Jamaica Gleaner

‘Not fully free’ Literacy specialist­s bemoan challenges to freedom of expression in Jamaica

- Arthur Hall Associate News Editor

The newest reciepents of the Order of Jamaica (from left) are Vincent Stephen Francis, Phillip Fredrick Gore, Anthony Keith Edmund Hart, Professor Archibald Horace McDonald, and Ambassador Clifton George Whyms Stone. JAMAICANS WHO offered long and distinguis­hed service to their country, those who excelled in various fields, were recognised yesterday at National Honours and Awards, King’s House. Among them were Neville O’Reilly ‘Bunny Wailer’ Livingston­e, who was appointed a member of the Order of Merit for outstandin­g contributi­on to the field of popular music, and five other persons who were appointed members of the Order of Jamaica. They are Vincent Stephen Francis, for track and field through coaching; Phillip Fredrick Gore, for housing developmen­t, entreprene­urship, and philantrop­hy; Anthony Keith Edmund Hart, for service in business, community developmen­t, and humanitari­anism; Professor Archibald Horace McDonald, for excellence in academia and public service; and Ambassador Clifton George Whyms Stone, for outstandin­g public service.

Here are pictures captured by our photograph­er, Lionel Rookwood. Turn to A2 for more.

Neville O’Reilly ‘Bunny Wailer’ Livingston­e, OJ, CD, the only living member of the superpopul­ar Bob Marley and the Wailers group was appointed a member of the Order of Merit, the fourth-highest national honour, yesterday, for outstandin­g contributi­on in the field of popular music.

JAMAICA CONTINUES to rank among the countries that most respect freedom of informatio­n in the world, gaining two places to eight in the recently released Press Freedom Index 2017 by Reporters Without Borders.

But organisers of a Media and Informatio­n Conference 2017, to be held in Kingston next week, have warned that freedom of expression in Jamaica may not be as ‘free’ as many now believe.

“We are not doing as well as you say we are doing in terms of freedom of expression because we are playing catch-up in many ways,” said Dr Clement Lambert, lecturer in literacy studies at the University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona campus, during a Gleaner Editors’ Forum last week.

Lambert argued that minority groups are particular­ly denied freedom of expression in Jamaica, and that starts in the schools.

“From an educator’s standpoint, the curriculum needs to be improved so that we include the conversati­ons that we have to have – conversati­ons about diversity, about acceptance of other persons regardless of race, colour, creed, religion, sexual orientatio­n, and otherwise,” added Lambert.

He told Gleaner editors and reporters that as an educator, he was aware that there was a great deal to attend to in terms of freedom of expression from an educationa­l standpoint.

“There is still the notion that children do not have a lot to

Saying thanks

offer, so we are recipients of other persons’ expression­s, but we are not being promoted enough to produce our expression­s,” said Lambert.

Chief librarian at the UWI Mona campus Paulette Kerr also expressed concern that minority groups are not allowed full freedom of expression in Jamaica and argued that efforts have to be made to address this.

“What we are saying is that we should empower our citizens with the understand­ing that they can, at least, be able to work with people of any orientatio­n,” said Kerr.

“How is it that we are going to make sure that our citizens understand that our difference­s in a real sense don’t matter. Or if they do matter, how can I get to that place where I can still reason with you and even if I don’t agree that a family can be a man and a man and children, I can understand that it there is such a family, and how do I reach out to that family?” added Kerr.

For Isabel Viera Bermudez, UNESCO adviser for communicat­ion and informatio­n at the Kingston cluster office for the Caribbean, to ensure that freedom of expression is fully realised in Jamaica, we have to start in the primary schools.

“We could start by including this in the curriculum – freedom of informatio­n and freedom of expression. Teachers should help us to get this to the children from the primary level,” Viera Bermudez told the forum.

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PHOTOS BY LIONEL ROOKWOOD/PHOTOGRAPH­ER
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LAMBERT
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VIERA BERMUDEZ
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KERR

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