PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad (AP) A Jamaican woman won damages against the government of Barbados on Friday over her treatment at the airport as she tried to enter the country.
The Caribbean Court of Justice awarded Shanique Myrie the equivalent of nearly $38,000 and ruled that she had been wrongfully denied entry into Barbados.
A panel of judges determined that Myrie had been subjected to a "humiliating cavity search," unlawfully detained and improperly denied entry.
The court rejected her claim that she had been discriminated against because of her nationality, deciding instead that Barbados had violated a treaty allowing the free movement of citizens among Caribbean Community member states. She had been seeking the equivalent of $500,000, in part to compensate for what she said was psychological trauma.
The Caribbean Court of Justice, established as the court of appeal for Caribbean Community member states in 2001, is charged in part with enforcing the treaty. The government of Barbados argued that the treaty does not prohibit member states from ensuring that people meet the requirements for entry.