Deported
Process of Deportation and Receiving Deportees
Theory vs Reality
The official Jamaican government documented procedures for handling deportation and receiving deportees are not how the process actually work. Once you’re detained for deportation, immigration authorities work to remove you while you try to fight it—filing paperwork, seeing a judge, or proving you belong in that country. Many people are detained without committing a crime or having an immigration violation.
When the Jamaican consulate is notified, the deporting country provides what they believe proves you’re Jamaican. The consulate may call or visit the detainee at the detention center, but the idea that they’re ensuring fair treatment is far from the truth. Their only role is to confirm your identity and facilitate your removal, not to help you. Some consulate officers treat detainees with indifference or hostility, as if they are a burden and refuse to visit the deportee when it’s required or requested.
The verification process is basic—they ask for your name, date of birth, birthplace, and parents’ names. If your name and birthdate match their system, you’re confirmed as Jamaican. Not considering the amount of people with very common names and same date of birth. It’s possible for you to give them the wrong date of birth and they will still confirm your identity. They issue a travel document, but you don’t get to keep it to help with getting identification—it’s taken at the airport along with files from the deporting country. You can’t ask them the most basic of questions, they never know anything.
What Really Happens
- During the Flight: You’re handcuffed and shackled until you enter Jamaica’s air space.
- At the Airport:
- Your documents are rechecked, you’re fingerprinted, and authorities question you about your deportation record. All processing happens at the airport—unless you have outstanding Jamaican charges. If you’re wanted in Jamaica, you’ll be arrested at the airport.
- There is no “Reception Center”, you won’t be escorted out of the airport unless you’re being arrested or need medical attention.
- Release with No Support:
- You may be asked if you have somewhere to stay, but even if you don’t, you are released from the airport regardless. All of the NGO’s and reintegration efforts either don’t exist or they are lacking. You’re not provided with documents or explanation of how to get a phone, who to contact or where you can stay.
- There is no structured support system—you must find your own way and seek help from NGOs on your own.
The reality is starkly different from the structured process the government claims exists. In practice, deportees are processed, released, and left to fend for themselves.
You’re In Jamaica!
