Are there tunnels in Tivoli?
Mark Wignall
Sunday, June 06, 2010
var addthis_pub="jamaicaobserver";
FORMER Commissioner of Police Francis Forbes was appointed at a time when Tivoli was in one of its perennial conflicts with the police. It was some time in 1996.
In one of his first TV appearances in 1996 he told viewers that he had been informed by his senior officers that there were tunnels in Tivoli Gardens. I took him to task on that revelation and was of the belief that if he had that information, the place to divulge it was not on national television.
SEAGA… should never get away with this fable
SEAGA… should never get away with this fable
It was at a time when I had just left writing for the Sunday Herald and began doing the same for the much wider readership of the Jamaica Observer. After I had spoken on various radio programmes about the matter, Mutty Perkins and myself were invited to tour Tivoli Gardens in an effort to determine if there were indeed tunnels there.
Fourteen years later, I still feel foolish to have even attempted such an exercise. Perkins and Seaga arrived in Tivoli together while I had taken a taxi there. As I suspected, Perkins was more mouth than bravado so he did the safe thing by travelling to Seaga’s house on Paddington Terrace then hopped a ride with Seaga to Tivoli Gardens.
I had taken with me a tape measure and some other stuff that I cannot recall now.
Tell the truth, Mutty Perkins
While Mutty basked in the adoration of his many fans in Tivoli, with the help of some young men in Tivoli Gardens I set about looking for tunnels. I tried to examine the spots where we would least expect to find them while saying to myself, “If I should find a tunnel, what then?” Would I have said, ‘Over here, I have found one. Nuff gun in deh.” Damn fool me.
The following Monday, Perkins was in his element on his programme declaring that both he and Mark Wignall had gone looking for tunnels and none were found.
Incredibly, Eddie Seaga was recently on Impact telling Emily Crooks that he had taken Mutty Perkins in Tivoli to look for tunnels. If he was referring to that time, which I believe he was, that was rank dishonesty and merely exposes Seaga once again for the fake ‘nationalist’ that he claims he is.
Perkins and his lovely wife did not at any time move from the spot close to the community centre. He did not at any time look for any tunnels. I was the one who did so. Seaga should never get away with this fable which lies conveniently in some space in his apparently calcified mind, and of course Perkins seems to believe that he should just let that story run.
I would suggest that the former commissioner, wherever he is, should consult with those who were his senior officers and ask them if all they were doing was running off their mouths. But are there tunnels in Tivoli?
Ask Tivoli.
Don’t come back, Bruce, says West Kingston
After having survived the predictable outcome of the no-confidence vote in the House, Prime Minister Golding, still being bombarded by calls for his resignation, made a tour of Tivoli Gardens to witness first-hand the damage inflicted on Tivoli by the eyewall of the recent ferocious social hurricane.
Hoping that the operations of the security forces would quickly position him as the author of the ‘assault on criminal elements’, early readings from his political operatives on the ground must have told him that he was persona non grata in West Kingston. Backed into yet another corner, he would be harshly criticised by the media and Tivoli residents if he didn’t visit and damned by Tivoli residents if he did.
Forced to the wall yet again, he did the next best thing. He visited but used the security forces to block out the media cameras, the angry stares and the numerous voices which would have starkly reflected the truth of his unwelcome status.
“Dat deh man deh,” said one of my contacts there. “Him done inna West Kingston. Wi nuh want him yah so. A Babsy wi want!” I suspect, however, that Babsy Grange would not want to take on the hot potato that West Kingston is.
It is not guesswork that many of the main armed street forces in Tivoli and the wider West Kingston hurriedly packed up and left once they felt the ferocity of the army incursion inside Tivoli. The question as to how many of those killed were gunmen and how many were just civilian casualties caught up in a war zone have not yet been determined, but knowing how we do business in this country, it is rather doubtful that those facts will ever come to light.
The very lack of young men in the community tells a sobering if tense and fearful truth. No war has been won and a peace treaty has not been presented to this nation. The Tivoli ‘soldiers’ have retreated for their own preservation and the guns have been stashed away. It is more than a possibility and even a likelihood that some of those young men who were drawn into a destructive subculture years ago are, wherever they are, seething and planning for another time. Could their anger spill over and be reflected in any future regrouping and renewed attack?
The prime minister and his team will be doing what politicians all over the world do; spinning the recent events to his benefit. It may not be right in the eyes of many in the population but, in politics, it is quite valid simply because politics is not a game for the angelic.
I cannot see him returning to West Kingston anytime soon. He cannot agree to a switch with Babsy Grange, his sports and culture minister, to return to his old stomping ground of Central St Catherine because the strongest support in that garrison constituency has all of the flavour of a little Tivoli.
So, castigated and openly spurned by ‘the heart of Seaga’s baby’ and still teetering on the razor’s edge with calls for his resignation, where can he go? If he survives the rest of the term and if the forces of disorder do not get up and smack him and the nation in the face, he will be forced to go on the hustings for one of the three new constituencies being carved out.
A commission of enquiry into the circumstances which led to the deaths of so many in Tivoli must be set up as soon as possible to determine who were killed, how they were killed, who were innocents and who were gunmen firing at the security forces. It seems to be a long shot for
anyone of us to believe that the security forces were simply firing at duppies, but it is obvious that something went wrong.
If, however, the verdict for the enquiry is already in before it is appointed, then it simply means that Jamaica has no interest in purging itself of a past that has done more to destroy us than deliver us into social, civil and economic betterment.
The Case for Golding’s Resignation
When questioned by Dr Peter Phillips in the House in March about the Manatt, Phelps & Phillips (MPP) matter, knowing what we know now by Golding’s own admission, the force and confidence with which he responded to Phillips and denied that there was any such arrangement points to a leader whose word on any matter in the future must be taken as very suspect.
Second, when the enormity of the pressure from the PNP Opposition and the media closed in on him, the prime minister relieved Information Minister Daryl Vaz of further comment on the matter and appointed Karl Samuda, Cabinet minister and JLP general secretary, to investigate and report on the issue.
Knowing what we know now, the prime minister was the very person who had removed the lock from his office door and allowed in others, yet months after doing so and burdened with public pressure, he appointed Karl Samuda to make a determination as to who had removed the lock from his office door. Absolutely incredible!
Third, when calls for his resignation bombarded his office and his consciousness, he came to this nation and, apologised, but failed to properly address both points while firmly insisting that the engagement with MPP was a JLP party initiative.
One year after Digicel exploded in Jamaica, a text message came upon my phone while I was asleep. My lady heard the beep, looked over at me snoring and, not seeing any movement on my part, she did what any other woman would do. She read it. But she took it a step further. Pretending she was me, she engaged in a series of exchanges with the lady on the other end. When the lady sent, ‘I was thinking of you. Call me now,’ my more than impish Chupski sent back, ‘My girlfriend is beside me. Will call you later.’
It was foolish of me to have given this person my phone number and the indiscretion on my part was close to unforgivable.
After awaking me with the phone hard on my forehead and bites on my chest she asked me to declare all that had happened. I explained and pointed out to her my imperfections, my weaknesses and apologised to her, declaring my undying passion. “You are apologising only because you were caught,” she reasoned.
I said to her, “Had I not been caught, there would have been no reason to apologise, but it was a moment’s indiscretion and I had long told her that there was nothing for us beyond the moment.”
I was forced to search my soul because, at that moment, faced with the possibility of damaging something real good, I had to divulge ALL, plus she listened in as I called the other lady to tell her that we could no longer communicate, by phone or by personal intimate contact.
Many of us in the nation are still of the view that Golding’s apology was only made to stave off the blow to his head and the bites to his chest. The indiscretion remains and, more than anything else, the fact that he is taking us all for fools suggests that he is still seeing the lady.
I maintain that the MPP engagement was one arranged by the JLP administration and not by the JLP as a private entity to act in conflict with the elected Government.
When all the ducks are lined up, the case for the prime minister’s resignation is a very sound one.
The Case against Golding’s Resignation
A day after I had expressed in an email to a VIP that I would be calling on the PM to resign, the man, a scholar but more of a pragmatist, wrote back, “And who would you suggest is there to replace him?”
Important consideration. Chairman of the JLP and Deputy Prime Minister Dr Ken Baugh did significant damage to his reputation when he sat down with Gen Sec Karl Samuda, a man used to the political trenches, and proclaimed solidarity with the prime minister before his apology.
Had the PM resigned and the constitutional requirements were met to place Baugh in Jamaica House, would he have the political savvy to control the troops until there was a special conference to allow delegates to elect a leader? Additionally, in the months following, surely the pressure would be on for general elections with a good chance for the PNP to be elected.
What would the nation have accomplished? We would have had Golding’s convenient apology, then his resignation, then an election, then the PNP, then Portia Simpson Miller as prime minister. And as much as we would have congratulated ourselves for ridding ourselves of the JLP and Golding’s deceptions, we would have to remind ourselves that Portia Simpson Miller had never even halfheartedly offered an explanation of her own role in Trafigura or deemed it necessary to extend an apology to this nation.
The two Cabinet ministers who have set themselves apart from the rest have been Education Minister Andrew Holness and Agriculture/Fisheries Minister Christopher Tufton. Both have been executing their portfolio responsibilities without the usual hype of the Neanderthals cluttering up the JLP Cabinet.
Both men have been on the radar, but they are political neophytes and it is doubtful whether they could control what would increasingly become a very fractious JLP administration and political party.
The other consideration inside the JLP would be their electoral viability relative to Simpson Miller. For this reason and the very real fact that the economy would have been at a delicate point that could become derailed by an election in, say, October 2010, JLP insiders would consider that the only pragmatic option available would be to slog it out, bear the public criticism and govern day-to-day in the hope than an economic turnaround in mid-2011 to 2012 would bear fruit at the next general elections.
And we should never omit from the equation the external influences, usually kept under the radar, of the US and/our EU partners on our internal political affairs. One suspects that Golding in this instance has to dance to another country’s tune, especially because of our delicate balancing act on the economy.
When the cases of both scenarios are placed alongside each other, it is my belief, albeit a personal one, that the case for resignation stands on a firmer moral foundation. In the real world, however, some may adopt the view that when both cases are examined, political pragmatism will always win out.
Minister Tufton, look carefully into this
Over the last few weeks I have written two columns in reference to the Customs seizure of the fishing vessel, the MV Abbey which was detained in Port Antonio in April.
I had pointed out that the owner, Frank Cox of DYC fishing, had had established fishing breaches in two instances in the US courts system and had suggested that DYC fishing should no longer have fishing licences in the Jamaican jurisdiction.
Every little fisherman in Jamaica with his 15-foot canoe with outboard motor must have a fishing licence and the occupation is one of the most hazardous in the world. Why therefore should we allow a company with a large motor vessel to take undersized lobsters from our waters and sell them to the Americans, and bask in the glory of getting away with that particular breach in our jurisdiction by being rewarded with the maintenance of his licenc?.
On Thursday I called Mr Cecil Thoms of the Agriculture/Fisheries Ministry to ask him a question about DYC fishing. Is the wife of Mr Frank Cox also in possession of a fishing licence?
Yes, he told me.
I am imputing nothing here, only that if by some investigation occurring as this column is read and Mr Cox’s fishing licence is revoked, he has an option, a very obvious one. Enough said.
Mark Wignall
Sunday, June 06, 2010
var addthis_pub="jamaicaobserver";
FORMER Commissioner of Police Francis Forbes was appointed at a time when Tivoli was in one of its perennial conflicts with the police. It was some time in 1996.
In one of his first TV appearances in 1996 he told viewers that he had been informed by his senior officers that there were tunnels in Tivoli Gardens. I took him to task on that revelation and was of the belief that if he had that information, the place to divulge it was not on national television.
SEAGA… should never get away with this fable
SEAGA… should never get away with this fable
It was at a time when I had just left writing for the Sunday Herald and began doing the same for the much wider readership of the Jamaica Observer. After I had spoken on various radio programmes about the matter, Mutty Perkins and myself were invited to tour Tivoli Gardens in an effort to determine if there were indeed tunnels there.
Fourteen years later, I still feel foolish to have even attempted such an exercise. Perkins and Seaga arrived in Tivoli together while I had taken a taxi there. As I suspected, Perkins was more mouth than bravado so he did the safe thing by travelling to Seaga’s house on Paddington Terrace then hopped a ride with Seaga to Tivoli Gardens.
I had taken with me a tape measure and some other stuff that I cannot recall now.
Tell the truth, Mutty Perkins
While Mutty basked in the adoration of his many fans in Tivoli, with the help of some young men in Tivoli Gardens I set about looking for tunnels. I tried to examine the spots where we would least expect to find them while saying to myself, “If I should find a tunnel, what then?” Would I have said, ‘Over here, I have found one. Nuff gun in deh.” Damn fool me.
The following Monday, Perkins was in his element on his programme declaring that both he and Mark Wignall had gone looking for tunnels and none were found.
Incredibly, Eddie Seaga was recently on Impact telling Emily Crooks that he had taken Mutty Perkins in Tivoli to look for tunnels. If he was referring to that time, which I believe he was, that was rank dishonesty and merely exposes Seaga once again for the fake ‘nationalist’ that he claims he is.
Perkins and his lovely wife did not at any time move from the spot close to the community centre. He did not at any time look for any tunnels. I was the one who did so. Seaga should never get away with this fable which lies conveniently in some space in his apparently calcified mind, and of course Perkins seems to believe that he should just let that story run.
I would suggest that the former commissioner, wherever he is, should consult with those who were his senior officers and ask them if all they were doing was running off their mouths. But are there tunnels in Tivoli?
Ask Tivoli.
Don’t come back, Bruce, says West Kingston
After having survived the predictable outcome of the no-confidence vote in the House, Prime Minister Golding, still being bombarded by calls for his resignation, made a tour of Tivoli Gardens to witness first-hand the damage inflicted on Tivoli by the eyewall of the recent ferocious social hurricane.
Hoping that the operations of the security forces would quickly position him as the author of the ‘assault on criminal elements’, early readings from his political operatives on the ground must have told him that he was persona non grata in West Kingston. Backed into yet another corner, he would be harshly criticised by the media and Tivoli residents if he didn’t visit and damned by Tivoli residents if he did.
Forced to the wall yet again, he did the next best thing. He visited but used the security forces to block out the media cameras, the angry stares and the numerous voices which would have starkly reflected the truth of his unwelcome status.
“Dat deh man deh,” said one of my contacts there. “Him done inna West Kingston. Wi nuh want him yah so. A Babsy wi want!” I suspect, however, that Babsy Grange would not want to take on the hot potato that West Kingston is.
It is not guesswork that many of the main armed street forces in Tivoli and the wider West Kingston hurriedly packed up and left once they felt the ferocity of the army incursion inside Tivoli. The question as to how many of those killed were gunmen and how many were just civilian casualties caught up in a war zone have not yet been determined, but knowing how we do business in this country, it is rather doubtful that those facts will ever come to light.
The very lack of young men in the community tells a sobering if tense and fearful truth. No war has been won and a peace treaty has not been presented to this nation. The Tivoli ‘soldiers’ have retreated for their own preservation and the guns have been stashed away. It is more than a possibility and even a likelihood that some of those young men who were drawn into a destructive subculture years ago are, wherever they are, seething and planning for another time. Could their anger spill over and be reflected in any future regrouping and renewed attack?
The prime minister and his team will be doing what politicians all over the world do; spinning the recent events to his benefit. It may not be right in the eyes of many in the population but, in politics, it is quite valid simply because politics is not a game for the angelic.
I cannot see him returning to West Kingston anytime soon. He cannot agree to a switch with Babsy Grange, his sports and culture minister, to return to his old stomping ground of Central St Catherine because the strongest support in that garrison constituency has all of the flavour of a little Tivoli.
So, castigated and openly spurned by ‘the heart of Seaga’s baby’ and still teetering on the razor’s edge with calls for his resignation, where can he go? If he survives the rest of the term and if the forces of disorder do not get up and smack him and the nation in the face, he will be forced to go on the hustings for one of the three new constituencies being carved out.
A commission of enquiry into the circumstances which led to the deaths of so many in Tivoli must be set up as soon as possible to determine who were killed, how they were killed, who were innocents and who were gunmen firing at the security forces. It seems to be a long shot for
anyone of us to believe that the security forces were simply firing at duppies, but it is obvious that something went wrong.
If, however, the verdict for the enquiry is already in before it is appointed, then it simply means that Jamaica has no interest in purging itself of a past that has done more to destroy us than deliver us into social, civil and economic betterment.
The Case for Golding’s Resignation
When questioned by Dr Peter Phillips in the House in March about the Manatt, Phelps & Phillips (MPP) matter, knowing what we know now by Golding’s own admission, the force and confidence with which he responded to Phillips and denied that there was any such arrangement points to a leader whose word on any matter in the future must be taken as very suspect.
Second, when the enormity of the pressure from the PNP Opposition and the media closed in on him, the prime minister relieved Information Minister Daryl Vaz of further comment on the matter and appointed Karl Samuda, Cabinet minister and JLP general secretary, to investigate and report on the issue.
Knowing what we know now, the prime minister was the very person who had removed the lock from his office door and allowed in others, yet months after doing so and burdened with public pressure, he appointed Karl Samuda to make a determination as to who had removed the lock from his office door. Absolutely incredible!
Third, when calls for his resignation bombarded his office and his consciousness, he came to this nation and, apologised, but failed to properly address both points while firmly insisting that the engagement with MPP was a JLP party initiative.
One year after Digicel exploded in Jamaica, a text message came upon my phone while I was asleep. My lady heard the beep, looked over at me snoring and, not seeing any movement on my part, she did what any other woman would do. She read it. But she took it a step further. Pretending she was me, she engaged in a series of exchanges with the lady on the other end. When the lady sent, ‘I was thinking of you. Call me now,’ my more than impish Chupski sent back, ‘My girlfriend is beside me. Will call you later.’
It was foolish of me to have given this person my phone number and the indiscretion on my part was close to unforgivable.
After awaking me with the phone hard on my forehead and bites on my chest she asked me to declare all that had happened. I explained and pointed out to her my imperfections, my weaknesses and apologised to her, declaring my undying passion. “You are apologising only because you were caught,” she reasoned.
I said to her, “Had I not been caught, there would have been no reason to apologise, but it was a moment’s indiscretion and I had long told her that there was nothing for us beyond the moment.”
I was forced to search my soul because, at that moment, faced with the possibility of damaging something real good, I had to divulge ALL, plus she listened in as I called the other lady to tell her that we could no longer communicate, by phone or by personal intimate contact.
Many of us in the nation are still of the view that Golding’s apology was only made to stave off the blow to his head and the bites to his chest. The indiscretion remains and, more than anything else, the fact that he is taking us all for fools suggests that he is still seeing the lady.
I maintain that the MPP engagement was one arranged by the JLP administration and not by the JLP as a private entity to act in conflict with the elected Government.
When all the ducks are lined up, the case for the prime minister’s resignation is a very sound one.
The Case against Golding’s Resignation
A day after I had expressed in an email to a VIP that I would be calling on the PM to resign, the man, a scholar but more of a pragmatist, wrote back, “And who would you suggest is there to replace him?”
Important consideration. Chairman of the JLP and Deputy Prime Minister Dr Ken Baugh did significant damage to his reputation when he sat down with Gen Sec Karl Samuda, a man used to the political trenches, and proclaimed solidarity with the prime minister before his apology.
Had the PM resigned and the constitutional requirements were met to place Baugh in Jamaica House, would he have the political savvy to control the troops until there was a special conference to allow delegates to elect a leader? Additionally, in the months following, surely the pressure would be on for general elections with a good chance for the PNP to be elected.
What would the nation have accomplished? We would have had Golding’s convenient apology, then his resignation, then an election, then the PNP, then Portia Simpson Miller as prime minister. And as much as we would have congratulated ourselves for ridding ourselves of the JLP and Golding’s deceptions, we would have to remind ourselves that Portia Simpson Miller had never even halfheartedly offered an explanation of her own role in Trafigura or deemed it necessary to extend an apology to this nation.
The two Cabinet ministers who have set themselves apart from the rest have been Education Minister Andrew Holness and Agriculture/Fisheries Minister Christopher Tufton. Both have been executing their portfolio responsibilities without the usual hype of the Neanderthals cluttering up the JLP Cabinet.
Both men have been on the radar, but they are political neophytes and it is doubtful whether they could control what would increasingly become a very fractious JLP administration and political party.
The other consideration inside the JLP would be their electoral viability relative to Simpson Miller. For this reason and the very real fact that the economy would have been at a delicate point that could become derailed by an election in, say, October 2010, JLP insiders would consider that the only pragmatic option available would be to slog it out, bear the public criticism and govern day-to-day in the hope than an economic turnaround in mid-2011 to 2012 would bear fruit at the next general elections.
And we should never omit from the equation the external influences, usually kept under the radar, of the US and/our EU partners on our internal political affairs. One suspects that Golding in this instance has to dance to another country’s tune, especially because of our delicate balancing act on the economy.
When the cases of both scenarios are placed alongside each other, it is my belief, albeit a personal one, that the case for resignation stands on a firmer moral foundation. In the real world, however, some may adopt the view that when both cases are examined, political pragmatism will always win out.
Minister Tufton, look carefully into this
Over the last few weeks I have written two columns in reference to the Customs seizure of the fishing vessel, the MV Abbey which was detained in Port Antonio in April.
I had pointed out that the owner, Frank Cox of DYC fishing, had had established fishing breaches in two instances in the US courts system and had suggested that DYC fishing should no longer have fishing licences in the Jamaican jurisdiction.
Every little fisherman in Jamaica with his 15-foot canoe with outboard motor must have a fishing licence and the occupation is one of the most hazardous in the world. Why therefore should we allow a company with a large motor vessel to take undersized lobsters from our waters and sell them to the Americans, and bask in the glory of getting away with that particular breach in our jurisdiction by being rewarded with the maintenance of his licenc?.
On Thursday I called Mr Cecil Thoms of the Agriculture/Fisheries Ministry to ask him a question about DYC fishing. Is the wife of Mr Frank Cox also in possession of a fishing licence?
Yes, he told me.
I am imputing nothing here, only that if by some investigation occurring as this column is read and Mr Cox’s fishing licence is revoked, he has an option, a very obvious one. Enough said.
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