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Human crisis if no govt plan

EDITOR, The Tribune.

The government of The Bahamas risks causing a humanitarian crisis if they do not have appropriate provisions in place to shelter and support the hundreds of people, including many children, who will be made homeless through its shanty town eviction policy.

Human Rights Bahamas has noted the government’s insistence that it is carrying out the evictions according to the law. We and our international partners in the human rights community will be watching carefully to ensure this is the case.

Regardless of the above, the fact remains that this exercise will still lead to hundreds – and, if the policy is extended to other communities, many thousands – of people ejected into the street without the most basic necessities to support human life. Many of them are without work, vulnerable and already dangerously below the poverty line.

Carrying out this exercise in the absence of a comprehensive support plan would thus constitute a violation of international human rights regulations and multilateral treaties to which The Bahamas is signatory.

According to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Housing: “Forced evictions constitute gross violations of a range of internationally recognized human rights, including the human rights to adequate housing, food, water, health, education, work, security of the person, freedom from cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, and freedom of movement.

“Forced evictions are often linked to the absence of legally secure tenure, which constitutes an essential element of the right to adequate housing. Forced evictions share many consequences similar to those resulting from arbitrary displacement, including population transfer, mass expulsions, mass exodus, ethnic cleansing and other practices involving the coerced and involuntary displacement of people from their lands and communities.”

HRB calls on the government to disclose its plan to feed, house and care for those it intends to displace next week. We also call on any institutions, such as churches or social clubs, which are connected to the communities being targeted, to do what they can to open their doors and assist those who will be affected, in the event the government fails to live up to its duty to uphold international human rights norms, widely recognized humane practices, and a basic standard of decency and humanity.

As always, we remind the State and its agents – the world is watching.

HUMAN RIGHTS BAHAMAS

November 2, 2023

Comments

sheeprunner12 6 months, 1 week ago

Dont you think that this country has supported illegals and squatters for far too long?????

How much money has these illegals and squatters remitted to their foreign lands over the decades that they have been here??? Many can afford rent etc. Bahamians must do so.

Why should Joe Public feel sorry for these people and their enablers in Govt and the private sector who openly defy the laws of our country by renting them house plots and giving them services against the established legal policies of the country???

Little sympathy will be gotten from the MAJORITY of right-thinking Bahamians.

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birdiestrachan 6 months, 1 week ago

Sheeprunner the money that pays smugglers to bring illegals to the Bahamas come from shanty towns for the most part many of them have money as we use to say gone to bed.

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