From thebahamasweekly.com -
2009 Human Rights Practices Report on The Bahamas
By United States Department of State
Mar 12, 2010 - 8:30:40 AM
The following is a
United States Department of State Human Rights Report on The Bahamas
done by their Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour.
The
following can be found on the United States Department of State website:
www.state.gov
Bureau of Democracy, Human
Rights, and Labor
March 11, 2010
The Commonwealth of The Bahamas is a constitutional,
parliamentary democracy with a population of approximately 342,400,
including an estimated 30,000 undocumented Haitians. Prime Minister
Hubert Ingraham's Free National Movement (FNM) regained control of the
government in May 2007 elections that observers found to be generally
free and fair. The civilian authorities generally maintained effective
control over security forces.
The government generally
respected the human rights of its citizens. There were problems in some
areas, including complaints of abuse by police and prison and detention
center guards; poor detention conditions; a poorly functioning judicial
system, leading to delays in trials and lengthy pretrial detention;
violence against women and children; and discrimination against persons
of Haitian descent.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the
Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From:
a. Arbitrary
or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
The government or its agents
did not commit any politically motivated killings; however, there were
killings by police in the performance of their duties. Police
investigated such incidents and referred them to a coroner's court when
necessary for further evaluation.
On March 5, police shot a
Nassau man in disputed circumstances. The victim later died, and the
case was under investigation at year's end.
In June a
coroner's jury delivered a verdict of accidental death in the 2007
police killing of a resident of Andros Island.
The coroner's
court received the case of the 2007 police killing of two armed men who
failed to stop when fleeing the scene of a crime. An investigation
continued into another 2007 incident involving an individual killed by
police at Rand Memorial Hospital on Grand Bahama.
At year's
end a magistrate's court was hearing the case against the police officer
who shot and killed a man on Bimini Island in 2007.
Although
a coroner's court recommended manslaughter charges against prison guard
Sandy Mackey, who allegedly killed an inmate in 2006, Mackey died
before he could be charged, and the matter was closed.
The
coroner's court continued to face a heavy backlog. In 2008 the coroner's
court had a backlog of more than 150 cases, including six police
shootings.
b. Disappearance
There were no reports
of politically motivated disappearances.
c. Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The
constitution prohibits such practices, but human rights monitors and
members of the public expressed concern over continued instances of
police abuse of criminal suspects. Police officials, while denying
systematic or chronic abuses, acknowledged that police on occasion
abused their authority.
In May a 15-year-old boy allegedly
hanged himself in a holding cell while in police custody, according to
media reports. A police autopsy was performed in June that determined
hanging was the cause of death. The family alleged foul play, and after
public pressure to revisit the case, a coroner's inquest began in
November. The doctor who performed the autopsy testified that the boy's
injuries were "consistent with a hanging" and "inconsistent with a
beating." The family alleged that the hanging was a cover-up for a
beating. The inquest continued at year's end.
In August
authorities opened an investigation in the case of police officer Dwight
Williamson, accused of raping a 15-year- old girl at the police station
on August 11. Police escorted Williamson to a magistrate's court on
October 1 to be arraigned.
On December 8, a judge heard the
case of police constable Daniel Paul Smith, alleged to have had
nonconsensual sex with a 19-year-old girl while on duty on September 28.
Charged with rape, authorities suspended him, placed him on half-pay,
and required him to report to the police weekly.
In November a
magistrate sent to the hospital a man charged with serial rape after he
showed the judge welts on his torso and alleged police brutality. He
claimed that he had been beaten by detectives into signing a statement;
the resulting medical report was placed in his court file.
Amnesty
International (AI) reported that Emmanuel McKenzie, chairman of an
environmental organization, was harassed and assaulted by police and
defense forces during a fundraising event in April 2008. AI stated that
no investigation was initiated.
There were other allegations
of police beatings and brutality throughout the year. Victim's families
and community activists claimed that many officers had their cases
thrown out of court or dropped by the Attorney General's Office. In
addition many officers waited years for their court date, only to return
to work without having their names cleared.
On December 3, a
magistrate ruled that the prosecution had established a prima facie
case against police officer Vaughn Pratt, arrested in 2007 and accused
of having sex with two minors. The prosecution closed its case on June
23; the police suspended Pratt pending the outcome of the trial.
Authorities
brought charges against two officers in connection with the 2007
beating of a suspect, Desmond Key. The officers were released on bail;
after an investigation, authorities charged both officers with causing
grievous harm. When Key died, the charges were upgraded to manslaughter,
and the case was before a magistrate's court at year's end.
On
June 12, authorities closed without prosecution a case involving a
foreign journalist allegedly beaten by Defense Force guards at the
Immigration Detention Center in 2006.
On July 1, a court
acquitted the seven defense force members charged with beating a man on
the island of Inagua in 2006.
The Privy Council in the United
Kingdom upheld the government's use of flogging as a punishment.
Prison
and Detention Center Conditions
Conditions at Fox Hill
Prison, the country's only prison, remained harsh for many prisoners.
Overcrowding was a major problem in the men's maximum-security block.
Originally built in 1953 to hold 450 inmates, it held 624 of the
country's 1,319 prisoners. The remaining prisoners were held in medium-
and minimum-security units that were at intended capacity. A remand
center held 265 detainees. Male prisoners in the maximum-security unit
were crowded into poorly ventilated and poorly lit cells that generally
lacked regular running water. Prisoners lacked beds, slept on concrete
floors, and if not participating in work programs were locked in small
cells. Maximum-security inmates were allowed outside for exercise four
days a week for one hour per day. Inmates complained of inadequate
potable water, lack of medical care, and poor treatment.
During
the year authorities installed toilets in cells, added a medical
facility and exercise yard within the remand facility, as well as a
well-equipped health diagnostic unit and a pharmacy. They also created a
classroom within the maximum-security facility to provide educational
programs to high-risk offenders who could not attend classes within the
correctional training institute. That facility had water treatment units
installed and the dental unit renovated and refurbished.
There
continued to be allegations of abuse by prison guards. Local attorneys
and human rights observers asserted that the prison's internal affairs
unit lacked the independence needed to investigate impartially
allegations of abuse and misconduct; it conducted no investigations
during the year.
Conditions for female prisoners were less
severe than for men; however, women did not have access to the same
work-release programs available to male prisoners.
The prison
has a separate section for juvenile offenders between the ages of 16
and 18. There was occasional mixing of juveniles with adult inmates
depending on the severity of their crimes. Offenders younger than 16,
along with children made wards of the court by their parents because of
"uncontrollable behavior," were held at the Simpson Penn Center for Boys
and the Williamae Pratt Center for Girls.
The Carmichael Road
Immigrant Detention Center held up to 500 detainees (with tent space
for an additional 500), and women and men were held separately. Haitians
and Jamaicans were the most commonly interdicted migrants. The highest
occupancy during the year was approximately 664. Observers complained of
continuing abuse by guards, although immigration officials stated that
no such complaints were filed during the year. Human rights groups
expressed concern that complaint investigations were handled internally
without independent review and oversight. Children under the age of 14
were held in the women's dormitory. Many children arriving with both
parents were not allowed contact with the father except during weekly
visitation. Despite the possibility of being held for months, children
did not have access to education.
The government made
improvements to the Carmichael Road center during the year, including
benches for seating and recreation, cable television, bunk mattresses,
fans, and 100 roll-away mattresses for overflow. Two nurses conducted
medical screening of detainees on a weekly basis; authorities issued
care packages upon entry into the facility and installed a washer and
dryer and additional pay phones for detainee use.
AI as well
as local media wrote and released reports throughout the year alleging
systemic abuse of detainees at the Carmichael Road center. In February
the media reported that three Cuban detainees went on a hunger strike to
protest conditions at the center. In an expansive interview with a
local daily newspaper in June, an anonymous former officer at the center
alleged widespread abuse of detainees that included killings. Media
reports also claimed that detainees exchanged sex for food due to
insufficient rations.
Neither domestic nor international
human rights groups made any requests to visit the detention center or
prison during the year. However, organizations providing aid, counseling
services, and religious instruction had regular access to inmates.
d.
Arbitrary Arrest or Detention
The constitution prohibits
arbitrary arrest and detention, and the government generally observed
these prohibitions, although police occasionally were accused of
arresting and detaining persons arbitrarily.
Role of the
Police and Security Apparatus
The Royal Bahamas Police Force
(RBPF) maintains internal security, and the small Royal Bahamas Defense
Force (RBDF) is responsible for external security, security at the
Carmichael Road Detention Center, and some minor domestic security
functions such as guarding foreign embassies and ambassadors. The
Ministry of National Security oversees the RBPF and the RBDF.
A
police officer involved in shooting or killing a suspect is
automatically placed under investigation. The Police Complaints and
Corruption Branch, which reports directly to the deputy commissioner
without any independent oversight, was responsible for investigating
allegations of police brutality. This unit determines if enough evidence
of abuse or misconduct exists in a particular case to warrant
disciplinary action within the police system or, in some cases, criminal
prosecution by the attorney general. Some local attorneys and human
rights observers expressed concern that the Police Complaints and
Corruption Branch lacked the independence needed to investigate
impartially allegations of abuse and misconduct and that the perceived
lack of impartiality discouraged full reporting of complaints.
The
complaints commission began an investigation after a police officer was
accused of savagely beating his girlfriend in May. The police
commissioner said that criminal charges and disciplinary action would be
considered at the conclusion of the investigation. In June authorities
arraigned four police officers on armed robbery and extortion charges,
two of whom pleaded not guilty to the extortion charges; the other two
were not required to enter a plea to the armed robbery charges.
Authorities remanded the two alleged armed robbers to the Central Police
Station, released the two alleged extortionists on bail, and ordered
them back to court at a future date. In early November authorities
arrested two police officers for an unauthorized raid on a bar but kept
them on active duty while deciding whether to discipline them. If they
are disciplined, they could face a court martial or a criminal trial.
There
were 257 complaints against police through October, compared with 300
in 2008. Of these cases, 55 were sub judice, and 202 were under active
investigation at year's end. Authorities resolved 184 cases, recommended
44 to the Police Court of Inquiry, found 46 to have insufficient
evidence, ruled 37 cases unsubstantiated, found 8 cases required no
further action, informally resolved 15 cases, dropped five cases as
unfounded, executed one warning, made one recommendation for counseling
and one reprimand, and dropped one case because the officer died.
Complainants withdrew 25 cases. The overwhelming number of complaints
involved allegations of assault, followed by unethical behavior,
unlawful arrest, stealing, missing property, damage, unnecessary
violence, threats of harm, causing harm, neglect, unlawful sexual
intercourse, indecent assault, and threats of death.
Arrest
Procedures and Treatment While in Detention
In general the
authorities conducted arrests openly and, when required, obtained
judicially issued warrants. Serious cases, including those of suspected
narcotics or firearms offenses, do not require warrants where probable
cause exists. The law provides that a suspect must be charged within 48
hours of arrest. Arrested persons appear before a magistrate within 48
hours (or by the next business day for cases arising on weekends and
holidays) to hear the charges against them. Police can apply for a
48-hour extension upon simple request to the court and for longer
extensions with sufficient showing of need. Some persons on remand
claimed they were not brought before a magistrate within the 48-hour
time frame. The government generally respected the right to a judicial
determination of the legality of arrests. The constitution provides the
right for those arrested or detained to retain an attorney at their own
expense; volunteer legal aides were sometimes available. Minors under
the age of 18 have the right to communicate with a parent or guardian.
There
is a functioning bail system. Judges sometimes authorized cash bail for
foreigners arrested on minor charges; however, in practice foreign
suspects generally preferred to plead guilty and pay a fine rather than
pursue their right to defend themselves, given possible delays in court
cases and harsh conditions in the prison.
Attorneys and other
prisoner advocates continued to complain of excessive pretrial detention
due to the failure of the criminal justice system to try even the most
serious cases in a timely manner. The constitution provides that
suspects can be held for a "reasonable period of time" before trial.
Government officials stated that approximately 581 of the 1,319
prisoners at Fox Hill Prison were awaiting trial. Available government
statistics suggested that approximately 100 prisoners had been held on
remand without trial for more than two years. This was recognized as a
major problem in the justice system, as criminals accused of serious
crimes made bail, while many others were held indefinitely without
trial. The minister also stated in 2008 that more than one-third of
those charged with murder during the previous 30 months were free on
bail for a previous murder indictment.
The authorities
detained illegal immigrants, primarily Haitians, until arrangements
could be made for them to leave the country or they obtained legal
status. The average length of detention varied significantly by
nationality, willingness of governments to accept their nationals back
in a timely manner, and availability of funds to pay for repatriation.
Haitians usually were repatriated within one week, while Cubans were
held for much longer periods. Illegal immigrants convicted of crimes
other than immigration violations were held at Fox Hill Prison, where
they often remained for weeks or months after serving their sentences,
pending deportation.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The
constitution provides for an independent judiciary, and the government
generally respected judicial independence in practice.
Magistrate's
courts are the lowest level courts and handle only crimes with a
maximum sentence of five years' imprisonment. Trial by jury is available
only in the Supreme Court, which handles most major cases. Magistrate's
court decisions may be appealed to the Judicial Committee of the Privy
Council in the United Kingdom, which is the final court of appeal.
Trial
Procedures
The constitution provides for the right to a fair
trial, and an independent judiciary generally enforced this right.
Defendants enjoy a presumption of innocence until proven guilty and are
permitted to question witnesses at trial and view government evidence.
Defendants have a right to appeal. There is a functioning bail system,
but individuals who could not post bail were held on remand
indefinitely. Defendants can elect to use a jury in criminal cases;
serious offenses such as murder and fraud automatically go to a jury.
The
judicial system had a large and steadily expanding backlog of cases,
numbering as high as 8,700 in 2008, which included hundreds of cases of
the most serious violent crime. In July 2008 the newly appointed
attorney general ordered an audit to determine the actual scope of the
problem. Delays reportedly lasted five years or more. Local legal
professionals attributed delays to a variety of longstanding systemic
problems, such as slow police investigation, inefficient prosecution
strategies, lack of judicial capacity, lengthy legal procedures, staff
shortages, and judicial inefficiency compounded by financial and space
constraints. According to media reports
, the attorney general
decided to drop some old criminal cases in which the evidence supporting
the charges was either not substantive or so degraded that a conviction
would be unlikely, to allow his prosecutors to focus on the most
pressing cases.
Defendants may hire an attorney of their
choice, but the government provided legal representation only to
destitute suspects charged with capital crimes, leaving large numbers of
defendants without adequate legal representation. Lack of
representation contributed to excessive pretrial detention, as some
accused lacked the means to pursue the case toward trial.
Political
Prisoners and Detainees
There were no reports of political
prisoners or detainees.
Civil Judicial Procedures and Remedies
There
is an independent and impartial judiciary in civil matters, and there
is access to a court to bring lawsuits seeking damages for, or cessation
of, a human rights violation.
f. Arbitrary Interference with
Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The constitution
prohibits such actions, and the government generally respected these
prohibitions in practice.
While the law usually requires a
court order for entry into or search of a private residence, a police
inspector or more senior police official may authorize a search without a
court order where probable cause to suspect a weapons violation or drug
possession exists.
In November arguments concluded in the
Court of Appeals over the constitutionality of the Listening Devices
Act, but no ruling was made before year's end.
Section 2
Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech
and Press
The constitution provides for freedom of speech and
of the press, and the government generally respected these rights in
practice. An independent press, an effective judiciary, and a
functioning democratic political system combined to ensure freedom of
speech and of the press. The independent media were active and expressed
a wide variety of views without significant restriction.
Internet
Freedom
The government did not impose restrictions on public
access to the Internet. There were no reports that the government
monitored e-mail or Internet chat rooms. Individuals and groups could
engage in the peaceful expression of views via the Internet, including
by e-mail. According to the International Telecommunication Union, there
were 32 Internet users per 100 inhabitants in 2008.
Academic
Freedom and Cultural Events
There were no government
restrictions on academic freedom or cultural events. However, the Plays
and Films Control Board rates and censors entertainment.
b.
Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The constitution
provides for freedom of assembly and association, and the government
generally respected these rights in practice.
c. Freedom of
Religion
The constitution provides for freedom of religion,
and the government generally respected this right in practice. The
constitution explicitly calls for respect for Christian values.
The
practice of Obeah, a version of voodoo, is illegal, and those convicted
of practicing it were liable to three months' imprisonment.
Societal
Abuses and Discrimination
There were no reports of societal
violence or discrimination and no reports of anti-Semitic acts. The
local Jewish community numbered approximately 200 persons.
For
a more detailed discussion, see the
2009 International Religious
Freedom Report at
www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/.
d.
Freedom of Movement, Internally Displaced Persons, Protection of
Refugees, and Stateless Persons
The constitution provides for
freedom of movement within the country, foreign travel, emigration, and
repatriation, and the government generally respected these rights in
practice.
The law prohibits forced exile, and the government
did not use it.
Protection of Refugees
Although the
country is a signatory to both the 1951 Convention relating to the
Status of Refugees and its 1967 protocol, the government has not
established a consistent system for providing protection to all refugees
and asylum seekers. In practice the government provided some protection
against the expulsion or return of refugees to countries where their
lives or freedom would be threatened. Applications for political asylum
were adjudicated on a case-by-case basis at the cabinet level. The
authorities did not grant asylum during the year.
The government
generally cooperated with the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) and other humanitarian organizations in assisting
refugees and asylum seekers. The government suspended the practice of
systematically sharing its prescreening notes with the UNHCR but did
seek UNHCR advice on specific cases of concern.
In April the
government denied political asylum to Haitian national Anderson Pierre,
stating he did not qualify for refugee status under the 1951 convention.
Assailants killed Pierre upon his return to Haiti. He had served as a
bodyguard and driver for a commissioner in the Aristide government, and
his wife claimed they fled Haiti after several attempts on their lives.
Local
and international human rights observers criticized the government for
failing to screen potential asylum applicants adequately. Those
requesting asylum screening often lacked access to legal counsel. Human
rights observers claimed that the government detained Cuban migrants for
excessive periods. The government asserted that all migrants who
claimed asylum were interviewed and screened adequately by trained
immigration officials.
Stateless Persons
The
government has not effectively implemented laws and policies to provide
certain habitual residents the opportunity to gain nationality in a
timely manner and on a nondiscriminatory basis. Children born to
non-Bahamian parents or to a Bahamian mother and a non-Bahamian father
born outside of the Bahamas do not automatically acquire citizenship.
Bahamian-born persons of foreign heritage must apply for citizenship
during the year after their 18th birthday, sometimes waiting many years
for a government response. The narrow window for application, difficult
documentary requirements, and long waiting times created generations of
de facto stateless persons. Individuals born in the country to Haitian
parents were not required to pay the college tuition rate for foreign
students while waiting for their request for citizenship to be
processed. There were no reliable estimates of the number of stateless
persons.
In November 2008 the Immigration Department announced
the initial results of an audit of approximately 2,000 outstanding
residence and citizenship claims conducted in 2007. The audit found that
86 persons, including 47 Haitians, were approved, 22 applications were
denied, and more than 700 cases remained pending. However, the remaining
claims, more than half the total, remained in different procedural
categories or were regarded as incomplete.
Section 3 Respect
for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change Their Government
The
constitution provides citizens with the right to change their
government peacefully, and citizens exercised this right in practice
through periodic, free, and fair elections based on universal suffrage.
Elections
and Political Participation
The two principal political
parties are the governing FNM and the opposition Progressive Liberal
Party (PLP). In May 2007 national elections generally considered free
and fair, the FNM won 23 of 41 seats in the House of Assembly and formed
the new government under Hubert Ingraham. The election campaign under
the incumbent PLP, however, was marred by instances of violence, alleged
favoritism by the influential state-owned electronic media' toward
government candidates, and allegations of vote-buying.
The PLP
lost the elections and unsuccessfully pursued court cases challenging
the election results in three constituencies.
The House of
Assembly had five elected female members; there were five appointed
female senators, including its president, in the 14-seat Senate. There
was one woman in the cabinet.
Information on racial background
was not collected, but there were several members of minorities in
prominent positions in parliament and the cabinet.
Section 4
Official Corruption and Government Transparency
The law
provides criminal penalties for official corruption, and the government
generally implemented these laws effectively. There were isolated
reports of government corruption during the year.
Both
political parties were subject to corruption allegations concerning the
inappropriate transfer of government-owned land. The opposition party
also charged the FNM government with corruption in relation to a
controversial relocation of the container port. In July authorities
suspended 16 customs officials over allegations that included falsifying
documents, bribery, stealing, and evasion of customs duties. Police
investigations into government contract corruption in the wake of 2004
hurricanes Frances and Jeanne continued at year's end.
In
January authorities charged a former PLP senator with conspiracy and
abetting an alleged extortion attempt. At year's end she faced retrial
on September 6, 2010. In July authorities investigated a former PLP
treasurer who was indicted on money laundering charges in a foreign
jurisdiction.
Senior public officials, such as senators and
members of parliament, were subject to financial disclosure under the
Public Disclosure Act. Antibribery legislation designates the attorney
general responsible for combating government corruption.
The
RBPF operated a complaints and corruption branch, which received 11
corruption reports during the year: it sent one to the police tribunal,
found that one was unsubstantiated, recommended criminal charges in one
case, and had eight cases under investigation at year's end.
Media
representatives criticized the lack of laws providing for public access
to government information. Members of the local press also complained
that the government failed to provide regular, open access to
information, including information regarding alleged human rights
violations. Specifically, press and local human rights groups complained
that the government was not forthcoming about alleged human rights
abuses by police and prison and detention center guards, citing a lack
of transparency in investigations and publication of investigative
reports.
Section 5 Governmental Attitude Regarding
International and Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of
Human Rights
A number of domestic and international human
rights groups generally operated without government restriction,
investigating and publishing their findings on human rights cases.
Government officials usually were cooperative and responsive to their
views.
The Data Protection Act of 2003 created a
"commissioner" with ombudsman-like duties.
The government
generally cooperated with international governmental organizations.
Section
6 Discrimination, Societal Abuses, and Trafficking in Persons
The
constitution prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, place of
origin, political opinion, or creed, and the government generally
enforced these prohibitions. However, the constitution and the law
contain provisions that discriminate against women.
The
country is made up of 700 islands and cays, 30 of which are inhabited.
Information reflects the situation in the highly populated areas on New
Providence and Grand Bahama. Limited information was available from the
lesser populated out-islands.
Women
Rape is illegal, but the law does not address spousal rape, except if the couple is separating, in the process of divorce, or if there is a restraining order in place. The maximum penalty for all offenses, including a first-time offense, is life imprisonment. According to the RBPF, there were 90 rapes reported by October, a decrease from 114 reported in 2008. Prosecutions and convictions on rape charges were common.
Violence against women continued to be a serious, widespread problem. The law prohibits domestic violence as a crime separate from assault and battery, and the government generally enforced the law. The police reported that seven of 87 killings recorded through December were related to domestic violence. Women's rights groups cited a general reluctance on the part of law enforcement authorities to intervene in domestic disputes. The police recognized domestic violence as a high priority, provided specialized training for all incoming officers, and offered continuing training in domestic violence.
The government operated a toll-free hotline in New Providence and Grand Bahama, with trained volunteers to respond to emergency calls 24 hours a day. Government and private women's organizations continued public awareness
campaigns highlighting the problems of abuse and domestic
violence. The Ministry of Labor and Social Development's Department of
Social Services, in partnership with a private organization, operated a
safe house to assist battered women. The ministry's Bureau of Women's
Affairs was responsible for promoting and protecting women's rights.
Prostitution
is illegal and was not a widespread problem. There are no laws
specifically addressing sex tourism. Police officials acknowledged that
sex entertainment was a developing industry but did not consider sex
tourism a problem.
The law prohibits criminal "quid pro quo"
sexual harassment and authorizes penalties of up to B$5,000 ($5,000) and
a maximum of two years' imprisonment. Civil rights advocates complained
that criminal prohibitions were not enforced effectively and that civil
remedies, including a prohibition on "hostile environment" sexual
harassment, were needed.
Couples and individuals generally
could decide freely and responsibly the number, spacing, and timing of
their children, and were not subject to discrimination, coercion, or
violence regarding these choices. Access to family planning was
universally available to persons age 18 and older and to younger persons
with the consent of an adult. Pregnant teens were removed from
government educational institutions and placed in a special school,
Providing Access to Continued Education, until after the birth of their
children. Women had access to maternal health services. According to UN
data, skilled personnel attended 99 percent of births, and 98 percent of
mothers received prenatal and postpartum care. Services were available
on a nondiscriminatory basis, although some illegal immigrants did not
receive postpartum care because they had no fixed address.
The
law does not provide women with the same right as men to transmit
citizenship to their foreign-born spouses. The law also makes it easier
for men with foreign spouses than for women with foreign spouses to
confer citizenship on their children. The law does not include gender as
a basis for protection from discrimination. Women were generally free
of economic discrimination, and the law provides for equal pay for equal
work.
Children
Children born to non-Bahamian
parents or to a Bahamian mother and a non-Bahamian father born outside
of the Bahamas do not automatically acquire citizenship. Otherwise,
citizenship is acquired by birth in the country. There is universal
birth registration; all births must be registered within 21 days of
delivery. All residents, regardless of immigration status, had free
access to education and social programs.
Both the government and
civic organizations conducted public education programs aimed at child
abuse and appropriate parenting behavior; however, child abuse and
neglect remained serious problems. The RBPF operated a hotline regarding
missing or exploited children. The Child Protection Act of 2007
included increased penalties for child abuse, mandatory reporting to
police of all forms of child abuse, a provision for fathers of children
born out of wedlock to pursue custody of the children, and a provision
for mothers of children born out of wedlock to pursue maintenance of
those children up to age 18.
The Department of Social Services
reported that cases of child abuse increased during the year, and in
some categories surpassed previous year's totals. From January through
August, 355 child abuse cases were reported, while neglect cases for the
same period were down slightly from 2008 to 217. The ministry believed
that only a minority of cases were reported.
The law
prohibits statutory rape of persons under the age of 16; victims between
the ages of 14 and 16 carry penalties of up to 14 years' imprisonment,
with harsher penalties involving persons under age 14. While a victim's
consent is insufficient defense against allegations of statutory rape,
it is sufficient defense if an individual can demonstrate that the
accused had "reasonable cause to believe that the victim was above 16
years of age," provided the accused was under age 18.
Child
pornography is against the law. A person who produces it is liable to
life imprisonment; dissemination or possession of it calls for a penalty
of 20 years' imprisonment.
The law requires all persons
having contact with a child they believe to have been physically or
sexually abused to report their suspicions to the police. Sexual
exploitation of children through incestuous relationships occurred, and
anecdotal reports suggested that this was a particular problem in the
out-islands. Observers generally acknowledged that a small number of
children were involved in illicit or unlawful activities. The ministry
may remove children from abusive situations if the court deems it
necessary. The ministry provided services to abused and neglected
children through a public-private center for children, through the
public hospital family violence program, and through a nonprofit crisis
center.
The Department of Social Services is responsible for
abandoned children up to 18 years of age but had very limited resources
at its disposal. The government found foster homes for some children,
and the government hospital housed abandoned children with physical
disabilities when foster homes could not be found.
Trafficking
in Persons
In December 2008 parliament enacted legislation
specifically addressing trafficking in persons for the first time. The
law also prohibits prostitution and the procurement of persons for
purposes of prostitution either in or outside the country by force,
threats, intimidation, or the administering of drugs. The maximum
penalty for trafficking in persons is life imprisonment.
The full nature and extent of the problem were undetermined. The previous lack of a legal prohibition rendered it difficult to measure accurately the extent of trafficking within the vulnerable illegal migrant communities. It was too early to assess the impact of the new legislation and how it would be implemented and enforced to prosecute perpetrators, protect and assist victims, and prevent trafficking.
According
to limited reports, men, women, and children may be trafficked for the
purpose of labor exploitation.
Local observers previously complained
that the law does not protect trafficking victims, who might be fearful
of pressing complaints due to emphasis on immigration enforcement. The
new legislation details provisions for assistance and protection for
victims, including witness protection and special immigration procedures
for nonresidents to facilitate investigation and prosecution. The
Foreign Ministry and the Women's Affairs Bureau have the lead on
antitrafficking efforts, and the International Organization for
Migration (IOM) met with an interagency committee that included various
NGOs that work on assistance issues.
In November the IOM
conducted antitrafficking training for government personnel in New
Providence and Grand Bahama. Various law enforcement officers, social
workers, and NGOs participated. Training included train-the-trainer
components, sensitization, awareness, indicators, and referral as well
as a discussion of the new law and jurisdiction of the various agencies
involved.
The State Department's annual
Trafficking in
Persons Report can be found at
www.state.gov/g/tip.
Persons with Disabilities
There is no specific law
protecting persons with physical or mental disabilities from
discrimination in employment, education, access to health care, or in
the provision of other state services. However, provisions in other
legislation address the rights of persons with disabilities, including a
prohibition of discrimination on the basis of disability. Although the
law mandates access for persons with physical disabilities in new public
buildings, the authorities rarely enforced this requirement, and very
few buildings and public facilities were accessible to persons with
disabilities. Advocates for persons with disabilities complained of
widespread job discrimination and general apathy on the part of private
employers and political leaders toward the need for training and equal
opportunity.
The Social Development Ministry's Disability
Affairs Unit worked with the Bahamas National Council for Disability, an
umbrella organization of nongovernmental organizations that offered
services for persons with disabilities, to provide a coordinated public
and private sector approach to the needs of such persons. A mix of
government and private residential and nonresidential institutions
provided education, training, counseling, and job placement services for
adults and children with both physical and mental disabilities.
National/Racial/Ethnic
Minorities
The country's racial and ethnic groups generally
coexisted in a climate of peace and mutual respect without overt racial
or other tensions. However, anti-Haitian prejudice and resentment
regarding continued Haitian immigration was common. According to
unofficial estimates, between 10 and 25 percent of the population were
Haitians or persons of Haitian descent, making them the largest ethnic
minority. Many persons of Haitian origin lived in shantytowns with
limited sewage and garbage services, law enforcement, or other
infrastructure. Haitian children generally were granted access to
education and social services, but interethnic tensions and inequities
persisted. The Haitian community was characterized by high poverty, high
unemployment, poor educational achievement, and poor health conditions.
Haitians generally had difficulty in securing citizenship, residence,
or work permits.
Lawyers for an illegal Haitian resident in
Nassau, whom an RBDF officer shot and injured in 2007, continued their
civil suit seeking damages against the officer, the commander of the
RBDF, and the attorney general for false arrest, false imprisonment,
assault and battery, and malicious prosecution, even though the man was
subsequently deported.
Members of the Haitian community
complained of discrimination in the job market, specifically that
identity and work permit documents were controlled by employers seeking
leverage by threat of deportation. Some also complained of tactics used
by immigration officials in raids of Haitian or suspected Haitian
communities. The economic recession led to an increase in resentment
against the Haitian population and a tendency to blame Haitians for
rising crime rates.
Societal Abuses, Discrimination, and Acts
of Violence Based on Sexual
Orientation and Gender Identity
Societal
discrimination against gays and lesbians occurred, with some persons
reporting job and housing discrimination based upon sexual orientation.
Although homosexual activities between consenting adults are legal,
there was no legislation to address the human rights concerns of gays,
lesbians, bisexuals, or transgendered persons. The 2006 Constitutional
Review Commission found that sexual orientation did not deserve
protection against discrimination.
Authorities brought charges
in one of three killings of reportedly gay individuals in 2008, but the
jury could not reach a verdict in the case of Troyniko McNeil (alleged
to have murdered handbag designer Harl Taylor). A retrial was set for
July 12, 2010, and he was released on B$30,000 ($30,000) bail. There
were no new developments in the investigations into the other killings
by year's end.
One 16-year-old male rape victim alleged that
investigators treated his case poorly because he was gay. He claimed
that he had to wait hours to report his case or be seen by a medical
examiner, and that the investigating authorities treated the case as a
"joke." However, in early December a court convicted a man for having
"unnatural intercourse" with the victim.
Other Societal
Violence or Discrimination
Stigma and discrimination against
persons with HIV/AIDS was high, but there were no reports of violence
against persons with HIV/AIDS. Children with HIV/AIDS also faced
discrimination, and teachers often were not told that a child was HIV
positive for fear of verbal abuse from both educators and peers. The
government maintained a home for orphaned children infected with
HIV/AIDS.
Section 7 Worker Rights
a. The Right of
Association
The law allows workers to form and join unions
without previous authorization or excessive requirements, and those laws
were applied in practice. Almost one-quarter of the workforce (and 80
percent of the workers in the important hotel industry) belonged to
unions. Members of the police force, defense force, fire brigade, and
prison guards may not organize or join unions.
The law
provides for the right to strike, and while workers exercised this right
in practice, the government has the right to intervene in the national
interest to assure delivery of essential services. The law requires that
before a strike begins, a simple majority of a union's membership must
vote in favor of a motion to strike. The Ministry of Labor and Social
Development must approve a strike ballot.
b. The Right to
Organize and Bargain Collectively
Workers freely exercised
their right to organize and participate in collective bargaining, which
the law protects. Employers can apply to have union recognition revoked
if a collective agreement is not reached after 12 months. Unions and
employers negotiated wage rates without government interference.
The law prohibits antiunion discrimination, and employers can be compelled to reinstate workers illegally fired for union activity. This law was generally enforced. Under the law, labor disputes first are filed with the Labor Ministry and then, if not resolved, are transferred to an industrial tribunal. The tribunal's decision is final and can be appealed in court only on a strict question of law. Some employers complained that the industrial tribunal was biased unfairly in favor of employees. After a massive sick out by the Bahamas Nurses Union over a health insurance dispute, the government announced it would prosecute doctors who falsified sick notes. The nurses returned to work, but the issue remained unresolved at year's end.
Freeport
is a specially designated free trade zone. Labor law and practice in
this zone do not differ from those in the rest of the country. There are
no export processing zones.
c. Prohibition of Forced or
Compulsory Labor
Although the law prohibits forced or
compulsory labor, including by children, there were reports that such
practices occurred.
Local sources indicated that labor
exploitation of undocumented Haitians could be widespread, and some
immigrants may be subjected to conditions of involuntary servitude.
Employers could coerce migrants to work long hours for no pay or below
the minimum wage by withholding documents or threatening arrest and
deportation. Migrant workers usually do not have access to labor
protections under local law.
A 2008 IOM World Migration Report
stated that smuggling rings continued to take advantage of the demand
for labor by bringing in irregular migrants from Haiti. Some commercial
sexual exploitation of women and minors was also identified.
d.
Prohibition of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
Although
the law prohibits the employment of children under the age of 14 for
industrial work or work during school hours, some children worked
part-time in light industry and service jobs. Children under the age of
16 may not work at night. There was no legal minimum age for employment
in other sectors. The Labor Ministry is responsible for enforcing these
laws and did so adequately.
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
The
government sets minimum wages in a transparent and tripartite manner.
The minimum wage for government employees, set in 2000, was B$4.45
($4.45) per hour. A minimum wage for the private sector was established
in 2002 at B$4.00 ($4.00) per hour. The Labor Ministry was responsible
for enforcing the minimum wage but did not do so effectively.
Undocumented migrant workers often earned less than the minimum wage.
The minimum wage did not provide a decent standard of living for a
worker and family.
The law provides for a 40-hour workweek, a
24-hour rest period, and time-and-a-half payment for hours worked beyond
the standard workweek. These standards were enforced effectively.
The
Labor Ministry is responsible for enforcing labor laws and had a team
of inspectors that conducted on-site visits to enforce occupational
health and safety standards and investigate employee concerns and
complaints, although inspections occurred infrequently. The ministry
normally announced inspection visits in advance, and employers generally
cooperated with inspectors to implement safety standards. It was
uncertain whether these inspections effectively enforced health and
safety standards, although the ministry actively sought international
assistance during the year to improve performance. The law does not
provide a right for workers to remove themselves from dangerous work
situations without jeopardy to continued employment.
ARTICLE SOURCE
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