Last Thursday and Friday, the deferred 50th Anniversary of the Black Power Movement conference was held at The UWI.
On April 21, 1970, Dr Eric Williams declared a state of emergency to deal with the Black Power protesters.
In London, declassified files reveal that the protests in Trinidad were discussed by the British Cabinet on April 23, 1970. Excerpts from the Cabinet Conclusions reveal the following:
“3. The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster said that there had been a series of disturbances in Trinidad instigated by the Black Power movement. The immediate occasion of these had been the trial of Trinidadian students in Canada on charges of arson, but there had been a long-standing background of economic discontent. On 21 April, the Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago, Dr Eric Williams, had declared a state of emergency and had ordered the detention of 25 Black Power leaders; but ten of these had so far evaded arrest. The situation was complicated by the fact that at much the same time some 50 members of the Trinidad and Tobago Regiment, who sympathised with the Black Power movement, had mutinied and had established themselves in the former United States base at Chaguaramas, where they were holding 200 members of the Regiment as hostages.”
The Defence Secretary, Denis Healy, told the Cabinet “that one frigate, HMS Jupiter, had been despatched to Trinidad, with orders to remain 30 miles off-shore, and would be in a position that night. A second frigate, HMS Sirius, would reach the island within the next two days and would also remain off-shore and out of sight.”
Prime Minister Harold Wilson, in summing up the discussion, said, “… that the Cabinet agreed on the importance of maintaining relations of confidence and sympathy with the Government of Trinidad and Tobago. A successful Black Power revolt would have serious repercussions elsewhere in the Caribbean; and, if these extended to the Associated States, it might prove impossible for us to avoid intervention ...”
The Associated States of Grenada, St Vincent, St Lucia, Dominica, Antigua and St Kitts-Nevis were established in 1967.
By the time of the next Cabinet meeting on April 30, 1970, the Foreign and Commonwealth Secretary, Michael Stewart, reported as follows:
“… the situation had eased over the past few days. In Trinidad the mutiny in the Trinidad and Tobago Regiment had been virtually brought to an end as a result of the negotiations with the mutineers conducted by the former commander of the regiment, Colonel Serrette: but some mutineers had disappeared, taking their arms with them, and were still unaccounted for. Meanwhile, HMS Jupiter remained off Port-of-Spain …”
One year earlier, on April 30, 1969, a confidential telegram was sent from the British High Commission in POS by Sir P Hampshire to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) on the subject of a ban on the T&T-born US Black Power activist, Stokely Carmichael. The telegram read as follows:
“At request of BOAC Manager here please pass urgently to Chief of Security BOAC London Airport. Trinidad Government has declared as an undesirable visitor either for in transit or landing at airports in Trinidad and Tobago Mr Stokely Carmichael Afro/American holder of US Passport Number … issued on 26/1/67. Request you advise all BOAC stations especially USA, Canada, Caribbean and Latin American areas.”
Williams had moved one year before the Black Power uprising to ban Stokely Carmichael (who later changed his name to Kwame Ture in 1978) from returning to the land of his birth. On April 13, 1970, another telegram from one Mr Thompson at the British High Commission in POS to the FCO was sent on the subject of Stokely Carmichael as follows:
“Message from BOAC Manager here to Chief of Security BOAC London which our TELNO 138 of 30 April 1969 asked you to pass reported Trinidad GOVT declaration of Carmichael as an undesirable visitor either for in transit or landing at Trinidad and Tobago airports.
2. On April 11 Ministry of Home Affairs repeated this declaration to Airlines Association who passed it on to individual airlines …”
Williams’ hard line against Carmichael that pre-dated the Black Power uprising of April 1970 by a year may have allowed him and the PNM to survive the events of 1970 as Carmichael’s charisma and forceful advocacy of Black Power could have caused the overthrow of the Government.
Prof Hamid Ghany is professor of Constitutional Affairs and Parliamentary Studies of The University of the West Indies (UWI). He was also appointed an Honorary Professor of UWI upon his retirement in October 2021. He continues his research and publications and also does some teaching at UWI.
