Jamaica Gleaner

St Andrew South leads with 71 murders

... But strategies working, says commanding officer

- Paul Clarke/Gleaner Writer paul.clarke@gleanerjm.com

WHILE THE state of public emergency has acted as a suppressan­t to the out-of-control gun violence in St James, the neighbouri­ng western parish of Westmorela­nd has taken up the mantle of Jamaica’s most violent police division. But the St Andrew South division remains the most deadly, with 71 reported cases of homicides so far this year.

Sixty-nine murders were committed in the St Andrew South division during the period January 1 to April 30, but only two since April to May 26, pointing to a slowing down of the murder rate, according to the latest Jamaica Constabula­ry Force crime statistics.

“We recognise the challenges in this division but are committed to finding the necessary methods to include community-based policing efforts to stem violence of all kinds,” Superinten­dent Gary Francis told The Gleaner yesterday.

St Andrew South was averaging more than one homicide per day from January 1 to April 30, but only two such killings occurred during the past 30 days (April 30 to May 26), a decline that is not lost on the commanding officer.

“A number of things have changed in recent times such as ramping up of our communityb­ased policing efforts and other operationa­l activities, and these have limited the cause for violence here,” Francis reported.

Police data also show an increase in cases of shootings to 62 – an upward movement of eight over the correspond­ing period last year of 54 in the that division. Robbery has increased 63.9 per cent over the same period last year – 59 so far over the 36 for the correspond­ing period last year.

“In the span of a month, we have managed to bring the violence under reasonable control. We have had only two murders in the last 30 days, and that is significan­t, taking into account that the division had 69 in the period January to April,” noted Francis.

During that time, seven illegal firearms were seized and the arrests of several crime producers executed as the police continued to build new partnershi­ps and strengthen existing ones in dealing with the situation, Francis said.

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