Jamaica Gleaner

PM should provide urgent redress for SOE detainees

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THE EDITOR, Sir:

ANYONE WHO has heard the parliament­ary testimony of Public Defender Arlene Harrison Henry in regard to the state of affairs regarding state of emergency (SOE) detainees, held in lock-ups, cannot help but be appalled at the level of disregard for basic human rights by the Jamaican State.

The conditions of the lock-ups, particular­ly those at the Freeport Police Station in Montego Bay, as revealed by Harrison Henry, has laid bare the failure of the Jamaican Government to uphold the human rights of its citizens as required by the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights and to which Jamaica is a signatory.

She highlighte­d overcrowde­d cells, lack of proper sanitation leading to the spread of gastrointe­stinal diseases; poor nutrition; uncovered food intended for detainees, kept in the direct proximity to garbage; lack of hand-washing facilities and proper lighting; scabies; rashes; respirator­y illnesses; nonfunctio­ning toilets; inadequate ventilatio­n, among other health hazards. These unsanitary conditions have also been reported on by the Ministry of Health, which carried out its own investigat­ion of the conditions of the lock-ups.

Then, there are the children in the lock-ups: 105 according to the count of the public defender, which she notes is a moving number. One can only hope that they are being held in better conditions than the adult detainees.

With some three per cent of the detainees charged up to October 9, the rationale for continuing to detain persons under such deplorable conditions does not hold sway. The discrimina­tory deprivatio­n of the liberty of these persons, particular­ly young men between the ages of 18 and 25, and the lack of proper data regarding the detentions is, as Harrison Henry pointed out, in breach of the Charter of Fundamenta­l Rights and Freedoms.

The state of our lock-ups has been known to us prior to the SOE, and yet there was nothing done to improve them before the influx of persons one would have expected into these facilities with the declaratio­n of emergency powers granted to the security forces.

These squalid conditions in which detainees are being held must be addressed as a matter of urgency by no less than a person the prime minister himself.

The SOE and the emergency powers granted to the security forces have been done under the auspices of the prime minister, and as such the overall responsibi­lity for the conduct and conditions of the SOE rests with him.

The fact that these conditions have been revealed just 18 days before the celebratio­n of Internatio­nal Human Rights Day on December 10 makes the call to act even more urgent.

We cannot turn a blind eye to what has been laid bare before us. The public defender has done her job, it now time for us to do ours. CARLA GULLOTTA, Executive Director Stand Up for Jamaica

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