Jamaica Gleaner

Silent soldiers

Calls mount for JDF to speak on internal actions since Tivoli operation

- Jovan Johnson Staff Reporter

THE JAMAICA Defence Force (JDF) is yet to publicly indicate what it has done internally in light of adverse findings against its officers and the army’s actions in the 2010 Tivoli operation, and there are growing calls for the force to address the nation on the matter.

The latest call from retired JDF Lieutenant Commander George Overton comes as a senior Cabinet minister has indicated that the Government will not accept the controvers­ial review by the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force (JCF), which has cleared cops of wrongdoing in the operation to capture then gangster Christophe­r ‘Dudus’ Coke.

“I believe that it’s necessary to declare that something has been done and the relevant authoritie­s have reviewed and said ,‘Well, OK. These are the changes that may be necessary in the operationa­l procedures and manuals’,” the director of operations at the Guardsman Group told The Gleaner.

“I am not aware of anything coming out from them on this matter. I think they, too, should be doing something. You may find, based on national security, that they may not be publishing what those changes are.”

According to Public Defender Arlene Harrison Henry, “Unlike the JCF, the JDF has remained silent”, and

that has to be broken with the impending implementa­tion of the zones of special operation law. We are trusting that we will hear from them soon as to what they have done from May 2010 and after the actual specific recommenda­tions coming from the Tivoli report.”

The 2016 report on the West Kingston Commission of Enquiry into the events six years earlier, in Tivoli Gardens, criticised the army for the use of mortars as a “serious error of judgement” and returned adverse findings against JDF mortar officer Major Warrenton Dixon and former army head Stewart Saunders as well as five cops.

EXTRAJUDIC­IAL KILLINGS

That report by the three-member commission said that it accepted credible evidence of extrajudic­ial killings and derelictio­n of duty against the named security personnel. At least 69 people were killed, and the commission felt that at least 20 were murders committed by the security forces.

But a JCF administra­tive review released last week cleared the cops of any wrongdoing and accused the enquiry’s commission­ers of being biased, confused, and engaging in speculatio­n.

Yesterday, Dr Horace Chang, the minister without portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, said that the Government could not accept the JCF’s report. It was the first comment from the administra­tion.

“We are not satisfied that we can accept that report. It is not a good report, and it is not reflecting well on the police force [given] where we are coming from.” But Chang, who was speaking on Nationwide Radio, would not definitely say whether the Government would ask the JCF to withdraw the report. He said that it was “likely we will go that way”.

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