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Locked in Paradise
7th December 2004
This script was made from audio
tape – any inaccuracies are due to voices being unclear or inaudible
Jayne Levy It looked nice. It
looked like Florida; it just seemed like the perfect thing to do.
Megan Quinn It hurts right now not
to see him for twelve months but it would hurt a heck of a lot more
not to see him for the rest of his life.
Alan Hadfield A youngster who is
having a tough time in society, that’s going down in flames needs
something tough to help him get back on track.
Julie Wilkinson It was an act of
desperation. My husband and I didn’t know what else to do and we
were conned.
LOCKED IN PARADISE
Raphael Rowe There’s a growing
number of difficult American teenagers, whose rebellious behaviour
and lack of respect is driving their parents to desperate measures.
Raphael Rowe Fifteen year old
Shannon from Florida was out of control and heading for disaster.
JAYNE LEVY She was piercing every
part of her body and she was on medication, which she doesn’t like
to talk about but she was on medication and she was drinking alcohol
with that medication and that’s that was lethal.
SHANNON LEVY ROWLEY Tranquility Bay
2000-2002 I was smoking pot, I was popping pills, drinking, doing
acid, just experimenting with everything cos I was really unhappy
with my life.
Jayne Levy I had to do something
quick, cos I was fearing for her life. I didn’t think she would be
alive too much longer. She got physically violent with me. And that
did it; that was the clincher, when that happened she was, it was
time for her to go somewhere else.
Youngsters Welcome to Jamaica!
Raphael Rowe Many of America’s most
challenging teenagers are dispatched here; Tranquility Bay, Jamaica.
Raphael Rowe The facility is run by
WWASPS, the World Wide Association of Specialty Programmes and
Schools. And it’s not cheap. Sending your child to this corner of
the Caribbean will cost almost nineteen thousand pounds a year.
That’s cheaper than Eton. Just.
Raphael Rowe Julie Wilkinson from
Florida felt she had no option but pay up.
Aston WINSTON WILKINSON Tranquility
Bay 2002-2003 I was out of control. I, like, stole their car, like
twice. Got, they pressed charges on me and I was arrested and I went
to jail and it led up to the point where I had so many charges that
they were going to put me on what they call a level six programme.
Aston JULIE WILKINSON You don’t
know where the government’s going to send your child, it could be
anywhere from Jacksonville to Miami and that scared me to death.
Raphael Rowe The courts told Julie
there were two options; either she found fifteen year old Winston a
treatment centre or the state would take him off her hands.
Julie Wilkinson I sat down and did
some research on the Internet and uh, you know, read all the
information at Tranquility Bay or WWASPS was providing and it
sounded like a wonderful programme where Winston was going to get
lots of professional help and that they would help to, you know, uh
straighten out his behaviour. They faxed me an application within
the hour and said if I send them a cheque for five thousand dollars
that Winston would virtually be on his way.
Raphael Rowe Jayne also was so
convinced by the website and sales team that she signed up with a
seven thousand dollar down payment.
Raphael Rowe Shannon meanwhile was
in for a rude awakening.
Shannon Levy Rowley Three
strangers, a lady and two big men, came into my house and sat me
down on the sofa and said they were going to take me away to a new
school since I wasn’t gong to mine. They said I was going to Jamaica
and they handcuffed me and said I could co-operate or they're gonna
throw me over their shoulder. I was screaming for my mom cos I had
no clue what was going on, I was very scared.
Raphael Rowe How difficult was it
to make the decision to have strangers to come into your home and in
effect kidnap Shannon?
Jayne Levy That’s basically what
they did, yeah, I always refer to it as kidnapping, they say
escorting but it’s really kidnapping. Desperate parents do desperate
things.
Raphael Rowe I wanted to see
Tranquility Bay for myself so I travelled to southern Jamaica. The
facility is tucked away in remote Treasure Beach, four hours from
Kingston.
Raphael Rowe Once inside children
are cut off completely from their home life. They can’t talk to
their parents until staff decide they’ve earned it. Their parents
sign over their rights to the programme.
Raphael Rowe Seven months after
first asking I eventually got a chance to meet the director and get
a rare glimpse inside.
Raphael Rowe Mr Kay.
Mr Kay Good morning.
Raphael Rowe Nice to meet you.
Mr Kay How are you? Raphael Rowe
I’m not too bad. Thanks for agreeing to meet me this morning.
Mr Kay You’re very welcome.
Raphael Rowe I wasn’t allowed to
talk to other pupils but I was handed over to Joe, a model student
from Ohio; fourteen months earlier he was into drink, drugs and
skipping school.
Raphael Rowe Now he’s clean.
Thanks, he says, to the programme.
Joe I think this is the first room
I was checked into when I first came here actually.
Raphael Rowe Really. And how long
ago was that?
Joe Fourteen months ago.
Raphael Rowe It’s quite bleak
Joe It’s just a latch down. It’s
minimum.
Raphael Rowe New arrivals, some as
young as twelve, can’t speak without permission, can’t look out of
line, are allowed the barest necessities. Only hard work and
compliance will earn them rewards such as a sweets or a phone call
home.
Aston JAY KAY Director of
Tranquility Bay Level One kids don’t have a lot of privileges.
They’re monitored twenty-four hours a day, supervised very highly.
Our programme is built on responsibility and trust and as they prove
themselves to be accountable and operating out of integrity then
they’ll advance in level and we give them more responsibility.
Raphael Rowe So these are the kind
of newest recruits, almost. This is not a punishment room.
Joe No.
Raphael Rowe It’s just a chill out
room but they’re having to be observed.
Joe It could even be there for a
long time but it’s just they haven’t gained any trust yet enough to
let these walk around by yourself.
Raphael Rowe I’m trying to imagine
what these kids must have done to be here. I really don’t know.
Joe I guess that’s the motivation
to work for gaining Level Four.
Voice on loudspeaker Subtitles
The investment in money and time
you have made up to this point…will come back to you many times
over. And the symbol of all the positive management skills taught…
Raphael Rowe Children are bombarded
with self improvement messages even when they eat.
Jay Kay What happens is every meal
the kids listen to a motivational audio tape. They have to write
down what they learned and what they heard today, so they actually
have to kind of recite from memory what they heard and then how are
they going to apply the message that was in the message to their
life. We have to maximise all the time that we have with these kids
to give them all the information we can so they can choose a better,
a better life for themselves.
Raphael Rowe Shortly after I
arrived I met a group of parents anxious to explain why they were
happy to put their faith in Jay Kay and his methods.
Raphael Rowe How long has it been
since you’ve seen your son?
Alan Hadfield Fourteen months. I
will see him tomorrow for the first time.
Raphael Rowe Why, Why haven’t you
seen him in fourteen months?
Aston ALAN HADFIELD Because this
is, this is the rules of the school. It’s, it’s, it’s, it’s also the
rules for parents.
Aston MEGAN QUINN If it wasn’t for
the God sent gift of this programme you would be going to the
lakeshore of Chicago where my father is buried, where my sister is
buried and putting flowers on his grave. So, yes, it hurts right now
not to see him for twelve months but it would hurt a heck of a lot
more not to see him for the rest of his life.
Alan Hadfield I have to, I have to
believe in these people. They have helped a lot of children.
Aston VIVIAN ELLIS You have to earn
everything in this programme, OK. It’s the way the programme is set
up. In fact they even have to earn the right to see the ocean.
They’re right there on the ocean, OK. I mean how great is that?
Don’t you think you’d be motivated to want to go out and see the
ocean?
Raphael Rowe But there’s a darker
side to being locked in paradise. Parents of children who haven’t
responded to the programme say the regime is brutal, open to abuses
and some of the staff poorly trained. They are now preparing to sue
WWASPS for damages.
Raphael Rowe
After the breakdown of his
relationship with his mother, fifteen year old Oliver Bucolo was
sent to Tranquility Bay.
Aston OLIVER BUCOLO Tranquility Bay
2000-2003 The first six months were just terrifying and horrible.
Like, like I said, they shaved my head, they stripped me of like all
my personal possessions, they threw you straight into line. You
know, sometimes I mean you’d be having a bad day so they just be nit
picking, try, try to drive you off the edge. I mean you’d be
thinking off into space so they’d get you for that, don’t look out
of line whatever, oh I’m sorry you talked out of turn when you were
apologising and you didn’t call me sir. You have a disrespect to
staff and talking out of turn and they’d go on and on and on and
kids would just freak out and like punch a wall or something.
Raphael Rowe For one child it was
all too much. In August two thousand and one seventeen year old
Valerie Heron jumped off a third floor balcony. She’d been escorted
to Tranquillity Bay just twenty-four hours before.
Shannon Levy Rowley She just got
there and she just jumped off the balcony one day and died in front,
smack in the middle of the school and every body saw it.
Raphael Rowe One of the most
controversial methods of the programme is OP or Observational
Placement.
Raphael Rowe Children lie silently
on the floor in a guarded room until staff members decide they can
leave. They eat, sleep and exercise in the same room. I found
ex-students who’d been in there for eight weeks at a time.
Jay Kay If they’re refusing the
programme, if they’re a danger to themself or others, if they have
acted out physically or in a violent manner they will probably find
themselves in Observation Placement. And the length of stay that the
kids stay in there; we try to get all the kids out within
twenty-four hours. However, if a child has acted out physically then
they’re going to find themselves in there for a longer period of
time.
Raphael Rowe Shannon could not cope
with the regime in Tranquility Bay; she cried constantly and ended
up in OP following a suicide attempt.
Shannon Levy Rowley They lined us
up like sardines in there, like feet to head everything. They lined
us up, no air, no ventilation, if we had to go to the bathroom we
had to leave the door open so they can sit there and watch us and I
was there for eight weeks straight.
Winston Wilkinson Pretty much when
I ran away they sentenced me to go to OP. And the normal, you’re
only supposed to spend like two or three days in OP, they kept me in
there for forty-six days and I would beg my case manager oh please,
you know, let me out, I’ll do good and you know, you know it kind of
like gave me, I was so distraught and like so depressed that I would
just like would do anything to get out of there.
Raphael Rowe So what have these
guys done? And why are they doing what they’re doing, which is lying
on the floor? What did you do?
Boy I tripped out. Raphael Rowe You
did what?
Boy I tripped out
Joe He flipped out.
Raphael Rowe What do you think
about what you’re doing right now, which is lying on the floor as a
form of punishment?
Boy I hate it.
Raphael Rowe Does it work? Does
this work for kids being forced to lie on your back or your front?
This is your third time. Joe has been in the situation you’ve been
in but he’s come through and he now says he’s on Level Six and he’s
conformed and it’s changed his life, don’t you think at some point
it’s going to change yours?
Boy This place is senseless, you
waste your parents’ money.
Raphael Rowe How long have you been
in that position?
Boy Five days.
Joe They used to give us worse
food, they used to give us beans and bread but I think someone came
and told them they couldn’t punish you with food, with like
different privileges of food so they get the same meals now.
Raphael Rowe Until last year
children were made to lie on towels. They are now given mats.
Jay Kay We added the mats. We were
going to, we would have changed the mats anyway but the Ministry of
Education and Children’s Services, they made that a recommendation
verbally.
Raphael Rowe As a result of
inspecting the school and seeing what had gone before?
Jay Kay Hmm mm.
Raphael Rowe The Jamaican branch of
UNICEF, the international child rights agency, want the use of OP
scrapped.
Aston BERTRAND BAINVEL Head of
UNICEF Jamaica This kind of methods is definitely something which is
not in accordance with the convention of the rights of the child and
not in accordance with, with other UN rules regulating the status of
juveniles deprived of liberty. There is a high possibility that it
falls under the definition of child abuse.
Raphael Rowe US Embassy documents
show there were concerns over the use of pepper spray by staff. This
was discontinued in nineteen ninety-eight. Jamaican police are
unhappy with the way the programme is run.
Raphael Rowe Last year a senior
officer voiced some concern that ‘the staff wasn’t sufficiently
trained to handle the many types of problems that might arise due to
the special needs and situation of the students’.
Raphael Rowe Oliver was restrained
for not being able to keep up with the exercises in OP.
Oliver Bucolo It was just really
intimidating, I mean a lot of the people were just, they would just
sit there real close to you and they’d have like some kind of big
guy on top of you and they’d just, they’d take your, you know, your
arm and they’d, you know, you know, jam it up behind you and just
push it and push it and push it and I mean it was just unbearable
and you’d be screaming, like are you going to comply yet, are you
going to comply and you’re just screaming yes, I’m going to,
whatever.
Raphael Rowe Shannon also
experienced excessive restraint after hitting a staff member. As she
struggled it became violent.
Aston SHANNON LEVY ROWLEY
Tranquility Bay 2000-2002 One staff held my arms behind my back when
I was standing up so I couldn’t grab on to anything. Another staff
ripped my feet out from underneath me so I fell with all my weight
right onto my chin. I immediately started gushing blood everywhere
but that didn’t stop them. They still continued restraining me,
trying to clean it up and they didn’t stop and I needed stitches but
they waited till the whole facility fell asleep to sneak me out to
the hospital and the care that they lacked to give me resulted in
the long term damage that I have.
Raphael Rowe A disc in Shannon’s
jaw was displaced. She’s now awaiting her third operation. Jay Kay
says he’s now introduced a new safer system of restraint.
Raphael Rowe Police have also been
critical of the lack of openness at the school. A two thousand and
two report to the US Embassy accuses the director of failing to
volunteer information to the police when staff had behaved
unlawfully.
Raphael Rowe It also lists an
alleged rape in nineteen ninety-nine, an employee being fired for
selling drugs and the dismissal of a member of staff for seeking
inappropriate contact with a female student.
Aston JAY KAY Director of
Tranquility Bay In the case of any, any sexual impropriety, that
information is always turned over to the police. Always. Anything
that has to do with drugs is always turned over to the police.
Raphael Rowe And there’s never been
an incident where you’ve not informed the authorities, you’re
categorically, that’s it.
Jay Kay Absolutely.
Raphael Rowe The parents I met
earlier have now had the chance to reacquaint themselves with their
children, some of them after a year. They seem unconcerned by the
criticism. For them the alternatives are far worse.
Vivian Ellis I’ll tell you
something Raphael; he’s better off in OP than in jail or dead. OK.
And as far as abuses go, look, look at me I’ve lived on this earth a
little while, OK, I’m not stupid enough to believe that everything
is all rosy and altruistic, OK. There are going to be abuses, I
don’t care what you’re looking at, there are going to be abuses,
sure, OK, and if I know of them I’m not going to let my child be
party to them.
Alan Hadfield My thoughts after
having conversation with him, Alex has a desire to change. He has a
desire to improve on himself and I have never seen that desire in
him before. So there’s hope, there’s clearly hope.
Megan Quinn These kids come out
with more tools and more self actualised than most adults we know
and I’ve just really surrendered to it and I watched him walk away
tall, giving me the thumbs up, both of us waving goodbye knowing
that it’s all going to be good and he’s coming home and I’ll have
that boy back.
Alan Hadfield Is this school hard?
It’s probably, probably one of the hardest schools out there but a
youngster who is having a tough time in society that’s going down in
flames needs something tough to help him get back on track. It’s not
easy. It’s not fun. It’s tough love.
Raphael Rowe Parents who see
results seem happy with the school’s extreme methods. But families
of those who can’t or won’t submit to tough love are not.
Raphael Rowe Sometimes the split
occurs within families.
Raphael Rowe Kathy and Michael have
come to see their relative, Amanda, who was put in the programme by
her father against their wishes. But a US Embassy official breaks
the news that they’re not welcome.
US Embassy official Hi.
Kathy Hi, can we go in?
US Embassy official No.
Kathy Why?
US Embassy official No, I’m sorry.
Kathy No why?
US Embassy official Because the…
Kathy I mean why? I don’t
understand. I have been nothing but nice to you all.
Michael Hold on just a second,
Kathy. Kathy, wait a second
US Embassy official ...with Mr Kay,
who made the decision that I could speak with Amanda but no one else
could be let on to the property.
Aston MICHAEL NEUMANN We didn’t fly
all the way over here, we haven’t spent thousands of dollars, you
know, to make a point, you know, or to be, or to win. No, we
wouldn’t, we wouldn’t do that to Amanda. You know, we just want to
make sure that she is comfortable and safe.
Aston KATHRYN BRAGG She smoked, got
caught with one cigarette, well that one cigarette turns into pot,
to cocaine where she’s the worst child in the world when she really
hasn’t.
Michael Neumann They’ve
criminalising adolescence.
Raphael Rowe So is Tranquillity Bay
just a bit rough around the edges? Events at other WWASPS facilities
point to a wider problem. These children are enjoying their freedom
after authorities ordered another of its programmes in Costa Rica to
be closed last year. Their findings included physical and
psychological maltreatment of students and restricted communications
with parents. Senior staff member Amberly Knight had already
resigned.
Aston AMBERLY KNIGHT Former
Director of Dundee Ranch I had the blinders on, I trusted that they
were the best thing and this is only thing for them. If we weren’t
doing this to these kids they’d be on drugs, they’d be out on the
street, so, you know, this is the best thing for them. And so I kind
of accepted that unfortunately, now I look back and think, how could
I have done that, but I did.
Raphael Rowe Did you witness some
of this punishment?
Amberly Knight Every day. Every
day. And I’m appalled to think that I didn’t recognise it at the
time.
Raphael Rowe Other facilities with
links to WWASPS have been investigated following allegations of
abuse. Two closed down.
Raphael Rowe One of problems in
finding out how your child is coping with the regime is that
communication is so limited.
Raphael Rowe Low level children can
write to their parents but rules forbid them from meeting them or
even talking on the phone.
Raphael Rowe It can take up to four
months or more to earn the right for a monthly call and even that is
monitored by members of staff.
Raphael Rowe You were there for how
long?
Shannon Levy Rowley Thirteen
months.
Raphael Rowe And in that time how
often did you get to speak to your mother?
Shannon Levy Rowley I didn’t speak
to her at all; I spoke to her for the first time after twelve
months. And we had about a half an hour phone conversation and I had
my family representative sitting right next to me and we’re not
allowed to say anything that they don’t want us to say. I was not
allowed to basically put across what happened to my jaw and the
things that were going on because if I said something that seemed as
manipulative to the staff I’d get into trouble, I could lose my
level, I cannot talk to my mom any more. Stuff like that.
Aston JAYNE LEVY We have been told
by the school and by all the parties that be, that we were not to
listen to our children, that we should listen to the family rep
because the children can manipulate and will manipulate us and I
believed that, I trusted that.
Raphael Rowe Former WWASPS employee
Amberly Knight says that’s no accident.
Amberly Knight We were told that if
a parent had a concern or if their child had a concern then we
should just tell them that the parent was, or the child was
manipulating and lying. I wasn’t given much training as far as how
to help the kids. A lot of my training, if you can call it training,
was how to manipulate the parents. We were always told that a
parent, a child should never leave the programme unless they turned
eighteen or graduated.
Raphael Rowe What’s this?
Joe This is the Starfish Dorm,
which is the transition…
Raphael Rowe Joe’s reached the top
of the privilege tree.
Joe It’s where I live right now.
Raphael Rowe Only a third of kids
get there.
Joe You see we can have like a TV
and VCR, guitars, we got a refrigerator and stereos and stuff.
Raphael Rowe And this is where you
end up when you go through the programme?
Joe It makes you count your
blessings, I guess, or like you really appreciate things like that.
Raphael Rowe Joe will be going home
to his parents soon. For children who flunk it’s a different story.
Joe They send you an exit plan,
which is like your, it’s what you get if you don’t graduate the
programme and if I didn’t graduate the programme and I left when I
was eighteen then they said I’d get twenty-five dollars and a ticket
to Columbus Ohio, which is where I live but twenty-five dollars and
then that means that I’m on my own.
Raphael Rowe Parents are sold a
progressive, tailored education as part of the programme package.
There is a computer room but learning is self study with text books.
Private tuition is available at an extra cost to parents who also
have to pay for pens, pencils and paper on top of fees of almost
nineteen thousand pounds.
Raphael Rowe Although teachers are
on hand to answer questions; speaking to Joe it seems there’s not
much traditional teaching going on.
Joe With the book, you’ll read it
and you do chapter work, which is notes on a piece of paper and you
turn that in and then you take a test.
Raphael Rowe What happens when you
take the test; I mean how do you pass, graduate?
Joe Well, if you get say like a
seventy-five percent, that’d be a C. So you need a B at least, you
need at least an eighty percent on these tests so what you do is you
look at the book again, you redo the chapter work and you retake the
test until you get an eighty.
Raphael Rowe Joe has been highly
motivated and has gained enough credits to be accepted to
university, something he doesn’t believe he would have achieved at
home. But that’s not the case for all children.
Joe There’s other people that are
stuck on the same grade for like two years here but that’s just
because they just refuse to do it.
Raphael Rowe Or can’t. Not capable
I mean.
Joe They have, they have special
education. They, they, some of these kids can do it, like they just,
they just don’t wanna, they have no motivation to do it. They just
don’t want to like sit down and comply just by taking a test.
Raphael Rowe Do you think your
parents are fully aware of what goes on within the school and the
discipline they use and the education and stuff; are they fully
aware of what goes on?
Boy in OP Well the education inside
here sucks. Literally.
Raphael Rowe But I’m told they’ve
got a very good education programme going on here.
Boy in OP Education my ass, no
offence, no offence. Raphael Rowe We calculate parents pay almost
four and a half million pounds a year in fees. We were told a large
percentage goes on administration, weekly therapy and character
building seminars for students and their families. WWASPS’
facilities as a whole take fifty million pounds a year.
Aston JULIE WILKINSON We wiped out
our savings and we are still paying on this loan that we have the
next twenty years to pay on. It’s created a very bad hardship for
our family and I know many of the families have refinanced their
homes two or three times to be able to afford the programme. So it’s
a very expensive programme.
Aston JAY KAY Director of
Tranquility Bay There is, there is profit in the schools and we use
that money for improvements but we also have to pay our shareholders
as well. Because we are a company, a corporation that has
shareholders?
Raphael Rowe And who are the
shareholders?
Jay Kay I am one of the primary
shareholders. The other individuals ask not to be named.
Raphael Rowe OK.
Jay Kay But I am the primary
shareholder.
Raphael Rowe I met the President of
WWASPS; who happens to be Jay Kay’s dad, Ken Kay.
Raphael Rowe I put to him what
UNICEF had said about the punishment regime in Jamaica.
Raphael Rowe What do you say to
that?
Aston KEN KAY President of WWASPS I
say that I am totally against violating reasonable rights of
children, or abusing them in any fashion; mentally, verbally,
physically. I am not always a hundred percent sure that the United
Nations is, has the expertise or, or, or the ability to discern the
difference. I hear these complaints and I'm very concerned about
them. But then let's do something about them. The people who claim…
Raphael Rowe You can.
Ken Kay …I, I do.
Raphael Rowe As the WWASPS…
Ken Kay I go in onsite make, make…
Raphael Rowe As the WWASPS director
you can do something about it. You can shut …
Ken Kay I do not control what they
do.
Ken Kay You can disassociate
yourself with Tranquility Bay, who are carrying out what UNICEF say
are issues of child abuse.
Ken Kay Allegations and accusations
are different than facts.
Raphael Rowe A month after this
interview WWASPS’ school in Mexico, Casa By The Sea, was raided and
closed by the authorities who found four children showing signs of
physical and emotional mistreatment.
Ken Kay We have thousands and
thousands of positive letters and e-mails from satisfied customers.
The whole controversy is very interesting to me. Never lose sight
is, the bottom line is just think if we shut down our business and
stopped doing what we’re doing, eventually one of these kids that
would come to us will die.
Oliver Bucolo Looking back on it, I
still think it’s an absolutely wretched place and they wanted to
make it tough because they wanted to effect change from the kids. I
look at it now and it did help a lot and I mean there’s no real
point to stew and brood about the things that happened that I really
had no control over.
Winston Wilkinson I would say that
the stuff I was doing was bad but I would say the punishment they
gave me was not right, like it was, no one deserves that type of
punishment.
Raphael Rowe Are you happy?
Joe I’m, yeah, now that I’m leaving
and like, it’s like, I don’t know, it’s like, I don’t know the most
success I’ve ever experienced in my life.
Shannon Levy Rowley I’ve been away
from Jamaica for over three years now and I still have nightmares; I
can’t get it out of my mind.
Credits
10.28.31 bbc.co.uk/thisworld
Reporter RAPHAEL ROWE
Camera PATTI MUSICARO
Dubbing Mixer CLIFF JONES
VT Editor BOYD NAGLE
Production Team JULIA DANNENBERG
SARAH HANKS LADONNA HALL
Production Manager JANE WILLEY
Unit Manager SUSAN CRIGHTON
Film Research NICK DODD
Additional Research HARRY BOYLE
Picture Editor MARK ATKINS
Executive Producer KAREN O’CONNOR
Produced and Directed by ESTHER
McWATTERS
Series Producer SANDY SMITH
bbc.co.uk/thisworld BBC © BBC MMIV
End
BBC This World: Locked in Paradise
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/programmes/this_world/transcripts/this_world_jamaica_locked_in_paradise.txt
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