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  • A Blast from the past. Not so long ago

    Focus on Arnett Gardens - Reclaiming the community from criminals
    published: Sunday | May 13, 2007



    Inspector Raymond Robinson of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) mobile reserve talks to a resident [deliberately kept out of the photograph] at the intersection of Ninth Street and Collie Smith Drive, Arnett Gardens, in Kingston last Tuesday. - Ross Sheil Photo

    Arnett Gardens is not an easy place these days. One resident says its worse than Iraq; another says it's rotten; and yet another says it is dangerous.

    In some parts of the community, children play on the streets and grown men and women crouch over tables to knock a few bones or flip cards. Despite this, you can feel the tension.

    The police have intensified their presence in the community and have said they have things under control. However, from speaking with residents there you get they feeling that Arnett Gardens is a time bomb. On one hand, it can explode anytime; on the other, it can be easily defused.

    A People's National Party (PNP) stronghold, Arnett Gardens falls in Dr. Omar Davies's South St. Andrew constituency. The community has been rocked by a resurgence of gang violence recently. Several lives have been lost in a bloody conflict which escalated a few months ago, but police and residents say this conflict has been going on for more than three years.

    "It is not a political war. It is a stupid war over turf," Inspector Raymond Robinson of the Mobile Reserves tells The Sunday Gleaner while keeping watch over the communitylast week.

    Insp. Robinson and his team of six police officers are positioned in an area of the community known as Pegasus. Their role is to be the buffer between men from that section of the community and men from an area known as Angola. Patrol vehicles are visible traversing the streets along with plain-clothes police in unmarked vehicles.
    Despite the police presence, commercial activities in the war-torn sections of the community have been crippled. In Pegasus alone, three shops on one road are closed, thanks to the violence.

    Makeshift barriers are mounted at the mouths of streets leading into Angola and some places in 'Top Jungle', signs that people are not taking any chances. Everyone is vulnerable in this community should violence erupt, even the children.

    Meet Troy, a 15-year-old student of Charlie Smith High School. Troy lives in Wilton Gardens, more popularly known as Rema. Today he is in school. He has missed a few days over the last weeks because of the violence in Arnett. He says life there "nuh pretty".

    "When yuh live and go school inna dem place yah, yuh eye dem affi open," the schoolboy says.

    "Like now when war a gwan, mi watch di pickney dem flow. If mi si nuff a dem pon di road a move up and down, mi move, otherwise mi just kick back a mi yard," Troy says.
    Children like Troy have from time to time found themselves in the firing line, especially in war-torm communities. Some 91 children were murdered in 2005 according to the United Nations Children Fund, which also says that more than 300 children have been murdered in Jamaica within the last five years.

    Under control

    The police, meanwhile, say they have managed to get things under control in the area now.

    "Order is gradually returning; it is not as bad as in recent weeks," Insp. Robinson says.
    "The majority of the people living here are law-abiding citizens and they want peace. It is just the few rotten elements that were causing the problem and many of them have run away," the inspector adds.

    As recently as last Sunday, police recovered two AK-47 assault rifles in a shoot-out with a group of gunmen. Two men were hit in the exchange, one fatally.

    But while the police are claiming some degree of success in the area, some residents claim to know the genesis of the war there and do not believe the end will come anytime soon.

    "Is wicked (people) a fight wicked (people) and (those) who can mek it dun, nuh want it done ... Corruption and badmanism mix up ... This thing yah dirty, dirty!" one woman commented.

    Believed to be at the centre of the conflict is the Tony Spaulding Sports Complex, home of the Arnett Gardens Football Club.

    The Sunday Gleaner has learned that warring factions have an interest in controlling the immaculate complex, which houses a team which was once number one in the island. This though is just a fraction of the greedy pie for which men vie for there.
    The Sunday Gleaner has been told that the current war is being waged by men who were all once members of the Bibow gang led by George Phang. An influential gang member engineered a split in the Bibow crew in 2004 and took with him nearly half of the thugs.

    Soon afterwards, an attempt was made to unseat Phang who was shot 18 times in a drive-by shooting. A mini-war developed during which several persons were killed.
    In 2005, Phang, along with brother Andrew and PNP candidate for West Central St. Andrew Patrick Roberts, spent Christmas behind bars after being detained by the police in relation to the number of shootings in the community. Then, nearly 50 persons were killed in the community within a three-month period leading up to the detention. The men were never charged.

    Police have not pointed a finger at any specific persons whom they believe to be responsible for the violence in the community, but residents say the factions involved in the war now are hell-bent on controlling things.

    However, Dr. Davies on Thursday declared that the community would be taken back from the criminals.

    Renewed energy

    "I have come withrenewed energy," he said, adding that there are enough persons in the community who are willing to partner with him and the police to fight the criminal elements.

    "We are taking back our community from the criminals, not only because it is right, but we are doing it for the children. They deserve it.

    "We have an obligation to give them a chance to be what they can be; not to be constrained by their parents' income and certainly not to be constrained by violence, but to be given the chance to blossom," Dr. Davies said at an opening ceremony for a new wing at the Iris Gelly Primary School in the community.

    But Dr. Davies is without criticism as many residents say he knows how to get through to the strongmen there.

    Former Prime Minister P.J. Patterson, who said he was speaking as a concerned Jamaican, suggested that the habit of Arnett Gardens residents referring to themselves as 'Junglists' may be a factor influencing the behaviours of some members.
    "Stop calling yourself Junglists. You don't come from no jungle," Mr. Patterson said.

    Can be done

    Like Dr. Davies, Mr. Patterson believes the community can be reclaimed from the criminals and persons can again walk across borders without fear.
    "It can be done," Mr. Patterson said.

    "The security forces cannot do it by themselves. You could give them all the guns in the world it won't solve it; you can give them all the technology that they need; it will help, but it will not deal with the situation.

    "You know, all of you know the people that are causing the trouble in the area. It cannot continue," said Mr. Patterson, who was guest speaker at the Iris Gelly Primary school function.

    The former Prime Minister said he was confident that an end to the conflict could be achieved. As he spoke, a woman uttered "and it will be done". She later told The Sunday Gleaner that if people were united against violence in the community, the evil could be defeated.

    "Mi very frighten, di pickney dem frignten ... everybody frighten. A pure madness a tek place, but it can stop," she said.

    Another resident agreed that the community should play a more active role in eliminating the criminals, but noted that it was not easy to trust the police.

    "People know who a di bad man dem, but dem fraid fi talk cause a di corruption. Next ting yuh tell di police an it reach back di man dem ears and a your name a call up, a scared young male told The Sunday Gleaner.
    Name changed.

    daraine.luton@gleanerjm.com

    Taxi drivers risk death to transport residents
    Last edited by Karl; June 5, 2010, 01:39 PM.
    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

  • #2
    Originally posted by Assasin View Post
    Focus on Arnett Gardens - Reclaiming the community from criminals
    published: Sunday | May 13, 2007



    Inspector Raymond Robinson of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) mobile reserve talks to a resident [deliberately kept out of the photograph] at the intersection of Ninth Street and Collie Smith Drive, Arnett Gardens, in Kingston last Tuesday. - Ross Sheil Photo
    Arnett Gardens is not an easy place these days. One resident says its worse than Iraq; another says it's rotten; and yet another says it is dangerous.
    In some parts of the community, children play on the streets and grown men and women crouch over tables to knock a few bones or flip cards. Despite this, you can feel the tension.
    The police have intensified their presence in the community and have said they have things under control. However, from speaking with residents there you get they feeling that Arnett Gardens is a time bomb. On one hand, it can explode anytime; on the other, it can be easily defused.
    A People's National Party (PNP) stronghold, Arnett Gardens falls in Dr. Omar Davies's South St. Andrew constituency. The community has been rocked by a resurgence of gang violence recently. Several lives have been lost in a bloody conflict which escalated a few months ago, but police and residents say this conflict has been going on for more than three years.
    "It is not a political war. It is a stupid war over turf," Inspector Raymond Robinson of the Mobile Reserves tells The Sunday Gleaner while keeping watch over the communitylast week.
    Insp. Robinson and his team of six police officers are positioned in an area of the community known as Pegasus. Their role is to be the buffer between men from that section of the community and men from an area known as Angola. Patrol vehicles are visible traversing the streets along with plain-clothes police in unmarked vehicles.
    Despite the police presence, commercial activities in the war-torn sections of the community have been crippled. In Pegasus alone, three shops on one road are closed, thanks to the violence.
    Makeshift barriers are mounted at the mouths of streets leading into Angola and some places in 'Top Jungle', signs that people are not taking any chances. Everyone is vulnerable in this community should violence erupt, even the children.
    Meet Troy, a 15-year-old student of Charlie Smith High School. Troy lives in Wilton Gardens, more popularly known as Rema. Today he is in school. He has missed a few days over the last weeks because of the violence in Arnett. He says life there "nuh pretty".
    "When yuh live and go school inna dem place yah, yuh eye dem affi open," the schoolboy says.
    "Like now when war a gwan, mi watch di pickney dem flow. If mi si nuff a dem pon di road a move up and down, mi move, otherwise mi just kick back a mi yard," Troy says.
    Children like Troy have from time to time found themselves in the firing line, especially in war-torm communities. Some 91 children were murdered in 2005 according to the United Nations Children Fund, which also says that more than 300 children have been murdered in Jamaica within the last five years.
    Under control
    The police, meanwhile, say they have managed to get things under control in the area now.
    "Order is gradually returning; it is not as bad as in recent weeks," Insp. Robinson says.
    "The majority of the people living here are law-abiding citizens and they want peace. It is just the few rotten elements that were causing the problem and many of them have run away," the inspector adds.
    As recently as last Sunday, police recovered two AK-47 assault rifles in a shoot-out with a group of gunmen. Two men were hit in the exchange, one fatally.
    But while the police are claiming some degree of success in the area, some residents claim to know the genesis of the war there and do not believe the end will come anytime soon.
    "Is wicked (people) a fight wicked (people) and (those) who can mek it dun, nuh want it done ... Corruption and badmanism mix up ... This thing yah dirty, dirty!" one woman commented.
    Believed to be at the centre of the conflict is the Tony Spaulding Sports Complex, home of the Arnett Gardens Football Club.
    The Sunday Gleaner has learned that warring factions have an interest in controlling the immaculate complex, which houses a team which was once number one in the island. This though is just a fraction of the greedy pie for which men vie for there.
    The Sunday Gleaner has been told that the current war is being waged by men who were all once members of the Bibow gang led by George Phang. An influential gang member engineered a split in the Bibow crew in 2004 and took with him nearly half of the thugs.
    Soon afterwards, an attempt was made to unseat Phang who was shot 18 times in a drive-by shooting. A mini-war developed during which several persons were killed.
    In 2005, Phang, along with brother Andrew and PNP candidate for West Central St. Andrew Patrick Roberts, spent Christmas behind bars after being detained by the police in relation to the number of shootings in the community. Then, nearly 50 persons were killed in the community within a three-month period leading up to the detention. The men were never charged.
    Police have not pointed a finger at any specific persons whom they believe to be responsible for the violence in the community, but residents say the factions involved in the war now are hell-bent on controlling things.
    However, Dr. Davies on Thursday declared that the community would be taken back from the criminals.
    Renewed energy
    "I have come withrenewed energy," he said, adding that there are enough persons in the community who are willing to partner with him and the police to fight the criminal elements.
    "We are taking back our community from the criminals, not only because it is right, but we are doing it for the children. They deserve it.
    "We have an obligation to give them a chance to be what they can be; not to be constrained by their parents' income and certainly not to be constrained by violence, but to be given the chance to blossom," Dr. Davies said at an opening ceremony for a new wing at the Iris Gelly Primary School in the community.
    But Dr. Davies is without criticism as many residents say he knows how to get through to the strongmen there.
    Former Prime Minister P.J. Patterson, who said he was speaking as a concerned Jamaican, suggested that the habit of Arnett Gardens residents referring to themselves as 'Junglists' may be a factor influencing the behaviours of some members.
    "Stop calling yourself Junglists. You don't come from no jungle," Mr. Patterson said.
    Can be done
    Like Dr. Davies, Mr. Patterson believes the community can be reclaimed from the criminals and persons can again walk across borders without fear.
    "It can be done," Mr. Patterson said.
    "The security forces cannot do it by themselves. You could give them all the guns in the world it won't solve it; you can give them all the technology that they need; it will help, but it will not deal with the situation.
    "You know, all of you know the people that are causing the trouble in the area. It cannot continue," said Mr. Patterson, who was guest speaker at the Iris Gelly Primary school function.
    The former Prime Minister said he was confident that an end to the conflict could be achieved. As he spoke, a woman uttered "and it will be done". She later told The Sunday Gleaner that if people were united against violence in the community, the evil could be defeated.
    "Mi very frighten, di pickney dem frignten ... everybody frighten. A pure madness a tek place, but it can stop," she said.
    Another resident agreed that the community should play a more active role in eliminating the criminals, but noted that it was not easy to trust the police.
    "People know who a di bad man dem, but dem fraid fi talk cause a di corruption. Next ting yuh tell di police an it reach back di man dem ears and a your name a call up, a scared young male told The Sunday Gleaner.
    Name changed.
    daraine.luton@gleanerjm.com
    Taxi drivers risk death to transport residents
    nice!

    The only missing element is the vociferous declaration by the MP or PM or even MPP that Jungle is a model community to be replicated across Jamaica

    That would close the circle of buffoonery
    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


    • #3
      Originally posted by Assasin View Post
      Inspector Raymond Robinson of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) mobile reserve talks to a resident [deliberately kept out of the photograph] at the intersection of Ninth Street and Collie Smith Drive, Arnett Gardens, in Kingston last Tuesday. - Ross Sheil Photo
      I don't need to read any more. Police go into the community freely and the fact it was in the papers means that reporters can freely enter as well.

      Please post a similar story of police in TG.

      Thanks!


      BLACK LIVES MATTER

      Comment


      • #4
        Any differences with Tivoli?
        "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

        Comment


        • #5
          A nuff time mi use to tek number 43 bus from Molynes Road and come off a retirement road and walk go down a Jungle so a nuff mi see. Nobody naw go act as if Jungle is so innocently a part of mainstream Jamaica and mi accept that.

          I notice anything go down a jungle the usual suspect them always quiet or plea fifth. Dem fi dig it down too.
          • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

          Comment


          • #6
            Sass, yuh ever see police jeep inna Jungle?

            Which bus go a Tivoli?


            BLACK LIVES MATTER

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Mosiah View Post
              Sass, yuh ever see police jeep inna Jungle?

              Which bus go a Tivoli?
              numba 666 guh deh... di Eddie Express
              Last edited by Don1; June 5, 2010, 04:02 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
                No bus nu go a jungle either(at least then).

                Where mi see the Police is right a di shop a jungle mouth from Obviously coming from down there with some long guns. Can't say I have ever seen any inside Jungle. I know they have been there as they have obivously taken out people like Starskey and others. My point is the thug life is obvious, the intimidation, even protectors on the streetside. I know in the 1980 Election the roads were blocked with old cars and holes dug in the road so there were no through traffic in certain areas. The sound of gunshot is never far at nights and regular people fear for their lives.

                Cop going there don't mean everything is fine. Since 2001 you can count a few high profile murder of "alleged gangsters" who have died and the murder is not solved.
                • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                Comment


                • #9
                  the funny thing is if you come off a retirement road and don't pay the conductor, they never asked you for money.

                  A wonder why and don't ask me how I know.
                  • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Cop going there don't mean everything is fine. Since 2001 you can count a few high profile murder of "alleged gangsters" who have died and the murder is not solved.
                    Nonsense.

                    There is a HUGE difference in police being being able to go into jungle and the Tivoli situation where they could NOT go at all...except in the last week or so.

                    If you cannot see the difference you are as hopeless as Chemical Ali.
                    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


                    • #11
                      Where did I say that? Mosiah ask me a direct question if I ever saw cops in Arnett. I told him as I saw it. Are you implying everything is ok since they can go in?
                      • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Assasin View Post
                        Where did I say that? Mosiah ask me a direct question if I ever saw cops in Arnett. I told him as I saw it. Are you implying everything is ok since they can go in?
                        sigh

                        and yuh ever see some reporter cover a murder or other crime in Tivoli?

                        let me issue pre-emptive "sigh" from now!

                        sigh!


                        BLACK LIVES MATTER

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          so you was one a dem!


                          BLACK LIVES MATTER

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Mosiah View Post
                            sigh

                            and yuh ever see some reporter cover a murder or other crime in Tivoli?

                            let me issue pre-emptive "sigh" from now!

                            sigh!
                            the guy just doesn't get it
                            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


                            • #15
                              you nuh say no murder no deh a Tivoli
                              • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                              Comment

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