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  • GUERRILLA WARFARE - No retreat, No surrender

    GUERRILLA WARFARE - No retreat, No surrender
    published: Sunday | November 6, 2005


    Arnold Bertram

    THERE ARE some 17 urban communities where the criminals are sufficiently organised and armed to challenge the state, and attempt to establish their own social order. However, not all members of these communities subscribe to the imposition of criminal overlords. There is still a broad stratum "of the striving working poor who see themselves as law-abiding and respectable with aspiration of upward mobility and ambition for self and community recovery." Unfortunately, intimidation and fear of reprisals make them far too silent.


    The three communities in which the criminal agenda is most advanced, and which consequently pose the greatest threat to the state are Tivoli Gardens, Arnett Gardens and selected enclaves of Spanish Town which come under the influence of the 'One Order' and 'Clansman' gangs. All three areas were oriented to crime and a depreciation of the value of life by the process which established them as political garrisons. They have never recovered morally from the deliberate and methodical conscription of the urban poor into partisan political militias.


    THE ROAD TO PERDITION


    The concept of the garrison was first pioneered by D.C. Tavares in South West St. Andrew, who, after the JLP victory of 1962, became the first minister of housing in independent Jamaica. His most successful protégée was Edward Seaga, on whose watch some 2,300 huts which housed the most militant PNP supporters were bulldozed between 1963 and 1966, and the occupants forced "to move and keep moving".



    Despite the protest from the church and civil society, too many law-abiding Jamaicans kept silent or rationalised the perpetration of this evil. They would discover later that it was this exodus from western Kingston which subsequently created proliferation of squatter settlement from White Mall in St. Catherine to August Town in St. Andrew. Worst, it nurtured in the hearts of the displaced a deep desire for revenge.


    Tavares' plans to extend the garrisons to South St. Andrew were hardly interrupted by his death in 1968, for his successor Wilton Hill was just as committed to the enterprise. It was the PNP victory in 1972 which brought a halt to the JLP expansionist design and provided the opportunity for both revenge and the beginning of PNP hegemony in the area. Leading the PNP challenge was the new Minister of Housing, Tony Spaulding, under whose watch Arnett Gardens was created in the image of Tivoli Gardens.


    I recall only too well the forced eviction of the Labourites from a section of Rema in 1977, and like many of my colleagues rationalised it on the basis of dealing with the threat posed by Seaga. It is only with the benefit of hindsight that I came to realise the extent to which the further division of the poor into permanent warring tribes, and the cruelty with which it was achieved eroded the moral authority of democratic socialism.
    Some of the displaced Labourites found their way to Spanish Town and were ready and available to Bruce Golding when he arrived in 1983 to establish his garrison. Like his predecessors, Spaulding and Tavares, Golding found the housing ministry the perfect base for an ambitious politician committed to garrison politics. Once again, the forced evacuations were replicated, and comrades as well as persons of no political affiliation found themselves overnight without shelter.


    Throughout the entire process, once again, too many law-abiding persons watched in silence, or worse, gave tacit support or made financial contributions.


    By the elections of 1989, those most discriminated against were ready to oppose Golding's garrison in Central St. Catherine with all available means at their disposal. Among those joining the opposition to Golding was a teenager named Donovan 'Bulbie' Bennett, who later became the leader of the notorious 'Clansman' gang.


    Golding left the JLP in 1995 and in a new and different political posture formed the National Democratic Movement (NDM) and proclaimed a parting of the ways with garrison politics. However, it seems that he had built it too well, as evident in the emergence of the 'One Order' gang.


    A PICTURE IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS


    Last week a new generation of criminal terrorists took to the streets to protest the death of Bennett who was killed in a shoot-out with the police. They carried out such acts of mayhem and vandalism that will be difficult to equal, much more surpass. While the lawless revelled in the public disorder, for the law-abiding there could hardly have been a more welcome sight than that which appeared on television of criminal terrorists burning the campaign paraphernalia of presidential candidate, Peter Phillips. This public admission that an unbridgeable gulf separates him from them should be enough to inspire confidence that the man, who more than likely will be Jamaica's next prime minister, is totally committed to the fight against crime and for the restoration of public order.


    FIGHTING FOR THE HEARTS AND MINDS OF THE COMMUNITY


    The political garrisons in Spanish Town and Western Kingston share the common feature of access to a flourishing market district in the centre of the community, as well as to high-rise housing accommodations which give them not only a clear view of operation on the ground, but a strategic military advantage in confrontation with the security forces.


    The most important lesson learnt from the mayhem in Spanish Town was the extent to which the criminals had converted selected communities into supportive military bases. This is classic guerrilla warfare strategy. "These support bases are points the enemy cannot penetrate except at the cost of heavy losses. They are a refuge and a resource for the purpose of more and more distant and daring raids". As our security forces are discovering, these bases provide tight security for training of recruits, storage of weapons and ammunition, and makeshift facilities for treating the wounded.


    In these communities women and children provide the first line of defence against any attempt by the security forces to apprehend criminals. These tactics are deployed after the cynical calculation that the state will not fire upon women and children, and even instances where the criminals themselves commit atrocities, there is an influential lobby to protest what they persistently claim to be an infraction of criminal rights. I watched with amazement as one TV station allowed recipients of criminal largesse to proclaim the benevolence of their criminal benefactors without asking a single question as to where the money came from.


    A new an interesting dimension has been added to the strategies employed by criminals to avoid apprehension. This is the acquisition of 'safe' houses all over the countryside, where accomplices live posing as returning residents.


    NIGHTMARE FOR SECURITY FORCES


    We have now reached the stage where the criminal networks will drop their political labels and pooling their resources in the fight against law and order. Indeed, last week in Spanish Town there was open facilitation and consultation between 'Clansman' and 'One-Order' gangs. Despite their pretensions, their only interest in party politics is the possibility of facilitation and patronage by politicians. I have no doubt, not one of them could recognise a portrait of either Norman Manley or Alexander Bustamante, much more to state what they stood for.


    In the light of this reality, the number one priority must be the immediate expansion of the police force, and its coordination with the JDF so as to be able to deal with the hot spots of crime simultaneously.


    Despite the resources and ruthlessness of the criminal elite, I have never seen Jamaica's security forces more confident in their capacity to deal with criminals, or more unfettered to ignore partisan politics in the execution of duties. The improving relationship with the community is yielding critical intelligence and the capacity building process has begun to pay rich dividends. It only remains for national security to be accorded first claim on the country's resources which any national priority should have.


    SUCCESS MEANS FIGHTING ON ALL FRONTS


    Minister Phillips has repeatedly stated that more effective policing is only one part of the equation in the management of crime and the building of social cohesion. Just as urgent is the provision of jobs and vital community infrastructure to give the urban poor and unemployed a real alternative to a life of crime, and a cleaner environment for themselves and families to live.


    The challenge of providing simultaneously economic, social, and military components of crime fighting require a real alliance between the government, the private sector, civil society and the community. The single factor which makes success possible in the fight against crime is the new determination from our law enforcement agencies, that in the face of a relentless threat from the criminals in our midst, the response of the law-abiding must be 'no retreat, no surrender'.


    http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/glean...ead/lead8.html

    -----------

    Plenty of sins! ...many to share the blame!
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

  • #2
    Too little too late? Did he really need the Dudus fiasco to start this? Still not hearing about other areas since Tivoli.

    Comment


    • #3
      "The three communities in which the criminal agenda is most advanced, and which consequently pose the greatest threat to the state are Tivoli Gardens, Arnett Gardens and selected enclaves of Spanish Town which come under the influence of the 'One Order' and 'Clansman' gangs. All three areas were oriented to crime and a depreciation of the value of life by the process which established them as political garrisons. They have never recovered morally from the deliberate and methodical conscription of the urban poor into partisan political militias."

      Don't let Mosiah them read this atall. The Comrade say this? A true him retire?
      • 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


      • #4
        Originally posted by Exile View Post
        Too little too late? Did he really need the Dudus fiasco to start this? Still not hearing about other areas since Tivoli.
        It's a 2005 article....


        Mi kno Bertram as a sportsmaster inna skool back in the day as a yute... wasn't much good at 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


        • #5
          ah well a donkey years ago that.
          • 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
            Actually I tried to post this 'blast from the past' in response to Rudi's post attached to a thread I started requesting an answer to whether or not Likle Brucie had bulldozed the ground provisions of persons in St. Catherine sometime during his sojourn in politics in that parish.

            A few minutes after I saw Rudi's questioning I did a 'google search' on Likle Brucie's hand in what my friend claimed. The above article was what I found in that possible 2 minutes search.

            I meant to return to a more thorough search...but after reading "Scree's" article I was called to attend other business. The article showed both parties hand in 'feeding' the rise of gun criminals. It struck me as being an 'even handed' piece....so I put in on the forum.

            Aside: It well have been posted in 2005...but I thought it was relevant to the current discussions we have been having.

            If anyone knows of Likle Brucie running roughshod over people in St. Catherine gardens/farms/back yard gardens...I would love to see the articles on same. ...as I cannot remember any such incident.
            "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

            Comment


            • #7
              The road to perdition...
              THE ROAD TO A CRUEL JAMAICA
              Published: Sunday | June 13, 2010
              Kevin O'Brien Chang, Gleaner Writer

              'How easy it is if an example is set by Government of cruel conduct, for everybody to condone cruelty and for cruelty to become a national attribute.'
              Norman Manley, 1966

              BETWEEN 1962 and 2009 Jamaica's murder rate went from 3.9 to 62.2 per 100,000 - perhaps the greatest violent death rate increase experienced by any country not at war. How did we get here?

              Recent books give varying perspectives, including Edward Seaga's My Life and Leadership, Patrick E. Bryan's Edward Seaga, and Amanda Sives' Elections, Violence and the Democratic Process in Jamaica 1944-2007. Obika Gray's 2004 Demeaned But Empowered covers similar ground.

              Sives and Gray date modern Jamaican politics from 1944, losing the crucial context of the 1938 upheavals. Sives calls Alexander Bustamante a "self-proclaimed friend of the workers" who aroused loyalty mainly through the "role of personality". Yet Bustamante inspired legendary devotion because of his commitment to workers' welfare, even proclaiming to levelled police bayonets: "Shoot me, but leave these defenceless, hungry people alone."

              Britain was a 'gentler' colonial master than Germany, Spain or France. Yet protesting workers were shot dead at Frome in 1938, and when St. William Grant, Bustamante's lieutenant, was arrested on May 24th, "The police made a pulp of Grant's head and underneath his private parts ... . He had never been the Grant he was before that, again, until he died" (Bustamante: Notes, Quotes, Anecdotes, Ken Jones, page 53).

              Confronted with colonial brute force, the Bustamante-led workers no doubt responded with brute force. Wills O. Isaacs has been pilloried for asking, "What are a few broken skulls in the building of a nation?" Yet revolution is not a tea party, and nationhood comes mainly from the barrel of a gun. Compared to most other Third World countries, Jamaica's political development from 1938 to 1962 was unusual for its relative lack of violence.

              Nations are generally born in chaos and mature into settled democracies. Jamaica's peacefully attained political stability then saw violence relentlessly increase. What caused this?

              Maybe the 'British overlordship democracy' of 1944 to 1962 was a quasi-dictatorship that stifled legitimate underclass grievances, which exploded into violence when independence removed artificial colonial restraints. Or perhaps the statesmanship of Alexander Bustamante and Norman Manley drew lines not to be crossed, which less-principled successors failed to respect.

              Comparative history supports the latter view. Few other colonial territories saw anything like Jamaica's remarkably smooth transition from widespread unrest in 1938 to peaceful elections in 1944 to unchallenged regime changes in 1955 and 1962. After his 1955 election loss, Bustamante telegraphed Norman Manley: "We shall be an honest opposition. Good luck." When age caused both to leave the stage, it became 'blood for blood, fire for fire'.

              Murders in Jamaica soared by 69 per cent from 1965 to 1966, with the largest increase in the West Kingston constituency of Member of Parliament Seaga and challenger Dudley Thompson. The July 1966 levelling of Back O' Wall was a defining event. In Edward Seaga's account, Back O'Wall ... was the worst crime den in the country ... a den of support for the PNP (People's National Party) ... [gunmen and thieves] brought with them the criminal and violent activity... they wanted ... to cripple ... my presence in the area so as to reassert their dominance which would allow them to do what they want" [Sives page 66].

              "They [Jamaica Labour Party (JLP)] supporters were being gunned down ... I built for them what people call an enclave, and I make no apology for that, so they could walk in peace and that their daughters wouldn't be raped ... " [Sives page 136].

              On July 26, 1966, Norman Manley spoke thus in Parliament:
              "The level that separates normal, human, decent conduct ... from what is virtually obscene cruelty is a very narrow margin indeed ... how easy it is if an example is set by Government of cruel conduct, for everybody to condone cruelty and for cruelty to become a national attribute ... when I hear [acting Prime Minister Donald Sangster] argue that because squatting is illegal ... and a few people had behaved violently and threw sticks of dynamite, therefore you are ... justified in destroying people's personal property, in leaving people shelterless, with their children, to sit in the rain and to sleep on graves. And so many of the comfortable middle class sat on their verandas ... and justified the action of the Government ... . This thing has driven deeper divisions than ever between one class whom we regard as sufferers and others who are more comfortable ..." [Bryan, page 155].

              Terry Lacey's Violence and Politics in Jamaica: 1960-1970 [pages 131-137] is sad déjà vu reading.
              "There were two new features of the JLP-PNP rivalry in Western Kingston. First, the widespread use of firearms and second, the reluctance of the police to arrest known gunmen ... . They were now reluctant to raid in Western Kingston because of the amount of firepower in the area." [Lacey]

              "... When a state of emergency was declared and the army and police moved in strength into Western Kingston, The Gleaner commented, 'At last'. 'No wonder these criminal pests have been going round the suburbs as well as the slums behaving like the new lords of the jungle! They knew that, more often than not, just as soon as they were arrested, some politician would ... bail them out'."

              Under siege

              In 1966, the PNP held eight of 10 urban constituencies, the exceptions being Seaga's West Kingston and D.C. Tavares' South West St Andrew. From one viewpoint, these JLP enclaves were under siege from rampant PNP forces intent on total city domination, with implicit police support - 65 per cent of the security forces voted PNP in 1967. Had Seaga not fought back in kind, he would have been driven out by force, making the Corporate Area, and perhaps later the entire island, a one-party entity.

              Another perspective says Seaga's party held state power, and a properly marshalled military could have achieved a relatively peaceful status quo. He used unprecedented means, as the October 1966 state of emergency, to establish an independent power base, impregnable even to his own governing party.

              Posterity will choose its 'official' narrative, but if Edward Seaga did indeed bring a new ruthlessness to Jamaican politics, Michael Manley was fully his equal.

              "... Garrison-style voting was not apparent in West Kingston until 1972 ... . Credit for this unfortunate result was no doubt due to the ... martial preparedness of Edward Seaga ... . Likewise ... the infamous Garrison gang, a group of PNP toughs, carried out acts of intimidation and perpetrated violence and mayhem on behalf of constituency representative, Michael Manley. This group ... was apparently so effective in expelling JLP threats in Central Kingston in 1967 and 1972 that Manley ... at a public rally late in 1974 commended the enforcers by their popular names: "I thank the Central Kingston Executive. I thank my Paseros of the Garrison - Skully, Val, Boots, Vinnie, Burry, Bernard, Spar, as a glory." [Gray pages 150-151]

              Prime Minister Manley and several Cabinet members led 20,000 mourners at Winston 'Burry Boy' Blake's March 1975 funeral. [Gray page 187]
              Did Edward Seaga and Michael Manley personally alter the fabric of Jamaican politics or were they merely agents of inevitable historical forces? Had Donald Sangster not died of a brain aneurism in 1967, and had Vivian Blake won most votes at the 1967 PNP leadership conference, would Jamaica be a less-cruel nation today?

              We will never know. But Lacey's 1977 book ends with depressing familiarity:
              "A generation of Jamaican youth has probably been lost for development and compromises a tragic social problem and a security risk as long as a youthful dispossessed lumpenproletariat hangs about the streets of Kingston doing nothing. The same thing must not be allowed to happen to the next generation of Jamaican schoolchildren."

              Feedback may be sent to changkob@hotmail.com or columns@gleanerjm.com.
              Last edited by Karl; June 14, 2010, 03:34 PM.

              Comment


              • #8
                I am from Spain Town...never heard of that. Mind you, he ran in Old Harbour before Spain Town.

                Just the normal political hooliganism in Span Town.

                One thing most town people dont understand is that Span town elections are NOT determined by garrison politics. I think i have posted long ago that only 20 over about 110 polling stations are in garrison areas (not all JLP, BTW) and that JLP wins because of Eltham, Ensom City, Hampton Green, etc, which are all middle class areas and all solidly green voting districts.

                Tawes Pen, and surrounding areas are JLP garrison, while the Railway station area is a PNP garrison. Rivoli and De la Vega City (both PNP garrisons) are in another constituency now, as Span Town is divided into 2 constituencies.

                Finally, Scree seems to forget that Pain Land is a major garrison as well.

                Comment


                • #9
                  yet none can compare to Tivoli.


                  BLACK LIVES MATTER

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    A few inaccuracies here. Typical Town man dem never understand Span Town! LoL

                    JLP does NOT depend on the garrison vote to win Central St Catherine. only like 23 of the over 120 polling stations are garrisons. The BIG votes come from Ensom City, Homestead and Eltham. So it is NOTHING like Tivoli. These areas are staunchly middle class and very anti-PNP due to their belief that PNP is poor at governance. They are available to switch if they are shown otherwise. Nobody can force them to vote one way or another, or even to vote at all.

                    When Bruuce went NDM, he did not give any of his activists guns and over one weekend, Babsy came with her Tivoli enforcers and cleaned them all up. That was the end of Bruce, as he lost all garrison votes and the middle class votes went with JLP as NDM was seen as a wasted vote. Thus, there cant be any love lost between Golding and Babsy/Tivoli, no matter how it appears on the surface. No love for Dudas either, as he must have ordered the liquidation of the NDM activists.

                    As for Bulbie, he did not rise up against Bruce. One order and Clansman is a result of the informal links with the Span Town posses in the US who linked up with their confederates back home. One order surely has Tivoli links as well. Bulbie made his name by wiping out PNP activists aligned to Heather Robinson and even threatened her. When she got no support from Party Heirarchy, she quit politics in disgust!

                    I hear people saying the name Clansman for a black gang is disgraceful, as the mistakingly relate it to the KKK in the US. However, it has roots in Rivoli Jungle (PNP), where the Crystal Theatre goers (on Monk Street) used to align themselves with fictional Kung Fu Clans, like Manchuria, etc and I guess Clansman is the unification of these splinter groups.

                    One Order now has a splinter group called No-Order that has ex-clansmen in it. They have NO political affiliation.

                    Finally, why didnt Scree touch on how Portia purged the OLD DC Tavares stronghold? She was the disciple of Tony Spaulding and their ethnic Cleansing in the early 1970s is what created Tawes Pen in Spanish Town and why Pain land is so formidable today. To my mind, Portia has the strongest garrison outside of old Tivoli. Now that Tivoli is smashed, her garrison reigns supreme. 105% of the votes back in the day. LoL

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      In one sense, but none ever got the 105% voter turnout like Portia did. That is beyond absolute! Seaga and Manley nah try! LoL


                      She got 83% of the registered voters and Finson got 22%. Only problem was that we have 5% more votes than people.

                      Still Spauding and Seaga both got higher vote shares at 87% of all votes, though Kgn W had only 94% voter turnout and Spauding seat had 102% turnout.

                      Heady days


                      http://www.eoj.com.jm/elections/1980.htm
                      Last edited by Willi; June 14, 2010, 08:23 AM.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Willi View Post
                        In one sense, but none ever got the 105% voter turnout like Portia did. That is beyond absolute! Seaga and Manley nah try! LoL


                        She got 83% of the registered voters and Finson got 22%. Only problem was that we have 5% more votes than people.

                        Still Spauding and Seaga both got higher vote shares at 87% of all votes, though Kgn W had only 94% voter turnout and Spauding seat had 102% turnout.

                        Heady days


                        http://www.eoj.com.jm/elections/1980.htm
                        Rather than mere levels of bogus voting...where Tivoli is the supreme garrison...the MOAG...is the level of local and international violence..drug running...arms trafficking..and influence over a political party & the state by extension.

                        Absolutely no contest
                        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
                          The Day Walking Vampire is the ONLY constant in this 50 year garrison mess

                          Up to today in his dotage the reprobate still supports the corruption he was instrumental in creating

                          Order of the Nation my ****************.... Disgrace to the Nation is more appropriate

                          All responsible JLPNP misleaders must be condemned but the Vampire is at the top of that Dung Heap
                          Last edited by Don1; June 14, 2010, 09:30 AM.
                          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


                          • #14
                            That was an evolution. Took time. They all started out about the same. Dont underrate Pain Land, as that is the PNP equivalent, more so than Jungle.

                            Tivoli and Pain Land are the best at extending their reach to the outside world.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              LoL

                              Day Walker. LoL

                              Still yuh have a point there. However, if Tony S was still alive, he would still be keeping up the effry like the Day Walker. DW just blessed with longevity.

                              Dat deh spwile generation really was a curse on di land, despite whatever good they managed to squeeze in. We should have kept them all in check.

                              Comment

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