The Voice Newspaper: May 2023

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MAY 2023 THE VOICE

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News Feature

THAT BAN LOCALS’ FLYING THE FLAG: Some local Jamaicans are being turned away from beaches on their doorstep due to the development of coastlines by hotels, villas and private residence (photos: Getty Images/Joey Nicotra on Unsplash)

‘LIFELONG DREAM’: Sinnead Jackson, from New Cross, south-east London, is of Jamaican descent. She wants to purchase land ‘back home’ but doesn’t know where to start

who live on the island should be given priority to purchase land in the country and then those in diaspora. She said: “There should definitely be restrictions on how much people from overseas can buy. Otherwise they are going to continue to buy up all the beaches and all the land and before you know it, locals won’t be able to go and enjoy the beauty of the country.” Dr Taylor also believes coastal land should be protected and kept in a trust for Jamaican people and not sold. He added: “We are witnessing one of the greatest transfers of wealth of the country into the hands of private companies and that is almost criminal be-

cause you will find one day the country is landlocked and you cannot buy it back because its multinationals that control it and they will ask a lot of money for it.”

LAW

JABBEM’s campaign was created to challenge the Beach Control Act 1956, which Dr Taylor says is a “colonial era legislation” which “does not give Jamaicans any right to walk along the beaches, and no right to swim or really access it”. “It is written in law and that law has been sitting there for the last 67 years and no government at all has made any amendments to make that

wrong become a right,” he said. He added: “We must rid our emerging constitution of all discriminatory laws that were colonial hand overs that still impact the psychological state of Jamaica.” Dr Taylor says any hopes of removing the legislation will require court action. In the coming months, he says a legal defence fund will be set up and he is encouraging the Jamaican diaspora in the UK to help contribute to the fund and use their voices to call for “constitutional protection for beach access”. He also urged the global Jamaican and Caribbean community to sign the online petition to protect beach access for Jamaicans. He says his campaign

“non-conditional” or that “no Dr Taylor said the beach acOne day cess issue will also have a detpermission is required”. Dr Taylor is also a senior re- rimental impact on Jamaica’s the country will search and drug discovery sci- natural resources and environin Immunology and says ment. be landlocked entist since Jamaica’s Emancipation He said: “The removal of all and you won’t in 1838, there has not been any the forestry that exists on the serious land reform, meaning, coastline, which is a living ecobe able to most of the descendants of en- system, has consequences on slaved Africans have “experi- the biodiversity on the coast.” buy it back enced being landless and homeJamaica is the third-largest is clear, and he wants “general and unfettered” rights of access to all beaches in Jamaica and for that to be constitutionally protected. He said now is the time for Jamaicans to have general rights of access which means

less” as a result of colonialism. He says as Jamaica moves towards becoming a republic, “internal reparations” of land rights for Jamaicans must also be put on the table to ensure the people can benefit from “development, wealth, power and independence” that comes with being a landowner.

Caribbean island, with a total land area of just under 11,000 square kilometres. According to the Jamaica Information Service, the government is the largest owner of land in Jamaica, with the majority of the land assets vested in the Commissioner of Lands.


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Articles inside

Duo helping to conquer swimming fears head on

3min
page 55

SPORT ‘They understand me’

4min
page 54

Why being different is a strength and not a weakness

4min
pages 52-53

Tale of love and Haiti... and voodoo

2min
page 51

Don’t mess with ‘The Boss’

3min
page 50

Tate Britain celebrates 40 years of Isaac Julien

6min
pages 48-49

Loss, love and family are centre stage

3min
page 47

Miss Erica’s strutting her stuff

4min
page 46

The Gospel Truth Sadé Thomas Jesus and drill

3min
page 44

Ageing with the grace of God in a world untainted by sin

2min
pages 42-43

Nothing But Truth and Light Trust God for He is present

2min
page 42

Montel Gordon Stephen reminds us how far society still has to go

3min
page 41

Being young, Black and female is my superpower

4min
page 40

Lyndon Mukasa Is this Australia’s chance?

4min
pages 38-39

Blackstory Partnership event marks Windrush anniversary

1min
page 37

Maxiemum reward!

2min
page 37

Dementia Aid puts heart and soul into campaign

2min
page 36

Support grows for Diane Abbott after whip removed

2min
pages 35-36

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023

1min
pages 33-34

Scrap the Bill of Rights

2min
page 32

More Black union members are heading for the picket lines

2min
page 31

FIGHTING RACISM ISN’T AN OPTIONAL EXTRA

3min
page 30

WORKPLACE ‘REP’ IS EMPOWERING

3min
page 29

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023 BEING A BLACK UNION WORKPLACE

2min
page 28

Putting race back on the agenda Kate Bell, Deputy General Secretary of the TUC, says the union movement is committed to anti-racism

2min
page 27

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023 CENTURY OF BLACK SELF-ORGANISATION

3min
page 26

What the Year of Black Workers is all about

2min
page 25

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023 Empowering members to make a difference

1min
page 25

The Year of Black Workers

4min
page 24

Men suffering domestic violence ‘is still a taboo’

4min
page 22

Do you know your risk of type 2 diabetes?

1min
page 21

Thousands avoid type 2 diabetes with free evidence-based lifestyle programme

3min
page 20

Terence Channer Reflections on a world characterised by colour

3min
page 19

Dotun Adebayo Rate him or hate him - you can’t ignore him! Jah Shaka - revolutionary who inspired all rastas to the end

4min
page 18

‘Black business mag boosted my enterprise’

3min
page 17

Why it is so important to build generational wealth

3min
page 16

Microaggressions are really not that micro

4min
page 15

Sherae No child should face Afro hair school ban

3min
page 14

Momentum for reparations

7min
pages 11-13

£1bn fund ‘to decolonise colonial grant-giving’

4min
page 10

increased fibroid risk’

4min
page 9

Hair relaxers ‘causing

3min
page 8

Quit the Commonwealth

4min
pages 6-7

THAT BAN LOCALS’

2min
page 5

‘AVOID JA RESORTS

3min
page 4

‘The prison staff don’t really care about you’

4min
page 3

Inside THIS MONTH The Voice says

1min
page 2
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