Not sure if Tivoli's gangsters have really lost their bravado as from the response by at least one lady in the article below seems to imply that for at least some denizens there the threat of death at the hands of the gangsters if they step out of line still seems to be present:
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...ravado_7660260
Humbled: Tivoli loses its bravado
BY ERICA VIRTUE Sunday Observer writer virtuee@jamacaobserver.com
Sunday, May 30, 2010
THE bravado of Tivoli Gardens residents who, dressed in white, vowed two weeks ago to die for Christopher 'Dudus' Coke -- a man indicted by the United States on charges of drug- and gun-running -- was nowhere to be found Thursday when the media were allowed a one-hour tour of the embattled community.
Hours after the sun came up on the fifth day of the military operation in the feared inner-city enclave that served as Coke's stronghold, women and young girls, who had given loud and vociferous support in his defence, were noticeably quiet. After previously announcing their willingness to die for Coke, against whom Prime Minister Bruce Golding announced on May 17 extradition proceedings would begin, the Sunday Observer could find no one still willing to breathe their last breath for him.
Journalists are escorted by Jamaica Defence Force soldiers during a media tour of Tivoli Gardens last Thursday. (Photo: Michael Gordon)
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"Are you still willing to die for Dudus?" the Sunday Observer asked the first woman we encountered.
She hissed her teeth before saying in a dismissive tone: "Woman, yuh nuh si seh wi need food, a dat wi need right now."
She then dragged a younger woman with her back behind the closed door from which they had come.
It was a question the Sunday Observer would ask another 11 or 12 times and the response was almost always the same....
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...ravado_7660260
Humbled: Tivoli loses its bravado
BY ERICA VIRTUE Sunday Observer writer virtuee@jamacaobserver.com
Sunday, May 30, 2010
THE bravado of Tivoli Gardens residents who, dressed in white, vowed two weeks ago to die for Christopher 'Dudus' Coke -- a man indicted by the United States on charges of drug- and gun-running -- was nowhere to be found Thursday when the media were allowed a one-hour tour of the embattled community.
Hours after the sun came up on the fifth day of the military operation in the feared inner-city enclave that served as Coke's stronghold, women and young girls, who had given loud and vociferous support in his defence, were noticeably quiet. After previously announcing their willingness to die for Coke, against whom Prime Minister Bruce Golding announced on May 17 extradition proceedings would begin, the Sunday Observer could find no one still willing to breathe their last breath for him.
Journalists are escorted by Jamaica Defence Force soldiers during a media tour of Tivoli Gardens last Thursday. (Photo: Michael Gordon)
1/1
"Are you still willing to die for Dudus?" the Sunday Observer asked the first woman we encountered.
She hissed her teeth before saying in a dismissive tone: "Woman, yuh nuh si seh wi need food, a dat wi need right now."
She then dragged a younger woman with her back behind the closed door from which they had come.
It was a question the Sunday Observer would ask another 11 or 12 times and the response was almost always the same....
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