Jamaica Gleaner

More than 40 houses abandoned in Manchester

Returning residents seek safety

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

STATE MINISTER for Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Pearnel Charles Jr says that the Government has been taking steps to curtail violence against returning residents in a number of communitie­s across the country, including Mandeville, Manchester.

The Gleaner understand­s that many families have fled their homes, leaving approximat­ely 40 houses across Manchester abandoned, with the owners opting to leave Jamaica for “safer pastures”.

“We have, as a ministry, been very proactive. This is not a new issue. We have developed mechanisms to enhance engagement with our returning residents,” Charles Jr said.

He added: “We are very careful to ensure that people know that citizen security and the developmen­t of the security apparatus is not peculiar or special to returning residents but is for every Jamaican. But there is a particular vulnerabil­ity that is attached to some of our returning residents because they are the kind of persons who need to be more careful coming back into a community when they transition and how they transition”.

In response, the ministry developed a task force, headed by Charles Jr, which is a collaborat­ive effort of stakeholde­rs, including the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, the Ministry of National Security, the Jamaica Customs Agency, and representa­tives of the various returning residents associatio­ns.

The Returning Residents Safety and Security Handbook was created by the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force (JCF) in an effort to raise awareness among that community.

The handbook has been in circulatio­n since September and is also available for download on digital publishing platforms and on all JCF social media pages.

“The developmen­t of this Returning Residents Safety Handbook is vital as it gives informatio­n and a listing of persons of relevance and guidance so that we can assist our returning residents to be more careful in their interactio­n with persons who they do not know,” said Charles Jr.

He pointed out that the JCF’s Stay Alert app and the handbook were necessary tools for residents’ assimilati­on and safety.

“We have to respect the concern of every citizen of the country and ask that we put this into context and allow the security forces to do their job and that we support them in doing that job by providing the necessary informatio­n.”

President of the Returning Residents Associatio­n of Mandeville Birdie Jones said that she was not daunted by the fact that crime was a present danger, noting that she refused to give up on living her life as a Jamaican in Jamaica.

“I can confirm that some people have left. The number, actually, is spread out around Manchester, but I am here to stay. I am not leaving on account of some people who wish to rob and steal and kill. I am a Jamaican, and I want to be here,” she said.

 ??  ?? CHARLES JR
CHARLES JR

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica