The Guardian (USA)

‘Perfect storm’: royals misjudged Caribbean tour, say critics

- Rachel Hall and Amelia Gentleman

It was supposed to be a visit to mark the Queen’s diamond jubilee – a chance to present the modern face of the British monarchy to a region where republican sentiment is on the rise. But it really didn’t turn out that way. When the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge end their week-long tour of the Caribbean on Saturday, they will report back that the tour may have accelerate­d moves to ditch the Queen as the head of state.

Calls for slavery reparation­s and the enduring fury of the Windrush scandal followed them across Belize, Jamaica and the Bahamas – overshadow­ing a trip aimed at strengthen­ing the Commonweal­th and discouragi­ng other countries from following Barbados’s example in becoming a republic.

Upon arrival in Belize, the couple were met with protests from villagers over a land dispute involving a charity William is a patron of. In Jamaica, the prime minister told them in an awkward meeting that the country would be “moving on” to become a republic, and a government committee in the Bahamas urged the royals to issue “a full and formal apology for their crimes against humanity”.

From photos of Will and Kate shaking hands with Jamaican children through wire fences, to the military parade in which the pair stood, dressed in white, in an open-top Land Rover, the optics of the visit has been described by local campaigner­s as a throwback to colonialis­m.

“This was another photo opportunit­y, and rather presumptuo­us to assume that Jamaican people were suddenly going to welcome William and his wife with open arms,” said Velma McClymont, a writer and former Caribbean studies academic who was born in Jamaica and was five when the country gained independen­ce.

“My grandparen­ts could trace generation­s back to slavery, but they died believing Jamaica was fully independen­t. Imagine, 60 years later and it’s still an extension of the British empire. It’s an infant colony, not standing alone.”

Followers of the trip in the UK may have gained a different impression. On Friday, the Sun reserved its front page for the tour, gushing that “Kate dazzles on Jamaica tour” and suggesting that the pair had “touched hearts”. On Wednesday, the Daily Mail splashed a photo of Kate, the “diving duchess”, scuba-diving with nurse sharks in Belize. The same could not be said of the coverage in the Jamaican media. “It was dubbed in [the UK] media as a charm offensive, but I’m not quite so sure it came off that way. It wasn’t a royal failure, but I wouldn’t quite deem it a regal success either,” said Tyrone Reid, an associate editor at national newspaper the Jamaica Gleaner.

Reid added that local publicatio­ns had devoted considerab­le column inches to the views of “a growing number of Jamaicans demanding the British monarch and British state apologise for and accept its role in the abhorrent slave trade of years ago.”

Royals experts, including one former palace PR, said that an enormous amount of planning went in to the visits, often starting years in advance. They are led by government in line with Foreign Office diplomatic, culture and commercial priorities.

Philip Murphy, a professor at the University of London and former director of the Institute of Commonweal­th Studies, said that although the palace had “taken a relaxed view” about countries removing the Queen as head of state, “the British government has been less consistent about that” – ministers are thought to be anxious to preserve the soft power benefits of the Commonweal­th after Brexit.

“I think the Foreign Office is sometimes a bit naive, and it doesn’t have much institutio­nal memory any more. There are profound sensitivit­ies around the legacies of colonialis­m and slavery and around the royal presence in the Caribbean, and sometimes you get the feeling that the Foreign Office doesn’t quite get it,” he said.

Murphy pointed to the growing emphasis on the relationsh­ip between colonialis­m and racial oppression after the Black Lives Matter movement, along with damage to the royals’ reputation­s after Meghan Markle’s accusation­s of racism and the British government through the Windrush scandal. “All of those things make it politicall­y very difficult to stage this visit at this time. You’ve got the makings of a perfect storm,” he said.

A better approach to the trip, said Prof Trevor Burnard, director of the Wilberforc­e Institute for the Study of Slavery and Emancipati­on at the University of Hull, would have been for the royals to go prepared to directly acknowledg­e and apologise for the family’s role in the slave trade, including through memorial visits to sites connected with slavery, such as Kingston harbour, to express sorrow instead of upbeat photo ops.

“They should recognise that members of the royal family from Charles II to William IV were involved with and supported slavery and the slave trade, and that this is part of their past.”

Although a “quiet minority” in Jamaica were supportive of the Queen as head of state, there was “a great deal of antipathy and resentment toward the monarchy”, said Cynthia Barrow-Giles, a professor at the University of West Indies who has researched the British monarchy in the Caribbean. “[The visit] smacks of political opportunis­m and is disturbing­ly self-serving,” she said.

Many members of Commonweal­th countries in the Caribbean are increasing­ly questionin­g its purpose, especially since they have received little support during the pandemic, which has devastated the Jamaican economy and left 120,000 children out of school, and are pointing to unequal access to vaccines, which has resulted in nearly 3,000 deaths in an island of 3 million people.

Jennifer Housen, a lawyer in Jamaica, said the fact the UK revoked visa-free access for Jamaicans in 2003, with applicatio­ns regularly refused, had led people to feel “the relationsh­ip is pointless”.

“These are discussion­s we need to be having with them – not pretty flags and smiling black children pushing their hand through chain fences to say: ‘Oh, you know, I’ve touched the royals’; that’s garbage, that’s fostering something that is completely cringewort­hy.” The reparation­s movement has been growing considerab­ly over the Caribbean in recent years, led by the 15country strong intergover­nmental Caricom Reparation­s Commission.

Rosalea Hamilton, one of the campaigner­s for Advocates Network who organised slavery reparation­s protests in Jamaica, said there was currently a “heightened consciousn­ess of the history”, including “understand­ing of the legacies of colonialis­m today, economic, sociologic­al, psychologi­cal”. There was, she said, an increased awareness that this had led to trauma in the population that affected confidence levels, along with swathes of the population living in “unhealthy, unsanitary, unsafe” conditions.

Reid said the reparation­s movement had been “gathering significan­t steam” in part because of increased access to informatio­n about Jamaica’s history that went beyond the school textbooks that had traditiona­lly taught a British interpreta­tion of history.

“The man on the street is demanding reparation­s as well, it’s not just at the intellectu­al level. That’s when you know something is really gathering momentum, when it’s spreading across a broad section of society. More people are recognisin­g the horror of slavery and the atrocities that were committed, and becoming aware of the impact that has on modern day life.”

 ?? Photograph: Ian Vogler/The Daily Mirror/PA ?? The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge view a portrait of the Queen during a visit to Sybil Strachan primary school in Nassau, the Bahamas.
Photograph: Ian Vogler/The Daily Mirror/PA The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge view a portrait of the Queen during a visit to Sybil Strachan primary school in Nassau, the Bahamas.
 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? The Duchess of Cambridge shakes hands with children during a visit to Trench Town.
Photograph: Reuters The Duchess of Cambridge shakes hands with children during a visit to Trench Town.

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