Prime Minister Andrew Holness, who is currently in the United Kingdom, is facing calls there to block a deportation flight to Jamaica next week.
Campaigners say about 20 Jamaicans in the UK have been rounded up and detained in recent weeks in preparation for a deportation flight on November 10.
As Mr Holness addressed world leaders at the international climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland on Monday, campaigners urged him not to collaborate with Home Office removal operations.
An emergency protest against the flight will take place outside the Jamaican high commission in Kensington, central London, tomorrow.
Human rights campaign group Movement for Justice, which is supporting those booked on the flight, said of the eleven detainees it had spoken to, eight came to Britain as children.
Among them is 31 year old Akeem Finlay, who arrived at the age of 10 and has been subjected to five Home Office attempts to deport him, most recently in August, after he was convicted in 2011 of causing grievous bodily harm.
Mr. Finlay, who was interviewed by the Morning Star newspaper last summer, maintains that his life would be in danger in Jamaica which he fled after being stabbed by a gang at the age of nine.
He said the same gang recently killed his cousin and threatened other family members.
Mr Finlay was detained again last Friday after the Home Office refused his claim for asylum.
This month's charter flight is the Home Office's third attempt in the last 12 months to deport dozens of Jamaicans.
Officials claim that those booked on the flight have committed serious and violent crimes.