JAMAICA-CRIME-Jamaica declares a state of public emergency as the crime situation worsens.

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KINGSTON, Jamaica, November 15, The Jamaica government Tuesday declared a State of Public Emergency (SOE) in the parishes of Clarendon, St Catherine, and sections of Kingston and St Andrew, even as it acknowledged that the country is not immune to the high level of criminality confronting the region.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness, speaking at a news conference here, told reporters that an SOE has also been established for the parishes of St James, Westmoreland, and Hanover, as the increase in crime and violence presents a threat to property and public order.
“The government, after careful consideration on the advice of the security chiefs, have decided to advise the Governor General that it was necessary and indeed appropriate to declare States of Public Emergency in these areas. We have seen an increase in criminal activity in these areas and indeed a threat to property and, in some instances, public disorder,” Holness told reporters.

He said that over the last six months, there had been a significant increase in murders on the island, adding that “right across the region, in particular along the Caribbean basin, societies like Jamaica are experiencing a persistent increase in homicides, shootings and other dangerous crimes.”

Police Commissioner, Major General Antony Anderson, told the news conference that as of November 13, the country had recorded a total of 1,360 murders. Last year, the figure stood at 1 231 for the same period.

“It’s really at that point an increase of 6.8 percent over last year. The main drivers of these violent crimes continue to be gang violence which accounts for 71 percent of all murders, and interpersonal conflicts, which account for another 16 percent of all murders.

“We will be targeting guns, gangs, and gunmen who are the chief architects of the sort of violence we are seeing in the society,” Anderson said, promising that the law enforcement agencies will continue in their efforts to root out criminals.

Holness said the crime situation is “not unique to Jamaica” and that on a visit to Trinidad and Tobago recently, “they too are experiencing a similar situation.

“There are many reasons for this, and the criminologist and sociologist and other professionals have pointed to the growing entrenchment of gangs and gang culture in the society,” Holness said, noting that these experts have also pointed to the ease of access to firearms and a parallel trade in narcotics with firearms.

“Jamaica is experiencing all of these. It is not a problem that has existed for five years, for a decade, for 20 years. We have been experiencing that problem for over 40 years,” Holness said, adding, “what has changed is that the gangs have morphed into intelligence organizations.

“They are scoping the environment. They are paying attention to the strategies of the police force. They are consolidating information to make decisions, and they are hierarchical, they have networks, they have leadership, they have deliberate recruitment mechanisms, they have deliberate trade mechanisms ….”

Holness said that the gangs were also able to launder their ill-gotten gains and to establish legitimate operations, “and they have deliberate strategies to infiltrate public entities and public officers to corrupt them (and) to facilitate their illicit activities.”

Holness said that while his administration does not intend to arbitrarily implement SOEs, his administration has nonetheless adopted a systematic way to deal with the upsurge in crime, which also includes a social intervention strategy.

“ So I want the country to understand that we have had a significant impact using the zones of special operations. In fact, all of the communities, which we have declared zones of special operations, all of them have seen significant reductions, people there are happy, they are satisfied ….”

Holness told reporters that the government had crafted the use of these powers “in a way to ensure that ultimately we can say we have protected the life and other rights of our citizens.”

The authorities have also introduced a gun amnesty that ends this weekend, and the Police Commissioner warned that the initiative does not prevent a person from being charged for being in possession of a firearm.

“What it does is allow you to carry it in. In other words, if you are involved in a crime at the moment with a firearm, you have no amnesty. You are going to be arrested, and I am going to charge you. If you are on your way to do a criminal activity …that is not what the amnesty is geared towards.

“What the amnesty is for is for people who have firearms and wish to turn them over to the state…, and you can do it without us pursuing any charges against you,” Anderson said.

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