Some troubling matters for Jamaicans
KEN CHAPLIN
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
There are three matters which many Jamaicans are worried about. First is the case of three boys reported missing from police custody after the initial assault on Tivoli Gardens by security forces more than six months ago, the deterioration of Boston Beach and Blue Hole Beach in Portland, and what appears to be more a clash of personalities between Senior Corporate Area Resident Magistrate Judith Pusey and Director of Public Prosecutions Paula Llewellyn, rather than the legal ramifications in the Cuban light bulb trial.
Missing Tivoli boys
Investigators from the Bureau of Special Investigations of the Jamaica Constabulary Force have followed every lead they get to locate these three boys, but without success. Armed with photographs of the boys, they visited every state institution, including the National Arena, where people were held during and after the State of Emergency but drew a blank everywhere they went. They have taken statements from residents who said they heard gunshots in two houses in Tivoli Gardens on the night of the assault, and immediately afterwards they saw policemen and soldiers taking what looked like bodies in sheets from the houses. So where are the bodies?
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/colum...aicans_8199804
KEN CHAPLIN
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
There are three matters which many Jamaicans are worried about. First is the case of three boys reported missing from police custody after the initial assault on Tivoli Gardens by security forces more than six months ago, the deterioration of Boston Beach and Blue Hole Beach in Portland, and what appears to be more a clash of personalities between Senior Corporate Area Resident Magistrate Judith Pusey and Director of Public Prosecutions Paula Llewellyn, rather than the legal ramifications in the Cuban light bulb trial.
Missing Tivoli boys
Investigators from the Bureau of Special Investigations of the Jamaica Constabulary Force have followed every lead they get to locate these three boys, but without success. Armed with photographs of the boys, they visited every state institution, including the National Arena, where people were held during and after the State of Emergency but drew a blank everywhere they went. They have taken statements from residents who said they heard gunshots in two houses in Tivoli Gardens on the night of the assault, and immediately afterwards they saw policemen and soldiers taking what looked like bodies in sheets from the houses. So where are the bodies?
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/colum...aicans_8199804
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