On visit to Jamaica, British minister says no to reparations

(Jamaica Gleaner) It took Mark Simmonds, the new British minister with responsibility for the Caribbean, mere seconds of his 24-hour visit to Jamaica to scorch the hope of local reparation agitators clamouring for compensation for slavery. But Member of Parliament for Central Clarendon, Mike Henry, finds his ‘colonialistic’ off-hand remarks an insult.

Instead of focusing on reparations, Simmonds said the United Kingdom was keen on assisting Jamaica revitalise its economic base.

Simmonds, on his first trip to the island Wednesday, said that while his country decried the acts of slavery past and present, he could not countenance compensation for human atrocities committed two centuries ago.

“Do I think that we are in a position where we can financially offer compensation for an event two, three, four hundred years ago? No, I don’t,” declared Simmonds at a press conference at the British High Commission in St Andrew hours after his arrival on local shores.

Simmonds said: “I made our position clear. We believe slavery was abhorrent and modern-day slavery is occurring and we need to work together to eradicate it totally, and that is the United Nation’s position.”