I suspect someone is selling you something....
The Garifuna language is an offshoot of the Island Carib language, and it is spoken in Honduras, Belize, Guatemala, and Nicaragua by the Garifuna people. It is an Arawakan language with French, English, and Spanish influences, reflecting their long interaction with various colonial peoples. Garifuna has a vocabulary featuring some terms used by women and others used primarily by men. This may derive from historical Carib practices: in the colonial era, the Carib of both sexes spoke Island Carib. Men additionally used a distinct pidgin based on the unrelated mainland Carib language.
Although many people speak it, it is not treated as a real language by some as it has no written component to it, it is only spoken.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garifuna
the phonemes in your phrase are decidedly NON-Romance and don't appear to have any meaningful relationship to English....so the components of the "creole" are not present.
They ARE, however, suspiciously consistent with those of the languages I listed - though my list may not be conclusive....