Barbados Attorney General Wilfred Abrahams has issued a stark warning that systemic agricultural theft, legally termed praedial larceny, is escalating into a national crisis that jeopardizes food security and undermines law enforcement. During Wednesday’s Budget debate in the House of Assembly, Abrahams demanded immediate and serious action against what he described as organized rural crime rather than minor pilfering.
Abrahams challenged the perception of praedial larceny as a pretty-sounding, victimless crime, stating bluntly: “Praedial larceny is thieving.” He emphasized that the romanticization of this offense through euphemistic language masks its devastating impact on farmers and agricultural sustainability.
The Attorney General revealed he recently forwarded a detailed complaint from a sugarcane farmer to Prime Minister Mia Mottley, Agriculture Minister Indar Weir, and Justice Minister Dale Marshall. The complaint documented organized theft operations occurring daily at the Bussa Roundabout, where individuals openly sell “trays piled high with cane neatly packaged” in what appears to be coordinated criminal activity.
While acknowledging economic disparities, Abrahams presented a compelling moral dilemma: “If one poor Black man robs somebody else systematically, day in, day out… and that person closes down their business so that 100 poor Black people don’t have a job, who has won?”
Abrahams warned that unchecked agricultural theft creates a dangerous precedent that erodes respect for property laws generally. “You don’t go and rape acres of somebody’s cane field… because it doesn’t stop there,” he stated, noting that such crimes often expand beyond crops to other goods.
The Attorney General connected the issue directly to national security concerns, arguing that failure to prosecute praedial larceny discourages agricultural investment precisely when Barbados needs greater food self-sufficiency. “When we are trying to get people to grow our crops, become food secure, we cannot be disincentivising farmers by not prosecuting people for praedial larceny,” he concluded.
