London Daily

Focus on the big picture.
Tuesday, Jun 23, 2026

Statement by the Caribbean Community on UK’s Commission of Inquiry in the British Virgin Islands

Statement by the Caribbean Community on UK’s Commission of Inquiry in the British Virgin Islands

CARICOM
The heads of Caricom members have released a weak, stuttering and cowardly message in response to the scandal that the dubious governor Augustus "Gus" Jaspert caused on the island before he left. The cowardly message does not express the loyalty, brotherhood and support expected from the common victims of crimes against humanity that the British committed against them in the past.

In an anti-democratic and tyrannical operation that is reminiscent of totalitarian regimes such as Ceaușescu’s Romania and Stalin’s Soviet Union, the dubious Governor Jaspert decided, on his own and without any consultation with the government, to appoint a fake committee of inquiry (a one-man “committee", not a group of independent experts). 

The establishment of that fictitious Commission of Inquiry - whose job it is to find something wrong that someone in the government may have done -  came surprise, surprise!  immediately after the BVI government demanded the British government apologise for the past and compensate the descendants of the victims for the crimes against humanity committed by the British against the BVI citizens (and all their Caricom neighbours).

So the Commission is supposed to investigate what? Well, nothing specific or known as yet. Their task is just to search and search until they can find something to point their fingers at and blame the democratically-elected government (as if their own UK government is oh-so perfect and not corrupt at all).

This illegal Commission obviously has all the characteristics of corruption itself, both in those who appointed it and in those who agreed to serve in it, as it is an investigation which is not based on any complaint or alleged suspicion of wrong-doing ("Prima Facie evidence").

As we know, only in the darkest regimes in history did the secret police knock on the door and interrogate people without any suspicion that they had committed an offense. The dreaded police assumed that if they searched hard enough, they would eventually find something wrong, some fly that could be described in court as an elephant, to enable the detainees wto be found to have sinned. Such easy sins could also have been found in the investigators themselves, if they too had been interrogated under a magnifying glass, and without any suspicion that they had committed an offense.

I am not so naïve as to think that there are no cases of corruption on the island. But I am not so dumb as to think that the corruption that can be found on the island, when one looks with a magnifying glass, is greater or different from the corruption that can be found in any democratic government in the rest of the world.

But the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry without any suspicion of any offense and without prima facie evidence of any wrongdoing is in itself a criminal libel, and a serious violation of the principle of the Presumption of Innocence on which both English law and the international human rights charter are based.

What disappoints me and saddens me greatly is reading the weak, dry and loose statement posted by Caricom. 

Undermining democratically-elected government and local watchdog institutions just to find out “if” there is any wrong-doing is a dirty, brutal act of intruding on the autonomy of an overseas territory. 

Only in the dark tyrannical regimes of the past did the police knock on the door - prior to any evidence or complaint - just to check “if” they can find something wrong!

This anaemic statement does not convey the reassuring tone of solidarity that should have been loudly broadcast by the Caricom brotherhood.

This empty message expresses not even the slightest mutual loyalty that one would expect from the common victims of the crimes against humanity committed by those who now insist on undermining the autonomy of the islanders, marking a return to the dark days of their colonialist crimes.


Here is the full, empty Caricom Statement:

“Heads of Government received a letter from the Premier of the British Virgin Islands which apprised of the announcement on 18 January 2021 of a Commission of Inquiry (COI) “to establish whether there is evidence of corruption and abuse of office or other serious dishonesty” in the British Virgin Islands. The COI was ordered by the then sitting Governor.

Heads of Government are cognisant of the disquiet that has arisen among the people of the British Virgin Islands about the establishment of the COI. Further, the Heads of Government are dismayed at the manner in which the COI was established with no consultation, or prior communication, between the UK government and the duly-elected government of the British Virgin Islands.

Heads of Government noted the strongly-expressed concerns on this matter by the British Virgin Islands government, which concerns are also shared by other Associate Members of the Community.”



Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
UK Heatwave Disrupts Transport, Healthcare and Public Services as Red Weather Alerts Expand Nationwide
Barclays Warns of Growing Cyber Risk Divide Between Large UK Firms and Micro Businesses
European Defence Plans Including Ukraine Integration Prompt UK Strategic Reassessment
UK Equity Markets React as US–Iran Peace Roadmap Eases Oil Price Pressures
United Kingdom Expands Global Clean Energy Partnerships With Brazil, Morocco and Tanzania
Lord David Frost Urges Incoming UK Leadership to Abandon EU Regulatory Reset Strategy
Housing Groups Support Amendment to Strengthen Fire and Gas Safety Access Powers in Social Housing
South London NHS Estates Staff Ballot on Industrial Action Over Pay Structures in Hospital Maintenance Services
United Kingdom Government Invests £60 Million in AI Research Labs at Oxford and University College London
Barclays Cyber Security Report Highlights Rising Threat Exposure Among UK Small Businesses in AI-Driven Attacks
UK Met Office Heatwave Triggers Transport Warnings as Rail Operators Urge Cancellations Amid Infrastructure Strain
South London NHS Estates Workers Ballot for Strike Action Over Pay Disputes Across Major London Hospitals
Barclays Warns of Severe Cyber Security Gap Between Large Corporations and Small Businesses in the United Kingdom
United Kingdom Government Allocates £60 Million for Artificial Intelligence Research Laboratories at Oxford and UCL
National Health Service Approves Teplizumab Treatment to Delay Onset of Type One Diabetes in First European Rollout
Met Office Issues Rare Red Extreme Heat Warning Across London, South East and West Midlands as Transport and Health Systems Face Disruption
Prime Minister Keir Starmer Resigns After Labour Party Revolt Following Economic Stagnation and Local Election Losses
United Kingdom Economy Contracts for Second Consecutive Month as Private Sector Weakens and Job Loss Fears Rise
Taxpayer Support Grows for Higher Digital Levies on Multinational Tech Companies
Bank of England Signals Caution Over Inflation Despite Easing Energy Prices
Lloyds Banking Group Expands Artificial Intelligence Hiring Amid Sector-Wide Automation Shift
Film Producer Corporate Collapse Leaves Creditors Facing Unrecoverable Losses
UK Ten-Year Brexit Anniversary Highlights Ongoing Political and Economic Uncertainty
Nottingham Maternity Scandal Inquiry Reveals Systemic Failings in NHS Care
Met Office Heatwave Prompts Public Health Warnings Across United Kingdom
Concerns Rise Over Fiscal Stability as Political Uncertainty Weighs on UK Borrowing Costs
UK Taxpayers Back Higher Digital Taxes on Global Technology Firms, Survey Shows
Bank of England Holds Interest Rates Steady Amid Persistent Services Inflation
Reform UK and Opposition Leaders Call for General Election Following Starmer’s Departure
Ten Years After Brexit Referendum, UK Faces Ongoing Political Fragmentation and Economic Debate
Nottingham University Hospitals Maternity Inquiry Exposes Severe NHS Failures
Met Office Issues Heat Health Alerts as United Kingdom Faces Record-Breaking Temperatures
Andy Burnham Emerges as Front-Runner for Labour Leadership After Starmer’s Resignation
Keir Starmer Resigns as UK Enters New Phase of Political Leadership Transition
UK Expands Alcohol Ban Enforcement Using Tagging Technology Ahead of World Cup
UK Invests £50 Million in Critical Minerals Supply Chain Security
UK Appoints Special Envoy on Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict
UK Introduces Fines for Landlords of Unsafe Rental Properties
Reform UK Leads Opinion Polls as Immigration Debate Reshapes UK Politics
Police Investigate Edinburgh Attacks as Potential Hate Crimes
King Charles to Publish Personal Tax and Royal Household Financial Records
Nottingham University Hospitals Maternity Inquiry Report Set for Publication
Heat-Health Alerts Issued Across London and Southern England Amid Rising Temperatures
UK Economy Shows Pressure From Middle East Conflict Despite Modest Growth
Brexit Anniversary Reignites Debate Over UK Economic and Political Direction
UK Parliament Continues Legislative Work Amid Leadership Transition
Financial Markets Hold Steady After UK Leadership Shake-Up
Andy Burnham Enters Labour Leadership Race With Strong Parliamentary Backing
Keir Starmer Resigns as UK Prime Minister After Two Years in Office
Reform UK MP Lee Anderson to Raise Pension Concerns Over British Coal Staff Superannuation Scheme
×