BARBADOS-Opposition DLP declines spot on National Advisory Council on Citizen Security.

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ralph-thorne
Opposition Leader Ralph Thorne. (Photo credit: Barbados Today)

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, CMC – Opposition Leader Ralph Thorne says the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) will not be accepting Prime Minister Mia Mottley’s invitation to sit on a National Advisory Council on Citizen Security announced as one of the government’s crime-fighting strategies following a surge in shootings, several of them fatal.

Last Thursday, Mottley told the country the council would be immediately tasked with providing a comprehensive approach to combating crime and restoring stability. Its creation came on the heels of a mass shooting at a bar in the capital, in which three people were killed and eight others injured.

The council—chaired by former Senator Professor Velma Newton and comprised of representatives from the trade union movement, religious organizations, communications, the private sector, the legal fraternity, and other interested groups—had its first meeting the next day.

The Leader of the Opposition or his representative was among the people the prime minister identified as members of the council.

But at a briefing on Saturday, Thorne said that after consulting with the party’s Executive Council, a decision was taken to decline the invitation, primarily because of the absence of critical voices on the council, which raised the DLP’s doubts about the body’s ability to be effective.

“On security matters, the Commissioner of Police will not be present. The head of the BDF [Barbados Defence Force] will not be present. Several of the government’s social agencies, certainly the Probation Department, will not be present,” he pointed out.

“So, while we are not questioning the competencies of those who sit on the council, we are questioning the conspicuous absences of critical persons whose jobs bring them into contact with the question of national and citizen security.”

DLP spokesperson on crime Verla De Peiza also questioned the council’s ability to make a meaningful impact without a long-term strategy.

She said the party’s Commission on Crime, which she chairs, is “well advanced” in its work and will shortly provide its report.

“Our research is almost complete,” she said. “All of the research that we have unearthed so far has pointed us in the direction of prevention – directing people away from criminal activity by way of social engineering, and this was curiously absent from any discussion,” she said.

De Peiza said the party was prepared to share the research with the government to foster a broader discussion on crime prevention.

“We have no difficulty because this is a national discussion,” she said. “We’re sharing our research, findings, and proposals once it is concluded.”

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