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Part 1: Never a Dull Day

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  • Part 1: Never a Dull Day

    Source: The Star (Thursday, May 6, 2010)
    http://www.jamaica-star.com/thestar/...ews/news1.html

    GANG ENFORCES NO VISITORS RULE
    ... unless residents get permission


    The notorious 'Stinger' gang is again the source of fear and discomfort for residents from communities off Maxfield Avenue, St Andrew, as it has now demanded that all residents get permission to entertain visitors.

    The last time the gang - which comprises a large number of severely bleached faced men, made headlines - they were reportedly using force to search the residents' cellphones.

    Now, in their latest brazen tactics, there is said to be a new 'anti-informant' initiative.

    "Di man dem seh dem a try weed out di informer dem 'bout di place, eno. So this a just a next way weh dem come up wid," said a resident who requested anonymity.

    According to the source, the gang members came up with the latest strategy after it was suspected that a family gave information to an 'outsider', who then contacted the police, following a dispute about a month ago. This was said to have led to the arrest of one of the thugs.
    The arrested man was later freed by the police, as no statement was given against him, even though another man was said to have been stabbed, THE STAR was told.


    orders from the top
    After the incident, word was said to have been sent from top mobsters that persons should get permission before inviting strange persons to the community.

    "Di man dem seh dem nuh want no strange face in a dem community 'cause dem a informer - at least a dat dem seh. Mi naw lie. Wah day yah, my cousin come link mi from country and me neva really ask dem still. Mi did just tell dem seh mi family a come stay wid mi fi a while," another resident, who gave his name as Howie, said.

    Failure to comply with the new order can result in severe beatings, residents said. While residents say they are complying with the thugs' orders, many persons are complaining among themselves.

    When THE STAR contacted the western Kingston police, they admitted the Stinger gang was wreaking havoc in sections of the division.

    During a recent visit to the Denham Town Police Station, crime chief for the division, Deputy Superintendent Leslie Ashman, told THE STAR that the police were working towards dismantling the gang once and for all.
    "They are giving a lot of trouble," DSP Ashman said. "We are working on some things, and we need to get them."

  • #2
    Why are taxpayers paying an army for nothing? Its about time a SoE is implemented. Is last week I read where gang members in Spanish Town just turn up at the homes of women, demanding that they will be sleeping there for the night (not in a sexual manner) and the women affi let them in.

    Yet ppl still doubt that Jamaica is a failed state? kiss teet.
    "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

    Comment


    • #3
      Agree 100%

      Originally posted by Lazie View Post
      Why are taxpayers paying an army for nothing? Its about time a SoE is implemented. Is last week I read where gang members in Spanish Town just turn up at the homes of women, demanding that they will be sleeping there for the night (not in a sexual manner) and the women affi let them in.

      Yet ppl still doubt that Jamaica is a failed state? kiss teet.
      Well, you already know my view on this “failed state” notion, Lazie. Jamaica, in my opinion, long ago started the journey to that unenviable “failed state” destination and today we are knocking on the door. So we find today that what is the norm in wide sections of Jamaica would be cause for an immediate state of emergency in EVERY other CARICOM country, including Trinidad and Guyana, and except for probably only Haiti!


      Failed state status on the horizon
      Mark Wignall



      Thursday, May 06, 2010var addthis_pub="jamaicaobserver";


      "You chopping, boy, but no chips are flying." - From the cartoon character Foghorn Leghorn.


      One day last week as I allowed myself the opportunity to watch Senator Dwight Nelson, our minister of national security, address the Upper House on security matters, a number of items jumped out at me.

      First there was the excellent cut of the minister's suit and his superb diction. Second was Senate President Ossie Harding seated pompously with an abbreviated pillow-top on his head, an anomaly wedged between the colonial designation QC and our claims to nationhood and independence. My third observation was that the debates in the Senate tend to be of a higher standard than those in the Lower House even if Senator Norman Grant had to keep savaging the word "violence" by referring to it repeatedly as "voilence".

      Senator Dwight Nelson as security minister is not a man I envy but after listening to the concern which he attached to his prepared speech, I could not help but falling prey to cynicism and side with Foghorn Leghorn.


      Just recently the new commissioner, Owen Ellington, made the appeal for the people to assist in the push-back against violent criminality, and the commissioner immediately before him, Rear Admiral Hardley Lewin, told us in 2005 that Tivoli is the "mother of all garrisons". Before him, Lucius Thomas detailed the corruption inside the police force. And just before the JLP election win in September 2007, the JLP proudly strode into power armed with an impressive crime plan authored by ex-commissioner, Colonel Trevor McMillan.

      Pardon my open cynicism, but for all that their collective efforts were worth, they were basically chopping but no chips were flying.
      Let us briefly examine people support in the fight against violent criminality. Close your eyes and choose any inner-city community from Glendevon atop MoBay to a crowded fishing village in Bull Bay. An old woman is shot dead there and 20 people in the community know who pulled the trigger. Which one of them will go with the information to the police? None of them.

      "Who, an mi nuh know if the police and 'im a fren," is the typical response. In general, the people, especially those in the inner-city communities, are more fearful of the police than they are of the gunmen living among them. The fact is, many people living in the ghettoes of Jamaica "love" their gunmen out of fear and respect. Fear because an "informer" automatically merits a death sentence even worse than a declaration from a "heretic" that God is dead, and respect because the criminal shares the booty with the poverty-stricken in the community.

      I have been inside many inner-city communities and it is almost routine that once a police vehicle enters a street or lane, the little children, especially the boys, scamper and head for cover. So, who is Commissioner Ellington fooling by asking a people shell-shocked by their self-imposed cultural alliance to community criminality and their very fear of what the growth of that alliance has wrought on them (coupled with routine police brutality) to support the police?

      Is that the same police force which killed Robert Hill in a "shootout" after Mr Hill had placed on YouTube the many threats to his life from the police after his car had met in an accident with a policeman's? Is that the same Jamaica Constabulary Force to which Mr Hill had sent a video recording (to the high command) of himself and his pregnant wife being beaten up by policemen after being advised by personnel from Legal Aid to do so?

      To add insult to our already injurious state, we recently had a UWI academic giving us the earth-shattering news that one is more likely to be murdered in Jamaica if one is a labourer and unemployed. That is akin to telling us that there is ice at Antartica!

      On the Al Jazeera video that highlighted Mr Hill's case, one of the most telling statements came from retired SSP Reneto Adams."How can you get clean wine from a dirty bottle?" he asked after conceding that maybe what we ought to do is disband the JCF. Adams was right on the button when he asked where the new recruits would come from.

      The same rotten, poisoned society that Jamaica has become.

      As solutions elude our leaders, many of them are showing up for work and they chop a lot but no chips are flying. I get really frightened when I hear our leaders in security asking for the "people's" cooperation. One online commentator said recently, "We have absolutely no leadership; hardly any enforced laws, indiscipline galore and low productivity in every known sector that is Jamaican-run."

      Commissioner Ellington would probably be the last to admit that many of the advances that were made in taking down criminals of the "Mr Big" type happened mostly with the efforts of the British policemen who came in under the last administration when the security ministry was headed by Peter Phillips. Will he admit, though, that too high a percentage of personnel in the JCF are too close to organised criminality? Nah, he won't.

      So while he and his team deserve the support of every law-abiding citizen in Jamaica, unlike the frank-talking Reneto Adams, he will be the last to admit that the society is close to terminally ill and that too many in the JCF from the top ranks to the bottom have never been vaccinated against corruption.

      There are many readers who believe that since newspaper columnists are so strident in identifying national problems, they should in every column propose workable solutions. Well, there are many who do that and in the process they frustrate themselves. Why do I say so?

      Simple. Even after identifying a problem and wanting to work towards its solution, 95 per cent of the time the only people who can solve those problems are the policy makers in government who are close to, or are a part of the authority structure managing the funds needed. It is quite easy to propose a big programme for inner-city renewal when one is outside looking in. The view from inside is vastly different with every area pressuring the few resources that are available.

      Although Minister Dwight Nelson and the police commissioner may say the right things, when their plans are placed alongside the reality of a murder rate gone mad, all they are doing is chopping, but no chips are flying.
      The bigger problem is one of national leadership, or the very lack of it. One reader who made reference to the Al Jazeera video summed it up: "... the video about the man who had a camera in his home, which recorded the police beating him and his wife, the tape was given to the 'Police High Command' and then shortly after the man was killed in a 'shootout' with the police. I was upset, saddened and hurt. This was the last straw for me. My homeland, Jamaica, is a failed state."

      observemark@gmail.com

      Comment


      • #4
        Why the hell the bleaching cream that dem using can't bleach out dem YEYE and blind them
        Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
        - Langston Hughes

        Comment


        • #5
          Look at the Contradiction!

          Originally posted by MdmeX View Post
          Why the hell the bleaching cream that dem using can't bleach out dem YEYE and blind them
          MdmeX, now you see that many of these guys are not only sick, but they need urgent psychiatric counseling!! Look at the extreme paradox here: terrorist-type thugs and enforcers who use bleaching cream extensively!!

          Think about it and try not to laugh too loudly !

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Historian View Post
            MdmeX, now you see that many of these guys are not only sick, but they need urgent psychiatric counseling!! Look at the extreme paradox here: terrorist-type thugs and enforcers who use bleaching cream extensively!!

            Think about it and try not to laugh too loudly !

            No Historian, I beg to differ, no money should be spent on psychiatric counseling; a LETHAL INJECTION can do the job, quickly. I don't know how some of these women like the thug looking walking time bombs!
            Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
            - Langston Hughes

            Comment


            • #7
              Historian;226090][FONT=Verdana]Well, you already know my view on this “failed state” notion, Lazie. Jamaica, in my opinion, long ago started the journey to that unenviable “failed state” destination and today we are knocking on the door. So we find today that what is the norm in wide sections of Jamaica would be cause for an immediate state of emergency in EVERY other CARICOM country, including Trinidad and Guyana, and except for probably only Haiti!
              Much as we are disappointed or rather disgusted with Jamaica's current condition and direction.... the fact remains that the term "failed state" has measurable sociopolitical indicators.... and therefore should not be used in a colloquial sense... at least not with an expectation of accuracy.

              From the list of states below Jamaica is at a relatively mild #117...but with an upward bullet.
              I have no doubt that Golding's pubilc and vociferous support for the country's biggest warlord will damage our ranking further.

              For some perspective:


              List of countries by Failed States Index



              This is a list of countries by order of appearance in the Fund For Peace's Failed States Index. A failed state has several attributes. Common indicators include a state whose central government is so weak or ineffective that it has little practical control over much of its territory; non-provision of public services; widespread corruption and criminality; refugees and involuntary movement of populations; sharp economic decline. Since 2005, the index has been published annually by the United States think-tank Fund for Peace and the magazine Foreign Policy.[1]

              Change in rank from 2008 is shown in parentheses and the three table headings correspond to those used by the Fund for Peace and Foreign Policy magazine. Taiwan (Republic of China), Kosovo, and Palestine were not included. This is the current list for 2009.[2]


              Alert



              Rank Country FSI
              in 2009
              2009 Change compared to 2008
              1 ▬ (0) Somalia 114.7
              2 ▲ (1) Zimbabwe 114.0
              3 ▼ (1) Sudan 112.4
              4 ▬ (0) Chad 112.2
              5 ▲ (1) Democratic Republic of the Congo 108.7
              6 ▼ (1) Iraq 108.6
              7 ▬ (0) Afghanistan 108.2
              8 ▲ (2) Central African Republic 105.4
              9 ▲ (2) Guinea 104.6
              10 ▼ (1) Pakistan 104.1
              11 ▼ (3) Côte d'Ivoire 102.5
              12 ▲ (2) Haiti 101.8
              13 ▬ (0) Myanmar 101.5
              14 ▲ (12) Kenya 101.4
              15 ▲ (4) Nigeria 99.8
              16 ▬ (0) Ethiopia 98.9
              17 ▼ (2) North Korea 98.3
              18 ▲ (3) Yemen 98.1
              19 ▼ (7) Bangladesh 98.1

              Rank Country FSI
              in 2009
              2009 Change compared to 2008
              20 ▲ (5) East Timor 97.2
              21 ▼ (5) Uganda 96.9
              22 ▲ (2) Sri Lanka 96.7
              23 ▼ (1) Niger 96.5
              24 ▬ (0) Burundi 95.7
              25 ▼ (2) Nepal 95.4
              26 ▲ (8) Cameroon 95.3
              27 ▲ (5) Guinea-Bissau 94.8
              28 ▲ (1) Malawi 93.8
              29 ▼ (11) Lebanon 93.5
              30 ▼ (4) Republic of the Congo 93.1
              31 ▼ (5) Uzbekistan 92.8
              32 ▼ (1) Sierra Leone 92.1
              33 ▲ (23) Georgia 91.8
              34 ▬ (0) Liberia 91.8
              35 ▲ (1) Burkina Faso 91.3
              36 ▲ (8) Eritrea 90.3
              37 ▲ (1) Tajikistan 90.3
              38 ▲ (11) Iran 90.0

              Warning

              Rank Country FSI
              in 2009
              2009 Change compared to 2008
              39 ▼ (4) Syria 89.8
              40 ▼ (10) Solomon Islands 89.6
              41 ▼ (2) Colombia 89.2
              42 ▼ (3) Kyrgyzstan 89.1
              43 ▼ (3) Egypt 89.0
              44 ▼ (4) Laos 89.0
              45 ▼ (3) Rwanda 89.0
              46 ▲ (1) Mauritania 88.7
              47 ▼ (5) Equatorial Guinea 88.3
              48 ▲ (1) Bhutan 87.3
              49 ▼ (1) Cambodia 87.3
              50 ▼ (5) Togo 87.2
              51 ▲ (4) Bolivia 86.3
              52 ▲ (22) Comoros 86.3
              53 ▲ (7) Philippines 85.8
              54 ▼ (4) Moldova 85.1
              55 ▲ (1) Angola 85.0
              56 ▲ (8) Azerbaijan 84.6
              57 ▲ (11) People's Republic of China 84.6
              58 ▬ (0) Israel 84.6
              59 ▼ (13) Turkmenistan 84.3
              60 ▲ (3) Zambia 84.2
              61 ▼ (9) Papua New Guinea 84.1
              62 ▼ (2) Indonesia 84.1
              63 ▼ (9) Bosnia and Herzegovina 83.3
              64 ▼ (3) Nicaragua 82.6
              65 ▲ (7) Swaziland 82.4
              66 ▼ (13) Belarus 82.3
              67 ▼ (6) Lesotho 81.8
              68 ▲ (18) Madagascar 81.6
              69 ▼ (1) Ecuador 81.2
              70 ▲ (5) Tanzania 81.1
              71 ▲ (1) Russia 80.8
              72 ▲ (13) Mozambique 80.7
              73 ▲ (7) Algeria 80.6
              74 ▼ (3) Djibouti 80.6
              75 ▼ (11) Guatemala 80.6
              76 ▬ (0) Cuba 80.6
              77 ▬ (0) Venezuela 79.5
              78 ▼ (8) Serbia 79.2
              79 ▲ (10) Thailand 79.2
              80 ▲ (3) Gambia 79.0
              81 ▼ (14) Maldives 78.8
              82 ▲ (5) Fiji 78.8
              83 ▲ (6) Mali 78.7
              84 ▼ (17) Cape Verde 78.5

              Rank Country FSI
              in 2009
              2009 Change compared to 2008
              85 ▲ (7) Turkey 78.2
              86 ▼ (4) Jordan 77.9
              87 ▲ (11) India 77.8
              88 ▼ (11) Dominican Republic 77.7
              89 ▼ (5) Saudi Arabia 77.5
              90 ▲ (4) Honduras 77.2
              91 ▬ (0) El Salvador 77.2
              92 ▼ (11) Peru 77.1
              93 ▼ (5) Morocco 77.1
              94 ▲ (1) Vietnam 76.9
              95 ▼ (7) Sao Tome and Principe 76.7
              96 ▲ (2) Namibia 75.6
              97 ▲ (3) Benin 75.5
              98 ▲ (6) Mexico 75.4
              99 ▼ (6) Gabon 74.4
              100 ▼ (5) Republic of Macedonia 74.4
              101 ▲ (8) Armenia 74.3
              102 ▲ (5) Senegal 74.2
              103 ▼ (2) Suriname 73.2
              104 ▲ (1) Guyana 73.0
              105 ▼ (4) Kazakhstan 72.5
              106 ▼ (2) Paraguay 72.0
              107 ▼ (10) Federated States of Micronesia 71.9
              108 ▼ (7) Samoa 71.4
              109 ▲ (3) Albania 70.0
              110 ▼ (2) Ukraine 69.7
              111 ▼ (1) Belize 69.5
              112 ▼ (1) Libya 69.4
              113 ▲ (4) Brazil 69.1
              114 ▼ (2) Cyprus 68.9
              115 ▲ (3) Malaysia 68.9
              116 ▲ (4) Botswana 68.8
              117 ▲ (4) Jamaica 68.6
              118 ▼ (2) Brunei 68.1
              119 ▼ (4) Grenada 67.9
              120 ▼ (6) Seychelles 67.7
              121 ▲ (1) Tunisia 67.6
              122 ▲ (3) South Africa 67.4
              123 ▲ (4) Trinidad and Tobago 66.7
              124 ▼ (1) Ghana 66.2
              125 ▲ (1) Kuwait 63.4
              126 ▼ (2) Antigua and Barbuda 62.8
              127 ▲ (6) Mongolia 61.9
              128 ▲ (4) Bulgaria 61.5
              129 ▼ (1) Romania 61.3
              130 ▼ (3) Bahamas 60.9
              131 ▼ (2) Croatia 60.1

              In December 2009, it was predicted that the Philippines would move from the second category of “Warning” states on the list of “failed states” if it would continue to have its record of massacres like the one in Maguindanao in November 2009 and the extrajudicial killings and disappearances would not stop [3].
              Moderate
              Rank Country FSI 2009
              132 Panama 59.7
              133 Bahrain 59.0
              134 Montenegro 58.0
              135 Barbados 57.2
              136 Latvia 54.6
              137 Costa Rica 52.5
              138 Qatar 51.9
              139 United Arab Emirates 51.2
              140 Estonia 51.0
              141 Hungary 50.7
              142 Poland 49.6
              143 Malta 48.8
              144 Slovakia 48.6
              145 Lithuania 48.0
              146 Oman 47.2
              147 Greece 46.1
              148 Mauritius 44.7

              Rank Country FSI 2009
              149 Argentina 44.7
              150 Italy 43.9
              151 Spain 43.3
              152 Czech Republic 42.6
              153 South Korea 41.6
              154 Uruguay 41.2
              155 Chile 37.5
              156 Slovenia 36.3
              157 Germany 36.2
              158 France 35.3
              159 United States 34.0
              160 Singapore 33.8
              161 United Kingdom 33.6
              162 Belgium 33.5
              163 Portugal 32.7
              164 Japan 31.2
              Sustainable
              Rank Country FSI 2009
              165 Iceland 29.0
              166 Canada 27.7
              167 Luxembourg 27.6
              168 Austria 27.6
              169 Netherlands 27.0
              170 Australia 25.9
              171 New Zealand 23.3

              Rank Country FSI 2009
              172 Denmark 23.2
              173 Ireland 21.6
              174 Switzerland 21.2
              175 Sweden 20.6
              176 Finland 19.2
              177 Norway
              Last edited by Don1; May 6, 2010, 05:18 PM.
              TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

              Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

              D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

              Comment


              • #8
                We are barely worse than South frica and T&T.

                YAY!


                BLACK LIVES MATTER

                Comment


                • #9
                  The cops just like to chat a lot of fart, and their insistence that they are going to break up that gang is just food for those who are not well read. This PNP affiliated gang is here to stay unless the political climate indeed changes and thugs linked to political parties lose their protection from law enforcement.

                  This gang is notorious for purging people from their communities, and in essence garrisonizing an area for political benefit.
                  Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    A few years ago they said they were going to get rid of extortion in Spanish Town.


                    BLACK LIVES MATTER

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Very Interesting List!

                      Thanks for this very interesting albeit surprising list, Don1. It’s always very useful to have empirical information such as this for reference.

                      It is, of course, no surprise that the East African nation of Somalia tops the list. It’s also interesting, although not particularly surprising given the improved social and political climate, to see the huge improvement in Rwanda’s status, which saw it moving from the distinctly unenviable slot of #3 in 2008 to #45 in 2009!!

                      There are some major surprises for me, though, including mainland China at #57, the Dominican Republic at #88 (#11 in 2008),Thailand at #79 (#10 in 2008), and Cuba at #76. In fact, with its universal education and health care, and its low crime levels, I find it a bit difficult to comprehend Cuba’s position on this list, and above Jamaica at that!!

                      But once again, thanks for posting this very interesting Index !

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Historian View Post
                        Thanks for this very interesting albeit surprising list, Don1. It’s always very useful to have empirical information such as this for reference.

                        It is, of course, no surprise that the East African nation of Somalia tops the list. It’s also interesting, although not particularly surprising given the improved social and political climate, to see the huge improvement in Rwanda’s status, which saw it moving from the distinctly unenviable slot of #3 in 2008 to #45 in 2009!!

                        There are some major surprises for me, though, including mainland China at #57, the Dominican Republic at #88 (#11 in 2008),Thailand at #79 (#10 in 2008), and Cuba at #76. In fact, with its universal education and health care, and its low crime levels, I find it a bit difficult to comprehend Cuba’s position on this list, and above Jamaica at that!!

                        But once again, thanks for posting this very interesting Index !
                        whatever criteria they use i'm sure it's not perfect so we should just see this as a rough guide at best.

                        respek
                        TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

                        Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

                        D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Don1 View Post
                          Much as we are disappointed or rather disgusted with Jamaica's current condition and direction.... the fact remains that the term "failed state" has measurable sociopolitical indicators.... and therefore should not be used in a colloquial sense... at least not with an expectation of accuracy.
                          I agree with this, although the crime situation in certain parts of Jamaica is diabolical, Jamaica is no where near failed state status. I think people who think it is, need to travel to places other than US, UK and Canada.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Don1, when a state is unable to provide security for its citizens, failed state. When communities cannot rely on the state for security and have to turn to Dons, Area Leaders, Warlord (and whatever else they are called) for security, failed state. When a parent have their teenage daughter and the Don send fi har and you have no option but to send her .... cho.
                            "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by MissLondon View Post
                              I agree with this, although the crime situation in certain parts of Jamaica is diabolical, Jamaica is no where near failed state status. I think people who think it is, need to travel to places other than US, UK and Canada.
                              Note to self .. "travel to places other than US, UK and Canada". Miss London, suppose I've never been to those places?
                              "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

                              Comment

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