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  • Remembering the State of Emergency

    4,000 Detained Under State Of Emergency
    Published: Wednesday | July 21, 20100 Comments
    More than 4,000 Jamaicans have been detained under the state of emergency since it was first imposed on May 23.

    Responding to questions in Parliament yesterday, Prime Minister Bruce Golding announced that police figures up to July 14 showed that 4,181 persons were detained in the almost two months of emergency measures activated to rein in crime.

    That figure is expected to increase sharply when the number of persons detained in Wilton Gardens, better known as Rema, in western Kingston last weekend and those detained in the curfew now on in sections of east Kingston is added.

    But using the week-old data, Golding said, of those detained, 2,792 were held in the Corporate Area and 1,389 were held in St Catherine.

    The vast majority of those detained up to last week (3,485, or 83 per cent) were processed and released.

    Golding told the House of Representatives that 139 detention orders were issued in the three parishes under curfew, with 138 of that number still behind bars.

    Seizing assets

    He said at least 28 of the detainees could face the courts with the authorities using the Proceeds of Crime Act (POCA).

    The prime minister's statement on the use of POCA echoed similar comments from Police Commissioner Owen Ellington last month.

    At that time, Ellington indicated that efforts were under way to seize the assets of at least 20 suspected gang lords who are believed to have amassed massive fortunes through a life of crime.

    arthur.hall@gleanerjm.com


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

  • #2
    Emergency Crumbles
    Published: Wednesday | July 21, 20100 Comments

    Prime Minister Bruce Golding making his plea to parliamentarians yesterday for the state of emergency to be extended. - Ricardo Makyn/Staff Photographer
    Daraine Luton, Senior Staff Reporter

    Prime Minister Bruce Golding will this morning huddle with the police and army chiefs to craft adjustments to their massive anti-crime initiative in the wake of the Government's failure yesterday to get enough votes to green-light an extension of the state of public emergency in the Corporate Area and St Catherine.

    Golding, on the request of the heads of the security forces, was seeking to extend the emergency regime until August 21.

    However, with six government members not on the island, the Labourites needed support from the Opposition People's National Party (PNP) to secure the extension.

    Under the Constitution, at least 31 of the 60 members of parliament (MP) must give the thumbs up for a state of public emergency to be extended. There are 32 government members in the House of Representatives.

    Despite political gymnastics, a stone-faced Golding and a more than 20-minute consultation between senior members of both parties, no consensus could be reached. All 25 government ministers present voted for the extension while the 18 opposition members in chamber abstained. Seventeen members were absent.

    Charles' rebuke

    "Shame!" Cabinet minister Pearnel Charles shouted as the results of the vote were read by stand-in Speaker Gregory Mair.

    "You are against the security forces who are sacrificing their lives," the labour minister added, while pointing in the direction of Peter Bunting, opposition spokesman on national security.

    Earlier, Golding pressed Parliament to grant the approval. He referred to a downward trend in murder figures since the measure was first implemented in May.

    "We would be playing Russian roulette with the country's security. We would be risking a regression from the significant advances that have been made if, in the face of the recommendations of the security forces, we are to say, 'Enough is enough, this is as far as we are prepared to go'," Golding said.

    However, the Opposition, during the debate on the motion, argued that there was no need for a one-month extension.

    Bunting and Opposition Leader Portia Simpson Miller said they were prepared to allow an extension until July 31 to allow for winding-down operations.

    Golding, however, ignored the suggestion, arguing that the security forces would not be able to take on some tasks without those special powers.

    Uneasy opposition

    As it got closer to the vote, some opposition MPs moved from seat to seat trying to convince others not to be swayed by Golding. Among those uneasy was Fitz Jackson, MP for South St Catherine, who was instructed by Simpson Miller to abstain.

    Then came the clearest sign that the parliamentary Opposition feared a political backlash for appearing to be soft on crime.

    "We are interested in seeing this matter resolved to the betterment of all and I am suggesting, on behalf of the Opposition, before you put the matter to the vote, that we have a short consultation," Derrick Kellier, leader of opposition business in the Lower House, said.

    A 10-minute recess was granted but members took twice as much time in an attempt to break the deadlock. The result: still no deal.

    Bunting later told journalists at a hastily convened press briefing that the Opposition was prepared to have the state of emergency extended beyond Independence Day, August 6.

    "We offered to accept a compromise position of an extension for 15 days and during this time we would ask to have a briefing from the minister of national security, as well as the chief of defence staff and the commissioner of police.

    "We would be prepared, if we felt it was justified, to extend for a further 15 days to achieve the 30 days that had been requested. The Government took the position that either we agree to the 30-day extension at one shot or there is nothing at all," Bunting said.

    Murder reduction

    According to police data, from January to May, 737 murders were committed at a rate of 147 per month or five per day.

    Ninety-two murders were committed in June. The year's homicide toll up to July 20 was 876.

    "The effort and the measures that have been used to bring about these reductions are measures that must be sustained, at least for the immediate, to continue that process because the security forces have made it clear to me that the nature of the operations that are being carried out would be severely hampered if there is a curtailment," Golding said.

    However, Maxine Henry-Wilson, opposition backbencher, lamented that the statistics presented by the Government were not sufficiently cogent to support its call.

    "We are not against the police having the power to do whatever they need. We are not against a state of emergency per se. What we are saying is that we want to be able to take decisions from an informed perspective," Henry-Wilson said.

    daraine.luton@gleanerjm.com


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

    Comment


    • #3
      Why don't we ever get REAL angry in Jamaica and protest against crime and gov't inaction????

      Angry protests in China (not condoning any violent protest)
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4cLrItnvdk
      Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

      Comment


      • #4
        Mi tink is ongly Dudus dem send wheh and wallah !

        Hero Bruce tuh di Wirl...

        Comment


        • #5
          If memory serves me correctly, the SOE was indeed effective but affected commerce immensely.
          I would be surprised if the elitists(the Butch Stewarts encouraged it being continued despite it being undeniably beneficial to Ja as a whole.

          Comment


          • #6
            Mi think Butch All Inclusive woulda benefit??? Him can't have it both ways. LOL
            • 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


            • #7
              Well what would make the PNP disagreeing to 30 days but willing to accept 15(if the JLP not accepting the 15 days proposal is called into the question then apply the same scrutiny to the PNP)acceptable? The climate I guess,I do remember those articles in the newspapers highlighting the perils of merchants, even the informal ones that are already disenfranchised even without a SOE.

              Comment


              • #8
                maybe others biggas disagree or maybe the PNP don't want to see crime go down too much under JLP, or dons a complain.

                Who knows.
                Last edited by Assasin; January 14, 2013, 04:41 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.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Ah, the real technocrats are never the the easily identifiable barefoot criminals(Dudus included)but often someone seen as a respectable citizen, someone we should all be like.
                  The media is a heck of a thing,it actually programs people,it decides what are the important issues we should be thinking about.
                  Last edited by Rockman; January 14, 2013, 04:44 PM.

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