Jamaica Gleaner

‘WE ARE KILLING OURSELVES IN UNDECLARED CIVIL WAR’

-

TO UNDERSTAND the seriousnes­s of the homicide problem among the combatant age of the male population of our inner-city communitie­s, we shall compare these figures with Iraq at fullscale war. A 2013 study (Mortality in Iraq Associated with the 2003–2011 War and Occupation: Findings from a National Cluster Sample Survey by the University Collaborat­ive Iraq Mortality Study) calculated that there were about 461,000 war-related deaths in Iraq during the US-led invasion of 2003 to 2011. This means an average yearly death of 57,625. Using the estimated average population of 28.17 million for the period, we can calculate that the war-related homicide rate was 205 per 100,000. Notice that at 405 per 100,000 for combatant aged males in the KMR, the death rate was almost twice higher than that of Iraq at full-scale war.

The figures show that Jamaica has an ‘undeclared civil war’ between gangs, and between gangs and the State. The data over the last 16 years show devastatin­g results from these wars – a kind of social suicide. Basically, we are killing ourselves. Let us now examine the side of the State. Between 1989 and 1999, the police death rate was 112 per 100,000. This increased to 154 per 100,000 between 2000 and 2010 before the ‘Tivoli Incursion’. These figures are among the worst in the world and show that the State is taking a heavy toll. In countries such as New Zealand, the police homicide rate is a mere three per 100,000 – that is 51 times less than for the Jamaican police. In New Zealand and Europe, police can concentrat­e on community-style policing; in Jamaica, the police remain in war-readiness mode – and emotionall­y hold on to the protective frame of paramilita­ry policing. This style of policing continues to feed the anger in the inner cities, which helps to fuel gang formation. However, no one in charge of the police dare say put your weapons away when the officers are so washed with fear. Major changes must come at some point, and come soon. (See Figure 2)

CAUSES OF HIGH MURDER RATE

Since the start of the new millennium, Jamaica has had the fourth highest average murders in the world. This is the result of centuries of oppression, combined with decades of political warring. In the work of violence experts, a history of violence is of critical importance to the constructi­on and maintenanc­e of feud or incessant warring. Anthropolo­gists of social violence are usually concerned with two broad sets of impact caused by a history of violence: adaptation to violent ecologies, and socialisat­ion and social organisati­on around the effectiven­ess of violence.

The ability of the human species to adapt to environmen­ts is well documented; but the work of Dawkins (1976) is critical to our understand­ing here of how aggression is critically necessary for our survival, and how each group of persons pass on the variant gene that has the greatest advantage for survival in a specific environmen­t, including violent ones. In other words, the efficacy of violence is now in our genes. We know how to use it to achieve political and economic ends, and even to end domestic disputes. The figures below (Figure 3) show that while the Tivoli Incursion had done much to restore some power in the state’s apparatus, murders have simply been fluctuatin­g. Violence is a by-product of social ills. In Jamaica, we have many, ranging from social injustice to exclusion from basic education. There is urgent need for the trained, the brave and policymake­rs to sit down to discuss the way forward.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? FILE ?? Police on the crime scene on Wellington Street, where a shooting took place last year.
FILE Police on the crime scene on Wellington Street, where a shooting took place last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica