2 Fa gan Avenue
Kingston 8
Tel: 755-4524-6
Fax: 755-4355
Tel: 755-4524-6
Fax: 755-4355
JAMAICANS FOR JUSTICE
Jamaicans for Justice is deeply troubled by yesterday’s brutal killing of Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Gilbert Kameka and Constable Valentino Chambers. We extend our deepest condolences to the family, friends and colleagues of these men. The killing of ACP Kameka and Constable Chambers should shake even the most cynical and hardened Jamaican and push us all to action.
That over1300 Jamaican citizens have lost their lives to violence this year is unfathomable and frightening. We are all negatively affected by the brutality of these deaths but must face this crisis of violence with soul-searching honesty and courage. We must vigorously guard against knee-jerk, rights-abrogating approaches to the problem that have failed so spectacularly in the past. It is time to develop a national consensus on the problem and for the articulation of a credible way forward which can get the buy-in of the majority, in a fashion which will drive them to action. The solutions to the problem are not going to be easy, are multifaceted and are not necessarily quick, but they are available.
Jamaica must understand that a dual approach to safety and security – effective and efficient law enforcement and the provision of crime prevention programs to reduce the occurrence of crime – is needed. Real reductions in crime will be attained through more effective and efficient policing coupled with a greater ability to prevent crime
As regards policing, we must begin to transform the Jamaican Constabulary Force into the Police Service of Jamaica that can effectively carry out its mandate to “serve, protect and reassure.” This transformation must include correcting the weaknesses of the present police accountability and oversight mechanisms. Jamaicans must insist on a police force with appropriate crime control and prevention strategies and adequate support systems.
The work of the police will need to be supported and strengthened by complementary social and economic policies. Crime is more than a security issue and crime prevention requires a concerted effort by government in partnership with civil society, business and community organisations and local government structures.
In addition, solutions will require the efforts of each and every Jamaican. The tasks are ours. We must begin to restore the morality that prevents participating in or encouraging unlawful activities. We must accept our own power and our own personal responsibility to be the change we wish to see, and exercise it, hold ourselves accountable and hold others equally accountable.
It is time that all Jamaicans work honestly and hard to ensure the right choices are made, that appropriate interventions are taken by the Government, by the business community, by civil society and by each citizen. If we do what we can do, we will succeed and the brutal killings in our nation will become a part only of the past.
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For more information contact:
Carolyn Gomes: (876) 755-4524-6/382-8583 or David Wong Ken: (876) 381-2977/946-2284
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