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  • THE JFJ has real competition ...MO ?

    'Police should not be expected to clean up mess left by politicians'
    Rights activist says cops given basket to carry water
    BY TANESHA MUNDLE Observer staff reporter mundlet@jamaicaobserver.com
    Tuesday, July 13, 2010




    HUMAN rights activist Yvonne McCalla-Sobers yesterday called for additional resources to be given to the police in order for them to conduct their duties efficiently.
    The police, the rights activist said, have been given 'basket to carry water' and that the constabulary should not be expected to clean up the "mess" made by politicians over the years.




    Yvonne McCalla-Sobers, head of the rights group Families Against State Terrorism, addressing Observer reporters and editors yesterday. (Photo: Naphtali Junior)


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    Addressing editors and reporters at the Observer's weekly Monday Exchange at the newspaper's Beechwood Avenue headquarters in Kingston, McCalla-Sobers said the expectations of the police were unfair, adding that police officers were being mandated with an impossible task of cleaning up crime without the necessary resources.
    "The police deserve better treatment, and better treatment means they deserve the resources that they need...," said McCalla-Sobers, president of the rights group Family Against State Terrorism (FAST).
    The police have, for years, called for more resources to strengthen their fight against crime and violence. In addition to the calls for more police officers, the constabulary has over the years called for more motor vehicles, state-of-the-art equipment to help in forensic investigation, and more bulletproof vests, among others.
    McCalla-Sobers, at the same time, said politicians were the root cause of the problems in most communities affected by crime, and they should not leave the problems up to the police to fix.
    "...The police do not deserve to be put out there on the front line cleaning up what mess politicians make," she said.
    McCalla-Sobers said, too, that it was not the duty of the police to implement social intervention programmes in crime-riddled communities in an effort to provide other alternatives for the residents.
    "The police cannot do that. The police have a job and social intervention is not their job," she said.
    McCalla-Sobers said that even though intervention by the police in some inner-city communities had in recent times shown a decline in crime in those areas, there has not been the necessary intervention by relevant government agencies to ensure that stability remains.
    Citing police intervention in inner-city communities in Kingston such as Hannah Town, Tavares Gardens, better known as 'Payne Land', and Parade Gardens in 2004 as examples, she said the police were expected to restore calm to those areas with the expectation that the relevant authorities would follow up with the necessary social intervention. "But it did not happen," she said. "Social intervention is not their (police) job."
    However, she said the police needed everyone's support.
    "The police need our support, but they also need our support to act in ways that do not increase alienation in the community. We have to support a kind of policing that is going to do what the military called building hearts and minds. If we treat the innocent badly they will become supporters of the tyrants," McCalla-Sobers said.
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    competition?!


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

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    • #3
      A lang time mi maths teacha ah chant dem chant deh...leff har
      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

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      • #4
        she teach you? at JC?

        I disagree with her on the statement that "social intervention is not" the job of police...otherwise she mek sense.
        Peter R

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        • #5
          police and social services need to be linked more.
          Peter R

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Peter R View Post
            she teach you? at JC?

            I disagree with her on the statement that "social intervention is not" the job of police...otherwise she mek sense.
            yeah she did I maths...can't report with much success though.. LoL!

            Social intervention is not a primary police role is it?? The problem is that the state has lost control and more importantly legitimacy in such communities...and the state depends on the police "force"as the primary agency point of contact with residents.

            This is fair or effective neither to the community nor the police....in fact it stinks big time.
            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


            • #7
              This just goes to show that there is a deeper issue which is embedded in Ja's history. The police was basically set up to keep the negroe population in check from the planter class. The planter class could in turn do whatever they want (including crimes) and be above arrest from the police.

              The above has continued into present times ; with the JCF hampered and ill equipped to deal with crime nationwide and crimes committed by an elite. Dudus is just a branch of the rot in Ja. Everyone knows that bigger fishes are out there (and the FEDS will expose them). In Ja we tend to be hypocrites becaue we know who really issues the guns , who is really making the connections in S.America to deal drugs. This is why it's easy for certain people to berate any senior officer in public because Ja is still under the slavery laws (with the planter class being above it).

              A nation cannot be productive with so much corruption and crime. At one point Garvey's ideas was seen as black power but in the coming info age the equation is reduced to survival (please note the exclusion of the word black).


              OH and if Gamma and D1 agree with me here I will run away (something big is about happen).

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              • #8
                pity....

                Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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                • #9
                  Yeah it's a pity Ja's intellectuals (calling out the Mona school of Business) cannot design creative ways to decrease corruption in the JCF. I've targeted areas in the tourist sector with the concept of selling shares to civil servants (police, firemen, nurse and teachers). I've even pointed to the sleeping cash cow CRH in Mt. Salem Mobay.

                  I think one of the biggest fear in Ja is to see the general populace of Ja begining to earn legit money and get true rewards from tourism. I can undertsand this fear; as it would erode certain control on the island. Decsions in the interest of Ja's national security would be swift and no one would be above the law (hey which one would want to see his nice pension destroyed).
                  Last edited by Jawge; July 15, 2010, 01:16 PM.

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                  • #10
                    The lady makes a lot of sense.
                    Just curious, is she from Barbados, or married to a Bajan?. The name Sobers in the Caribbean is almost exclusive to Barbados.

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                    • #11
                      He considers himself Jamaican. Could have been naturalized, but I have never heard of that.


                      BLACK LIVES MATTER

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