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‘Nowhere to go’ for shanty residents as eviction looms

Residents of the Kool Acres and All Saints Way shanty towns.
Photo: Moise Amisial

Residents of the Kool Acres and All Saints Way shanty towns. Photo: Moise Amisial

By LYNAIRE MUNNINGS

Tribune Staff Reporter

lmunnings@tribunemedia.net

RESTLESS residents of the Kool Acres and All Saints Way shanty towns have packed their bags and secured their belongings, ready to leave before the bulldozers arrive.

There is just one problem: they don’t know where to go.

Mercidieu Pierre, 53, reckons his car will become his temporary shelter.

Glaides, 52, believes she will be pushed onto the streets.

Juline Oilbrice, 32, a jobless mother-of-seven, hopes the Ministry of Social Services intervenes or that the Davis administration changes its mind.

“I is a PLP,” she whispered to The Tribune yesterday. “I vote for them, so they need to try to help me.”

Successive administrations have pledged to eradicate shanty towns, but for dozens in Kool Acres and All Saints Way, the longstanding threat is more imminent than ever.

The Ministry of Works said Sunday that the 28-day eviction notice residents received earlier this month has ended.

Unlike in the past, there are no immediate signs that the government’s plans will be stymied in courts –– not after Supreme Court Justice Cheryl Grant-Thompson ruled that the Minnis administration’s 2018 shanty town eradication policies were legal.

In the House of Assembly yesterday, Works Minister Clay Sweeting outlined the rationale for the government’s actions, saying they will stop developments that could harm people’s health, the environment and the community.

For the government, demolishing homes while avoiding a humanitarian problem could be a daunting challenge.

Only two of nearly a dozen residents The Tribune spoke to yesterday said they are employed, and they claimed they are only temporary workers.

 Some residents said many potential rental units are unavailable because they are being renovated.

 Others said landlords have strict rules about how many children can live in a space, prohibiting families with more than a few children.

 The Tribune could not confirm before press time widespread reports in the communities that the government has granted a five-day grace period and that demolitions would begin on Monday. The Unregulated Communities Task Force, the body managing the process, will host a press conference today.

 “Apartments are so expensive,” said Chantal Petitifrere. “And a lot of them, they don’t want no children. Either you have one or two. One bedroom is $800. Not a lot of people in the yard is working.”

 Ms Petitifrere said she hasn’t seen anyone move out of the All Saints Way community yet.

 Some residents said government workers had not contacted them, but others said “inspectors” had come around.

 Ms Petitifrere claimed an official told her the government would help cover her housing needs for three months if she found a unit.

 Among those uncertain about the future is Ketteny Lefrance, the mother of three children who fended for themselves earlier this month after immigration officers posted eviction notices and apprehended people who could not prove they had legal status to be in the country. The children were at school when she was taken. Acting Immigration Director William Pratt later said she didn’t tell officials she had children because she feared they would be repatriated to Haiti.

 Ms Lefrance said she spent 17 days in the state’s custody and has not had time to look for new living arrangements. She also said she is unemployed.

 She said one thing is sure: she will not return to Haiti.

 As The Tribune interviewed her, a man interjected, insisting without proof that multiple children from the community who were repatriated to Haiti had already died and that some of the adults had been kidnapped amid the gang violence and instability there.

Comments

stillwaters 6 months, 2 weeks ago

Say jobless mother of seven......muddoes...says she's a PLP. So many unemployed people making so many babies. The shanty towns seem to be one big incubator of babies.

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JokeyJack 6 months, 2 weeks ago

That is their plan. Once they are a larger percentage of our "population" then the United Nations will force us to "help" them. They know exactly what they are doing. Mother of 7 - LOL. What university did she attend to achieve that title?

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AnObserver 6 months, 2 weeks ago

Thank the church. If it weren't for their stupidity we'd have proper sex-ed and family planning in the schools.

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bahamianson 6 months, 2 weeks ago

32, jobless mother of 7. I will leave that right there. One thing , though. Plp and Fnm , do not raise VAT because you need more money to feed people. I have a private part , and I can make children . I just dont want to have the stress of feeding 7 children! Bad decision on your part , 32 year old.

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mandela 6 months, 2 weeks ago

The Bahamas cannot become a shanty town developer. The Bahamas cannot absorb and take care of another country whose population is over 27 times ours, impossible. Shanty towns are breeding grounds for crime and lawlessness. They become a society within a society, rules, laws and hygiene.

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birdiestrachan 6 months, 2 weeks ago

They were wrong to build shanty towns BAHAMIANS had to struggle and pay rent. We were not allowed to build on property that did not belong to us. Some Hatians are very good at lies.

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themessenger 6 months, 2 weeks ago

The immigration and police should also investigate those BAHAMIAN land owners who have been collecting rent from the shanty town dwellers for decades. Some of those immigration people should be investigated for all of the phony work permits they have sold unsuspecting Haitians for decades also. Some Haitians may be good at lying but plenty Bahamians good at crookedness and tiefin, plenty Bahamians have made a living of the blood, sweat and tears of the Haitians for years and continuing to do so.

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birdiestrachan 6 months, 2 weeks ago

That is a high fence who put that fence up. If these people are on work permits they are suppose to be working. Something is not right. Immigration need investigation for sire. It seems some people pay their own work permit

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M0J0 6 months, 2 weeks ago

Sad to see their mindset, they just want to live a free life, we the residents don't have that luxury so go pay rent.

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