free movement of
people as part of the Caricom Single Market and Economy. He noted,
too, that Arthur had gotten into “trouble” when he disclosed
that an illegal immigrant from Guyana had worked on renovations at
his private residence before he became Prime Minister.
“We have to discuss these issues in the public [domain],”
asserted Jagdeo. “Why is it that we [should] try to sweep it under
the carpet? If we are saying that we are serious about Caribbean
integration and Single Market and Economy, then our people have to
learn not to be so insular.”
Making a stand
He then made it clear he wasn’t going to stand for that kind of
“terrible” treatment of his nationals.
“I am not going to have Guyanese treated that way and remain
silent,” he said.
Jagdeo said he too had suffered at the hands of Barbadian
immigration when he was Minister of Finance and passed through the
airport.
“All my years as finance minister, I never travelled using
protocol in Barbados,” he explained. “Even when I came to New
York or Washington, I wouldn’t use protocol. So they didn’t know
who I was and they would treat me in a terrible way until I opened
my passport and they saw me as a minister of the government, and
then everything changed. And I would say to them: ‘Why are you
changing now because this is the way you treat my people?’” He
charged that the problem could be traced to “a mindset” of
immigration officers. “It is not the people of Barbados,” he
declared. “Barbadians are a friendly people. I think it is a
mindset of some of the officials.”
As the president saw it, Guyanese immigrants in Barbados were hard
workers who “sustained the construction industry in Barbados. They
sustained many sectors; they are not displacing Barbadians”.
Monday
March 3, 2003
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