Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts

Friday, January 9, 2026

Brittany Harris writes the Canadian Prime Minister on the Appointment of Mr. Clayton Fernander; The Bahamas Consul General to Canada




I wrote the Mark Carney Prime Minister of Canada 🇨🇦and the Minister of Foreign Affairs

 

Dear Prime Minister,


Brittany Harris
I am writing as a concerned member of the public to respectfully request that the Government of Canada undertake an appropriate review and investigation into the appointment and presence in Canada of Mr. Clayton Fernander, former Commissioner of the Royal Bahamas Police Force, who is currently serving as Consul General of the Commonwealth of The Bahamas in Canada.

This request is made in the interest of transparency, public confidence, and the integrity of Canada’s diplomatic and national security standards.

Mr. Fernander resigned from his position as Commissioner of the Royal Bahamas Police Force in December 2024.  His resignation followed significant public controversy surrounding serious criminal matters that arose under his leadership and are now before the courts.

During Mr. Fernander’s tenure as Commissioner, the following documented and factual events occurred:

- United States federal indictments were issued against senior officers of the Royal Bahamas Police Force for drug and firearms trafficking, with those officers arrested and prosecuted in New York.  These matters are before the United States courts and occurred while Mr. Fernander was Commissioner.

- Chief Superintendent Michael Johnson, then head of the Criminal Investigations Unit, was removed from his position following the public release of voice recordings involving the bribery of a known criminal figure connected to a million-dollar armoured truck robbery.  This matter is also before the courts.

- The killing of Mr. Azario Major, an unarmed Bahamian man who was shot and killed by police officers.  This incident has been the subject of public inquiry, judicial proceedings, and documentary examination, and has significantly impacted public trust in law enforcement leadership during that period.

In addition to the above, I wish to clearly distinguish the following as allegations, which I respectfully ask Canadian authorities to independently assess:

- There have long been allegations within Bahamian and Canadian law-enforcement and community circles regarding a close relationship between Mr. Fernander and Daran Neely, also known as “Monster,” an alleged gang leader associated with the so-called “Dirty South Gang.”

- This gang has been linked to violent criminal activity, including a serious robbery-murder in Windsor, Ontario, involving Bahamian nationals.

- It has been alleged that Mr. Neely benefited from protection during Mr. Fernander’s tenure as Commissioner.  Following Mr. Fernander’s resignation, that protection allegedly ceased, and Mr. Neely was later killed.  These points are presented strictly as allegations for the purpose of requesting independent review.

It is also a matter of public record that Mr. Fernander maintains a close personal relationship with the Prime Minister of The Bahamas, the Right Honourable Philip Edward Davis.  Despite Mr. Fernander’s resignation amid public outcry and ongoing court matters involving senior officers under his leadership, he was subsequently appointed to a senior diplomatic post in Canada.

In light of the seriousness of these facts and concerns, I respectfully request:

1. A review of the vetting and acceptance process that led to Mr. Fernander’s appointment as Consul General in Canada.

2. An assessment by appropriate Canadian authorities of whether his presence and role are consistent with Canada’s standards for diplomatic engagement, public safety, and the rule of law.

3. That relevant national security, law-enforcement, and foreign-affairs agencies be permitted to independently examine the court records, indictments, and public materials related to the above matters.

This letter does not seek to assert guilt, but rather to request due diligence, accountability, and transparency.  Canada’s reputation for upholding democratic values and the rule of law makes such a review both reasonable and necessary.

Thank you for your time and consideration. I trust this matter will receive the seriousness it warrants.

Respectfully,

Brittany Harris  
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

We Learn from Canada Trudeau Errors in Response to Trump's Tariff Big Stick

Justin Trudeau Errs


CANADA IS RIGHT TO STAND UP; BUT IT MUST LEARN TO ACT WITH STRATEGIC STEALTH!


By Professor Gilbert Morris
Nassau, The Bahamas


Trudeau Errors
Seems unwise that Canada should telegraph its every move against US financial aggression.

If Canada knows - for instance - that 6 million U.S. homes depend on Canadian energy…make the moves necessary to bring that to bear without telegraphing.  Undertake surgical strategies to offset interdependencies, by whatever degree of stealth is possible.

One can’t win a narrative war.

Let Trump awaken to the consequences of his decisions by their actual impacts.

America’s apparent dominance - to speak in such terms - are really a network of teeming interdependencies through which it has been allowed to appear dominant singularly.

That is fragile.

And Canada has been complicit in sustaining American dominance; including choking Cuba to death illegally and financing the slaughter of 50,000 Palestinians.

It’s not enough to whine and claim victimhood.  Canada must in its actions atone for its complicity as handmaiden to serial villainy: for instance, it should end the effectiveness of the Cuban embargo by leveraging its massive agricultural prowess in Cuba; solving their food production and distribution problems.

Such a strategy would not merely help the Cubans, but it would punch a hole in the embargo, whilst providing regional states - which have also been complicit - with alternative access to agriculture.

Things how one break those interdependent linkages, expose fragilities and system anomalies which are weaknesses appearing as strategy’s, by enacting counter-measures against key US industries, rather than against the U.S. itself…and beyond mere talk and showboating.

It strikes harder and more deeply and in that way, does so in a manner that’s difficult to incite revenge.

Small nations must master such methods!


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