Posts Tagged ‘ICAR’

Give us a chance!

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

by PHILLIPPE AIMEY

I want to state categorically that the Police Force does not enforce the law by targeting any groups. We carry out our duties without fear or favour and with sensitivity. We are willing to engage with any group in the society. We are the Police Force of Barbados and all communities.

- Commissioner of Police Darwin Dottin, SUNDAY SUN April 25.

RASTAFARI profiling is real!

So say members of the Rastafarian community.

But it goes beyond the police force, they said in an interview with the SUNDAY SUN last Friday. Such profiling, they say, extends to the main social institutions and it is a problem that will not go away easily, unless the movement is endorsed fully by the Government.

“This has not now started and it will not finish anytime soon. Outside of the police force, there is profiling within the education and health system and even our own families.

“This is and has been a reality for us,” said Sister Asheba Trotman, chairperson of ICAR and co-chair of the Caribbean Rastafari Organisation (CRO). (more…)

Empathy, caution on Rastafari profiling

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

READERS OF THE NATION’S online edition have mostly empathised with the call by Ras KudosSage-I to stop the profiling of members of the Rastafarian religion.

Speaking at the African Liberation Day celebrations, KudosSage-I, a representative of the Ichirouganaim Council For The Advancement Of Rastafari (ICAR), spoke of the “scourge called religious intolerance, which the Rastafari community finds itself head to head with”.

He called “on our brothers and sisters in faith to help us to combat this scourge and this offspring called Rastafari profiling”.

On NATIONnews.com, some readers shared their own experiences of profiling.

(more…)

Call to stop Rastafari profiling

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

by YVETTE BEST

A CALL has gone out to all faiths to help stop Rastafari profiling.

Speaking at Monday’s celebration of African Liberation Day in Jubilee Gardens, Ras KudosSage I said it would call for people to speak in one voice.

“As we set about to eliminate the remaining vestiges of racism, let us be mindful of the fact that there is another scourge called religious intolerance, which the Rastafari community finds itself head to head with.

“And we are calling on our brothers and sisters in faith to help us to combat this scourge and this offspring called Rastafari profiling,” he urged.

The representative from the Ichirouganaim Council for the Advancement of Rastafari (ICAR) said his brothers and sisters were still being persecuted.

“Rastafari finds itself in a position where we are continually persecuted for the way we practice our worship and for the very things that define us as Rastafari,” he said.

Noting that the African black man was similarly persecuted and rose from that position, Ras KudosSage I said “it is my hope and dream that Rastafari will do the same”. (more…)

ICAR Press Release

Monday, June 30th, 2008
by Ras Simba (Public Relations Officer, ICAR Barbados)
Tacuma Graduation

Born into the folds of Rastafari, I’Akobi was an attribute of significance to the movement of Rastafari. Upon his crossover I’Akobi was a student member of the Barbados Association of Professional Engineers (B.A.P.E).

In 2001, I’Akobi, who was voted by peers as the most likely to succeed from the Christ Church Foundation School, graduated as valedictory speaker and “Best All Round Male”. The year prior, the Ministry of Social Transformation sent I’Akobi as their Youth Delegate at the 5th Ministerial Meeting on Children and Social Policy in the Americas. At the tertiary level l’Akobi was the recipient of the Scholarship for Academic Merit, Barbados Government Exhibition (2003) and recently was elected as president of the Barbados Association of Students at UWI (St. Augustine). (more…)


free counters