Clement Payne

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Clement Osbourne Payne was a Barbadian pioneer in the Caribbean trade union movement. He is officially recognized as a "national hero". In 1937, Payne led black Barbadians to resist the white planter class. He organized several public meetings and aroused the ire of the police and government. Payne was expelled from Barbados in July of that year on the basis that he had lied to enter the country. Payne was under the impression that he was a Barbadian citizen, but did not know that he was born in Trinidad to Barbadian parents. Authorities secreted Payne onto a boat in the early morning to Trinidad. After Payne was deported, four days of rioting ensued. This led to a Commission of Inquiry (The Moyne Commission) to investigate the situation in Barbados and other British West Indies colonies. The Moyne Commission determined that all of his charges against the island's rulers were accurate. In its report, it insisted on reforms which Payne had proposed, including the introduction of trade union legislation.

[edit] Legacy

The Clement Payne Movement is a leftist Barbadian political party named after Payne.

The Clement Payne Cultural Centre was formed in Barbados in 1989 to perpetuate his memory and to continue his work of enlightening Barbadians about their history and struggle.

[edit] References

Clement Payne on the Barbadian national site : [1]