Guyanese author says Barbudans fighting to retain collective ownership of land

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A Guyanese-born author of several books on African and African diaspora history says the people of Barbuda are currently not only struggling to recover from the devastation that was brought to the island by Hurricane Irma, but they are also fighting to retain the collective ownership of their land.

“This is a system that has been in place since the abolition of slavery on the island and is currently being threatened by the government of Antigua and Barbuda,” said Dwayne Wong, a contributor for the Huffington Post.

“Prime Minister Gaston Browne has argued that in order to rebuild Barbuda and to improve the island’s economy it is necessary to change this law.

Barbuda devastation
Barbuda devastation (file photo)

“The people of Barbuda are concerned that they will lose the control of their land, so that Barbuda can be developed into an island for mass tourism, much as Antigua has been,” added Wong, writing on Friday under the caption, “Barbuda and the Land Issue in the Caribbean”.

“As I have pointed out previously, some Antiguans have complained that tourism has become such a dominant feature on the island that the island belongs to the tourists more so than the people who lived there. The people of Barbuda fear the same thing will happen to their island as well.”

Wong said Barbuda’s struggle to retain collective control of the island is “a struggle that has been waged throughout the Caribbean islands, where the forces of colonialism and neo-colonialism have sought to establish foreign ownership over those lands.

“Christopher Columbus’ well-known ‘discovery’ of the Caribbean islands in 1492 led to massive genocide on those islands,” he said. “In many of the Caribbean islands the nation population was completely wiped out due to a combination of violence and disease. Thus, the initial process of colonization not only involved theft of native land, but also the complete depopulation of those islands.

“Those islands were then repopulated mainly by enslaved Africans. After slavery was abolished other ethnic groups, such as East Indians and Chinese, were brought to the Caribbean to labor as indentured servants. Throughout this whole process the land was owned by a small elite group of wealthy white settlers,” Wong continued.

He noted that when the people of Haiti won their independence through a revolution, one of the major provisions that were put in place by the new government was one which sought to ensure that Haitians retained the ownership of their land and property.

“This was so important for the Haitian Revolutionaries that Jean-Jacques Dessalines decreed that foreigners would not be allowed to own property in Haiti,” Wong  said.  “Unfortunately, for many of the Caribbean countries that have gained their independence after Haiti, retaining local control of the land has not been a priority.”

He said one of the reasons for this is the Caribbean’s reliance on tourism, stating that, on some islands, it became a policy to privatize beach land, excluding the locals in the process.

The author said the privatization of beach land has been the subject of a number of songs, “which have been aimed at exposing and criticizing these policies.”

In Trinidad and Tobago, he said the late calypsonian Lord Kitchener  complained about how the natives in Tobago were arrested for being on their own beaches.

In Barbados, the Mighty Gabby composed his hit song “Jack” in response to a policy put forward by Jack Dear, the chairman of the Tourist Board, who suggested allowing hotels to privatize beach land, Wong said.

Concerning Jamaica, he said Mutabaruka “complained about the all-exclusive hotels, which would make tourists believe that Negril is a separate island apart from Jamaica.”

Wong said the foreign control of land has also been an issue in Puerto Rico, a former Spanish colony, which was later taken from the Spanish and brought under American domination.

“I mention all of this to show that the struggle of the people of Barbuda to retain the ownership of their land is a struggle that has been waged and is being waged on other Caribbean islands as well, where foreign powers continue to control the economies and the land of those islands to the exclusion of the locals,” he said.

“Barbuda is unique in that its system of collective land ownership ensures that no one on the island is excluded from owning property or land,” he added.  “If history is a good indicator of what may happen to Barbuda, if this system is overturned, then the people of Barbuda have every right to voice their concerns over what they see as a ‘land grab’ taking place on their island.”

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3 COMMENTS

  1. While I do not disagree with Barbudans, they need to understand you can’t have your cake and still eat it.
    I think preserving the land is a priority but you need to step up and figure out how to create a thriving, self sustaining economy for Barbuda. Pass a lease only law for non Barbudans. If lands get repossessed by a bank they can only be sold to Barbudans or the council.( These may not work but try to think of something) There are many Antiguans who have had to struggle to own what they have, why should we be looking after you? This is like a child moving from parents but still want parents to pay bills. It’s either we are separate independent states or one state, no middle ground.
    Fyi I used a piece of property to get a loan for business, I now own more than one business and employ a few people and I’m not thirty yet. You can’t sit on your behind and expect the government to take care of you all your life. Empower yourself, if you dont like what the PM is proposing, suggest changes what will work for you instead of screaming about you ready to die for land. Have a constructive discussion, instead getting so emotional about something that nature almost reclaimed with a hurricane, which by the way could happen again in a few months. Stop for a second and think! THEN DO SOMETHING!!!

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