Observer column published MON 29 June 2020
by Jean Lowrie-Chin
|
Security Expert Jason McKay |
Jamaica is looking good on the international stage for our strong
response to the Covid crisis. However, we are looking horrible when it comes to
crime. Check this Jamaica Observer headline earlier this month: “Nineteen
killed across Jamaica in bloody weekend”. How can a country of barely three
million have our high crime rate? Our size should have made this more
manageable, but the dreadful dynamic of the past fifty years cannot be ignored.
Politically aligned gangs emerged in the seventies, growing into
monsters that neither political party has been able to control. Security expert
Jason McKay sheds light on Jamaica’s plight in his Jamaica Observer column.
Last July he related an experience as a negotiator with a ‘don’ in a kidnapping
incident: “I remember when talking to the kidnapper that he said to me when
I objected to his demands that I was in ‘their place’ and they can do as they
like with me. His exact words: ‘If we 'waa' you dead you dead. A fi we place
dis’… I reflected that many Jamaicans live just like this daily. That some
dunce with a gun has dominion over them and that dunce is a member of a gang
with more dunces, more guns, and no respect for human beings or their lives.”
Last week he reflected on
the ‘demise’ of retired SSP Renato Adams, Jamaica’s most famous crime-fighter.
He described the people’s view of Adams as “someone standing up for the regular
man against the gangs that dominated our lives.”
He continued, “Adams'
demise occurred when just a few genuine people uptown organised themselves and
were manipulated by a few others who should have known better. This was by no
means a general uptown attack; just a few under-exposed folk and too many cups
of coffee.”
Clearly, there have been
police officers who have sullied the good name of the Force, but this column
has maintained that they are in the minority and has called out some members of
civil society for their lack of compassion towards our decent officers. Indeed,
they asked representatives of Amnesty International to meet with me a few years
ago. They were lovely people who were unaware of the dangerous realities of life
in Jamaica.
|
JCC President Lloyd Distant Jr |
The cost of crime to
Jamaica is estimated at over $60 billion, or nearly four percent of the
country’s GDP, and these are pre-Covid figures.
Now Jamaica’s private sector organisations’ push for a national
anti-crime plan is even more urgent. The Jamaica Chamber of Commerce (JCC),
Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica (PSOJ) and the Jamaica Manufacturers and
Exporters Association (JMEA) have been engaged with Government, Opposition,
civil society and security experts since 2018, with its aim, in the words of
JCC President Lloyd Distant, “to develop a
credible National Strategic Programme of initiatives and actions
to transform Jamaica to become a Safe, Secure, and Investment-friendly
Society.”
Mr Distant noted that the process has received “overwhelming
support” from the National Partnership Council. A Summit held last October had
two major agreements: “successful transformation would require agreement on specific priorities
and actions, widespread buy-in with regard to the way forward, and a bipartisan
commitment to implementation; the naming of a Working Group whose mandate would
be the delivery of a blueprint for sustainable reduction in crime on which
there is National Consensus.”
He shared the key points for this plan:
· The fight against
crime must be underpinned by a bi-partisan, whole of government approach that
must be nationalistic – stressing the importance of getting the whole nation
involved in effecting the plan
· Amongst the top
national priorities are the elimination of criminal gangs, reintegrating
troubled communities, inculcating an intolerance of corruption, collusion and
money-laundering, and modernizing our policing infrastructure and justice
system
· The most
critical pillar of the Consensus is likely to be the prioritizing of effective
community and social interventions.
- De-politicize
decisions on social and community interventions. This does not mean
taking away involvement and participation of elected reps – this is
primarily to ensure that programmes are appropriately targeted and
effective
- The
importance of focusing on community regeneration
- The
role of the education system, the family and the Church in social
transformation
- This
includes the normalizing and re-integration of troubled communities, and
replacing an underlying culture with a culture of civic pride
· Affirming the need
to expedite JCF reform
· Affirming the
importance of waging a relentless war on corruption, collusion and
money-laundering
· Satisfying the call
for the appointment of a multi-sectoral and non-partisan committee to
provide oversight of the programme (like EPOC)
We understand that the Working Group had talks with Government and Opposition
leadership last week. We hope both parties will show the courage and care for
their people by supporting the implementation of this plan. The thug-assisted
power plays may be tempting, but the impact on their constituencies will be
greater if they connect with their people, nurturing the next Marley, Shelly-Ann
and Bolt so gang membership will no longer be an option for our desperate and
unattached youth. They, backed by the stakeholder groups, can take the
gangsters’ knees off the necks of our people, and be heroes for Jamaica.