Last Thursday afternoon, I became exasperated while watching the Manatt-Dudus commission of enquiry.

Sunday 27 March 2011

Last Thursday afternoon, I became exasperated while watching the Manatt-Dudus commission of enquiry. I had run out of superlatives to describe K.D. Knight's cross-examination of Prime Minister Bruce Golding and felt I would be unforgivably remiss and stingy to simply describe his performance as brilliant. Afterward, in struggling for words to capture what I had just witnessed, I had to settle for "intellectually orgasmic".

Perhaps it's the intellectual environment in Jamaica - or lack of it - which would cause me to deliver what my good friend and colleague Colin Steer would, no doubt, regard as an embarrassingly fawning opening paragraph. But when you are starved of good argumentation and a celebration of reason in the local environment, even the smell of it is delectable.

In K.D.'s own words, he was leading the prime minister "in a process of reasoning", a commitment he lived up to.

In a cross-examination which demonstrated a gripping mastery of research, information, recall, quickness of mind, intricacy of Government - as well as pacing, modulation, wit and charm - K.D. Knight ditched the aggressiveness and abrasiveness many had been complaining about and gave the prime minister maximum respect. When he said, "I have been a model" of respect, he was not exaggerating.

It was as if he wanted to show all Jamaica - and the world - that he could defeat the worthy opponent without any unfair or foul means. I hope he keeps up the respectfulness and restraint, for impoliteness and abrasiveness are redundant weapons in his arsenal. They are for lesser combatants.

I said to People's National Party Chairman Bobby Pickersgill and other high-ranking party officials on Thursday that if we could conduct our domestic political discourse at that level, what a difference that would make to our democracy. But I must stop dreaming and come back down to earth (Jamaica).

READ MORE - Last Thursday afternoon, I became exasperated while watching the Manatt-Dudus commission of enquiry.

story of a Jamaican woman who was allegedly finger-raped by an immigration officer before being thrown out of Barbados

story of a Jamaican woman who was allegedly finger-raped by an immigration officer before being thrown out of Barbados on March 14, 2011, has sparked the fury of readers, perhaps betraying deep-seated animosity among Caribbean islanders. Here are some of the comments the Observer received online:
Manuel Sata: This is an outrage and very shameful. The story of a Jamaican woman who was allegedly finger-raped by an immigration officer before being thrown out of Barbados yet it is seemingly polite about this travesty. Sadly, this is not an isolated incident and requires a strong response. Jamaicans, if little Barbados can treat some of us like that, you retaliate by not vacationing there, don't buy goods made in Barbados and boycott Bajan-owned companies in Jamaica. Support Jamaican-owned enterprises. Jamaicans, you have power. Use it!!!

Sonny Black: This kind of behaviour towards Jamaicans by Trinidad and Barbados has been going on for a long time. I work with these people and the only thing they love about Jamaica is the music. They speak of Jamaicans like we are dogs and yet we bow to them and welcome them like they are special. But our spineless government will as usual do nothing. I believe this lady, and I feel her shame.
Joe Jackson: I'm from Barbados, just a couple weeks ago I was reading in the news how Jamaican police treated those Haitian football players like criminals, just because two of them had malaria. Basically, it is ok for Jamaicans to treat Haitians like trash because Haiti is a poor country, but you want other countries to treat you guys with respect, come on. What goes around always comes around.

READ MORE - story of a Jamaican woman who was allegedly finger-raped by an immigration officer before being thrown out of Barbados

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