OP-Ed & Features - Sunday, December 21, 2008 10:29
“A democracy with caveats”: police aggression against journalists in Barbados
By Antillean, News DeskIt is textbook in its simplicity: a police officer sworn “to serve and protect” makes his way to a court appearance charged with possession and trafficking of cocaine, while journalists arrive to take photos for the press. Simple? Not in Barbados. For, in Barbados, this ‘oasis of calm in an otherwise troubled world’, two journalists now await trial after a brutish arrest in their line of duty[¹]. Welcome to Barbados, a democracy with caveats.
Reactions around Barbados
“Commissioner Dottin has once again promised to have some sort of investigation or inquiry into the incident – the same as he always promises whenever the police shoot an unarmed citizen in the back of the head or beat up working reporters.”
Barbados Police Out Of Control – Journalists Arrested For Reporting On Crooked Cops – Call For Commissioner’s Resignation (Barbados Free Press)
“It feels like there is a creeping disrespect for journalism and it’s coming from all sides.”
Barbados Media Personnel Urged To Support Colleagues In The Face Of Police Harassment (Barbados Underground)
“The action of the Police force in this matter reeks of the Gestapo tactics which takes place in Zimbabwe and other oppressive dictatorships around the world.”
“Royal Barbados Police Force Making my Ass Sick” (Peter Boyce)
Support our journalists
Show your support for the arrested journalists by attending their court hearing tomorrow, December 22, at the District A Criminal Court at 0900.
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Observer from Saint Lucy, Barbados
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Free press in Barbados is a joke. Show independent thought and your editor cuts you down in the newspaper’s interest. Criticize a politician and lose your job and more tomorrow. Take photos of a policeman, get manhandled and arrested. To get by in Barbados, you play the game and keep quiet and just pander to authority figures without question. Barbados may well be Beijing.