Barbados hints at signing refugee agreement with the United States.

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Barbados Foreign Minister hints at US refugee resettlement agreement in talks
Foreign Affairs Minister, Kerrie Symmonds

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, CMC – The Barbados government has hinted at the possibility of following several other Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries in signing an agreement with the United States to facilitate the entry of third-country refugees, to mitigate situations in which Washington cannot return these individuals to their state of birth or origin.

Foreign Affairs Minister Kerrie Symmonds says, while Washington has not yet approached Bridgetown, “I would like to think that we would not be left out.

So far, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, St. Lucia, and Saint Kitts and Nevis have all indicated that they have signed the accord with the North American country. At the same time, Guyana has disclosed that negotiations are still ongoing.

Symmonds told the online publication, Barbados TODAY, that the United States is going around the Caribbean, and “they have not reached out to us yet, so we will just wait and see.

“It is not something we are looking forward to,” he said, adding that Barbados will “cross that bridge” when the time comes.

Symmonds declined to comment on what conditions Barbados might attach to any deal with the US, reiterating that the country had not yet heard from the Trump administration.

He said that Antigua and Barbuda had stipulated that it would not accept asylum-seekers with criminal records. In contrast, Dominica has said there were “careful deliberations of the need to avoid receiving violent individuals or individuals who will compromise the security of Dominica”.

In December last year, the Trump administration expanded travel restrictions to 20 more countries, including Dominica and Antigua and Barbuda, which went into effect on January 1 this year.

Last week, the US State Department said Antigua and Barbuda and Dominica were the only two Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries whose citizens will now have to post a bond of up to US$15,000 when applying for a visa to enter the North American country.

The US State Department said the measure comes into effect on January 21 this year, and the only other Caribbean country named is Cuba. The majority of countries that require citizens to post a bond are in Africa.

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