Opinion Hurricane Melissa a ‘real-time case study’ of colonialism’s legacies - Destruction in Jamaica shows why climate justice cannot be separated from reparatory justice, campaigners say

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Perched on the edge of a hill in the idyllic village of Cold Spring in Hanover, Jamaica, the Gurney’s Mount Baptist church has stood for centuries as a symbol of resistance and endurance. The church and its congregation has endured through uprisings – in particular the famous 1831 slave revolt led by the Black Baptist deacon Samuel Sharpe – and earthquakes.

But when Hurricane Melissa descended on Jamaica, it ripped off the church roof and shredded the rows of sturdy pews, leaving an unrecognisable mangle of wood and debris in its wake. Outside, parts of the structure had survived the onslaught of the category 5 storm. The church is one of Jamaica’s 146,000 buildings – just 15% of those assessed so far – that has suffered major to severe damage, according to Alvin Gayle, director general of Jamaica’s emergency management office. The death toll on Thursday was 45, with 13 people missing; an estimated 90,000 households and 360,000 people have been affected by this damage.


The ‘freedom stone’ built into the church structure to commemorate the abolition of slavery. Photograph: William Richards/The Guardian
The names of past members are still etched into its walls and the “freedom stone”, built into its structure to commemorate the end of slavery on 1 August 1838, is still there.

As church and faith groups play a significant role in Jamaica’s recovery, the loss of the building and parts of the adjacentschool are a huge blow to the community, Rev O’Neil Bowen, told the Guardian.

The Cold Spring village, and many of its neighbouring communities in Hanover, where residents are still coming to terms with catastrophic destruction, were once plantations owned by Europeans who amassed wealth from centuries of trafficking and enslavement of African people. One of the Guardian’s 19th-century funders co-owned a plantation, Success, in the area. For the last few years, the Legacies of Enslavement Programme has been engaging with these communities to discuss priorities for repair.

At the ongoing UN Cop30 climate change conference in Brazil, campaigners say that devastated regions such as Hanover as well as others across Jamaica, Cuba and Haiti, are stark examples of how African descendants are disproportionately affected by centuries of environmental degradation.


Rev O’Neil Bowen in front of Gurney’s Mount church.Photograph: Ina Sotirova/The Guardian
Speaking from Cop30, Jamaican economist Mariama Williams said historical injustices must be confronted and addressed.

“The research shows that wherever Afro descendants are located, they are most vulnerable to climate and environmental impact and have been suffering from historical environmental injustice and climate injustice,” she said. “Climate justice cannot be separated from reparatory justice. The same systems that enriched the north created today’s vulnerabilities.”

The Global Afrodescendant Climate Justice Collaborative, where Williams is a senior adviser, is among hundreds of human rights groups and environmentalists that urged Cop30 to put reparations on the agenda.

In their open letter they argue that “global warming began with the Industrial Revolutions that were made possible by the resources provided by imperialism, colonialism and enslavement, [and] that colonialism and enslavement skewed the global economy in favour of the material and financial interests in the global north”.

Describing the efforts to recover from Hurricane Melissa as a “real-time case study” that validated this argument, Williams said: “The storm hit rural Jamaica hardest – people who are poorest, least protected, and historically marginalised. The same communities shaped by slavery, colonial extraction, and racialised policies are now on the frontline of climate disaster. So we’re not in theory any more.”

The economist believes countries such as Jamaica should have remedies such as being able to identify and write off debts which they were forced into because of their colonial past.



The same communities shaped by slavery, colonial extraction, and racialised policies are now on the frontline of climate disaster
Outlining the magnitude of the challenge facing Jamaica, the prime minister, Andrew Holness, estimated the damage caused by Melissa to be about $6bn-$7bn (£4.6bn-£5.3bn) based on preliminary figures. Aid has been pouring into the country and the World Bank announced last week that the government of Jamaica would receive a full payout of $150m under its catastrophe insurance coverage.

But for environmental justice academic and associate professor, Kevon Rhiney, though insurance payouts are important, Caribbean countries need more sustainable solutions in order to withstand the brunt of climate change they did not cause.

“Countries cannot just be expected to insure their risks because the fact that a single hurricane can wipe out an entire agricultural sector means that these bonds will not be enough to cover the full risk and the loss and damages that these countries will accrue.” he said.

Referring to the amount of money pledged to the UN-backed loss and damage fund to help vulnerable countries recover from climate change impacts such as extreme weather, as “embarrassingly low”, he called for a greater commitment from high-emitting countries.

A drone view of affected areas in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa, in Black River, Jamaica. Photograph: Raquel Cunha/Reuters
“We’re not begging these countries. This is a debt that is owed. And I think this needs to be made clear. And this is why there is very deep connection between calls for climate reparations and reparations for slavery, because they’re both connected through these longer histories, these colonial legacies,” he said. The UK has pledged £7.5m.

Arley Gill, a member of the Caribbean Community (Caricom) Reparations Commission, set up to advance the region’s pursuit of reparatory justice, told the Guardian that “a successful Cop cannot avoid a discussion about climate change and reparations”.

“Hurricane Melissa once again showed us that the same islands and the same peoples that are … demanding reparative justice for the crimes against humanity of slavery, slave trade, and indigenous genocide, are the same peoples and the same countries that are on the wrong end of the effect of climate change. And so those two issues are inseparable.

“We call upon the global leaders, to once and for all to confront the harsh reality of that climate change is as a direct result of the impact of colonialism and industrial revolution which was fuelled by the crimes against humanity.” he said.

On Thursday, the UN permanent forum on people of African descent called for climate action rooted in human rights, and reparatory and racial justice.

“We must recognise that climate justice cannot succeed without addressing historical and structural forms of injustice and their lasting consequences.”

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"How can we make this natural disaster and third world corruption be about huwhyte pippo?"
 
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“global warming began with the Industrial Revolutions
Okay, so you third world countries stop enjoying the benefits of the industrial revolutions....

... actually considering the average living conditions, they are still behind the industrial revolution but still use phones and AC some places. But at least they should stop taking modern medicine.
 
The grand irony being that, according to relief workers and volunteers I've talked to, the locals are just happy people are coming to help them out of the kindness of their heart. I've yet to hear from any of my friends about locals screeching at them for causing climate change or whatever. Make no mistake, this is manufactured outrage and in no way represents the average people on the ground who are very thankful for the outpouring of support from relief agencies and charities.
 
It's weird. I've worked with Jamaicans in various jobs. Absolutely loved working with them. Hard workers, good sense of humor, etc. The sense I get is if the Jamaican of my personal experience was the average Jamaican not only would the nation be able to take care of this themselves, they'd laugh at garbage about "legacies of colonialism" and so on. I guess they're the ones that got out?

As an aside, as best I could tell their kids uniformly became archetypes of Americanus Negroicus in all the ways we love to document here. Not sure what the lesson to draw from that is, but there must be one somewhere. At least one remarked despite having a far better economic situation in the USA than they'd have ever gotten Jamaica, they regretted the way their kids turned out.

Still, kind of have a warm spot in my heart for Jamaicans. Now, where Haitians are concerned there's not a high enough category hurricane that could hit the place. In fact, I'm good with an earthquake followed by a tsunami.😐
 
Fuck The Guardian, fuck climate doomers, and fuck grifting activists.
None of you care about the victims of the hurricane, only about your mishandled pet issues, and this drivel is proof of it.
 
It was a strong hurricane, of course there's damage. My only regret is that it didn't exclusively hit Haiti.
 
Unless this was the last thing this "journalist" wrote before unplugging their computer and never starting it up again to prevent global warming? They're just another grifting hypocrite.
 
That hurricane also hit Cuba if I'm correct and not surprising to learn then the Guardian won't complain about a case of communism legacy about Cuba.
Cuba's communist legacy can be summed up by Castro's hearse breaking down during his funeral.
 
Holy shit, "climate justice"? They're really reaching deep in the bag to grab some pure 2019 level scoldium alloy aren't they.
 
“The research shows that wherever Afro descendants are located, they are most vulnerable to climate and environmental impact and have been suffering from historical environmental injustice and climate injustice,” she said. “Climate justice cannot be separated from reparatory justice. The same systems that enriched the north created today’s vulnerabilities.”

Oh, OK, how much money do you want this time?
 
“We’re not begging these countries. This is a debt that is owed. And I think this needs to be made clear. And this is why there is very deep connection between calls for climate reparations and reparations for slavery, because they’re both connected through these longer histories, these colonial legacies,”
Sounds like a beggar to me. I only give money to beggars when they dance and sing for me like a minstrel. I've seen this song and dance before and it does not amuse me, it is tiring and worn out its welcome.
 
Caribbean countries need more sustainable solutions in order to withstand the brunt of climate change they did not cause.
Go bug China and India about it then. Why the fuck is whitey responsible for Anuj and Chang’s garbage?

wherever Afro descendants are located, they are most vulnerable to climate and environmental impact and have been suffering from historical environmental injustice and climate injustice
- fucking sheer balls on this race hustler.
- according to the kangz, niggers were everywhere; the first jews, euros, native americans, arabs, mexicans- you name it. When’s the US getting a fat check from Jamaica?
 
That hurricane also hit Cuba if I'm correct and not surprising to learn then the Guardian won't complain about a case of communism legacy about Cuba.

Cuba's communist legacy can be summed up by Castro's hearse breaking down during his funeral.

I'm surprised this journo didn't try to blame the CIA and/or Mossad for causing this hurricane to "defame" Cuba, like how they love to blame the CIA for everything that goes wrong there.
 
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