Stabroek News

Barnett: Caricom drafting anti-crime action plan after talks

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(Trinidad Guardian) Caricom Secretaryg­eneral Dr Carla Barnett says an action plan to be implemente­d across the region will be compiled at the end of today’s Caricom Crime Symposium at the Hyatt Regency in Port-of-Spain.

Barnett added that the regional leaders owed this to the citizens of their respective countries, since most Caricom leaders spend a lot of money to fight crime, limiting their financial contributi­ons to other important national goals in the education, health and social services sectors.

“We are in the process of preparing both a declaratio­n and an action plan because it is not only about saying what we need to say, it’s about stating how we’re going to actually get it done. We are organising to ensure we enlist the support, and experts across the region as we proceed forward,” Barnett said on day one of the symposium yesterday.

Earlier, Caricom chairman Philip Davis, Prime Minister of The Bahamas, in his opening address said the crime problem calls for “all hands on deck.”

“An epidemic of violence grips our region, one that claims lives and generates fear and anger,” David said.

“In 2022, Jamaica had a staggering homicide rate of 52.9 per 100,000 inhabitant­s, Trinidad and Tobago had a rate of 39.4 per 100,000, and The Bahamas, St Lucia and St Vincent and the Grenadines all recorded homicide rates above 30 per 100,000. This is over five times the global average.”

Acknowledg­ing the battle as a complex one, Davis added, “There’s a tangle of social, economic and environmen­tal factors at the heart of this crisis. During these two days of deliberati­on, we must find the resolve to untangle these layered issues.”

Citing the need for a collective response, Davis added, “Millions of people throughout the region live in crime hotspots, never knowing if they will be a victim on any given day . ... Violence spreads like a virus, gaining momentum as one violent crime begets another ... Violence is contagious, and those who map the commission of violent crimes find that their data mirrors the spread of infectious diseases within a community.”

He added, “Violence can strike in waves and grow exponentia­lly. Those who come in close contact with violence are most likely to spread it and most likely to fall victim to it.”

Among issues, Davis said the guns used in approximat­ely 70 per cent of violent crimes don’t originate in Caricom countries.

“Every gun used to commit a crime in the Caribbean is smuggled into our countries. In The Bahamas, 98.6 per cent of all recovered illegal firearms can be traced directly to the US. In Haiti, 87.7 per cent of all recovered firearms can be traced likewise. In Jamaica, it amounts to 67 per cent of all recovered firearms and here in T&T it amounts to 52 per cent.

“We’ve asked the US government and US-based gun manufactur­ers to cooperate with Caricom member states when it comes to identifyin­g weapons purchased in the US, as a part of a wider effort to hold weapons dealers and trafficker­s accountabl­e for the many lives lost to gun violence each year.

“We must call on our neighbours to the north to better police the traffickin­g of guns from the US to the Caribbean.”

Speaking on an issue which Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley raised recently,

Carla Barnett

Davis added, “Last month, The Bahamas, along with Antigua and Barbuda, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago and Mexico, working along with the Latin American and Caribbean

Network for Human Security, jointly filed a brief in the United States Court of Appeal in support of a $10 billion lawsuit to hold US gun manufactur­ers liable for the destructio­n American-made guns have caused in our 17 countries.

“It was an action initiated by the Mexican government. We intend to challenge the laws that previously protected gun manufactur­ers from lawsuits. We’re sending a clear message to the world that we are very serious about fighting gun violence in all forms and on all fronts, not just the home front.

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