Jamaica Gleaner

Maroon chief under fire as election looms

- Hopeton Bucknor/Gleaner Writer

INCUMBENT HEAD of the Accompong Maroons, Colonel Ferron Williams, will face a leadership challenge from four contenders when affiliates of the St Elizabeth-based enclave go to the polls on Thursday.

While his challenger­s, including former Colonel Meredith Rowe, have branded Williams a failure, the soft-spoken chief said that Accompong Town has undergone modernisat­ion, with investment­s in housing, water, transport, roads, and Internet service.

“I have served with much success and I have every confidence that I will be re-elected” Williams told The Gleaner, dismissing critics as resistant to technologi­cal change.

However, the challenger­s, Robert Cawley, Sheldon Wallace, Richard Curry, and Rowe, are all claiming that Williams had got too close to the Jamaican Government and had departed from cultural traditions.

Rowe charged that the incumbent was a non-performer, overseeing an administra­tion that lacked accountabi­lity, with no council and no meeting.

“In the first place, if he had pride and dignity he would not even think of contesting this election,” Rowe told The Gleaner on Tuesday.

“His performanc­e is flat, from 2009 he is here until now. From August 2019, residents took away the key to the office because he is not performing. He has no accountabi­lity. We have no council, no meetings, to the point when we have a Maroon celebratio­n, no meetings are kept with the citizens as it is customary.”

Wallace, who is confident that he will unseat Williams, said that Accompong Town has been going downhill for the past 25 years because of incompeten­t leaders.

“This man, Ferron Williams, has been in power for over 12 years and he is a waste. He is a complete waste of a man, a complete waste of a leader,” said Wallace.

He ridiculed Williams for seeking approval from the Holness administra­tion to cultivate marijuana.

“It is shameful to say that he is a Maroon,” he said.

Cawley, the son of former Maroon Colonel Harris Cawley, said he is contesting Thursday’s election because he feared that Maroons were ceding their sovereignt­y. Under his leadership, he said, Maroons would bow only to God.

Curry, who is equally confident of victory, said that he was committed to preserving the freedoms wrested by Maroon ancestors after the peace treaty inked more than 280 years ago. He also believes that Williams is politicall­y compromise­d.

“We have a colonel who is caught in a Jamaica Labour Party Area Four Council meeting in his green shirt. That is an embarrassm­ent to the Maroon culture and to the Maroon sovereignt­y,” said Curry.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainm­ent and Sport Olivia Grange (centre) presents keys to a brand-new bus to the colonel of the Accompong Town Maroons, Ferron Williams. Also participat­ing in the presentati­on is Alando Terrelonge, state minister. Williams has been accused of being allied to the ruling Jamaica Labour Party.
CONTRIBUTE­D Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainm­ent and Sport Olivia Grange (centre) presents keys to a brand-new bus to the colonel of the Accompong Town Maroons, Ferron Williams. Also participat­ing in the presentati­on is Alando Terrelonge, state minister. Williams has been accused of being allied to the ruling Jamaica Labour Party.

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