St Lucia threatened into accepting deportees from US — PM Chastanet

January 31, 2017 in Regional

PRIME MINISTER ALLEN CHASTANET

CASTRIES, St Lucia (CMC) — Prime Minister Allen Chastanet says the United States had threatened St Lucia to accept nationals deported from the North American country.

Chastanet told reporters that Castries was told that if it did not accept the deportees, travel for locals would be “pulled”.

He said while he has indicated to Washington that he is not pleased with the threat, he would honour the current system.

However, Chastanet said he would continue to lobby for an international treaty to deal with the situation and explained that he was concerned that someone who left this country at two years old, spent their childhood and adult life overseas, committed a crime and is repatriated.

The prime minister said that the flaw in the process is that the United States is using the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) legislation governing air travel to send people back.

“In that agreement, if somebody leaves here and is detained or for some reason denied entry, it is required that we accept that person back,” the former Tourism and Civil Aviation Minister said.

He said he understands that provision within a particular lime frame but was not sure that the architects of the ICAO agreement had in mind that someone could spend up to 50 years in a country and then be repatriated.

“I think this is an issue that must be brought up at the UN level and I think that we should write a treaty that specifically deals with deportees and how we are going to handle it,” the prime minister told reporters.

Chastanet observed that some countries like India have refused to accept the deportees.

“Countries that seem to have the backbone and the ability to say ‘no’ get away with it. Unfortunately, a smaller state like ours has to depend on a national treaty that we can go by because certainly we do not have the ability to push back,” he told reporters.