Jamaica Gleaner

Jungle justice rebuke

- Nadine Wilson-Harris/Staff Reporter

IN HIS first public comment on the controvers­ial endorsemen­t of vigilante justice by Senator Lambert Brown, Opposition Leader Mark Golding has rejected that declaratio­n but sought diplomatic cover by saying the People’s National Party (PNP)-aligned lawmaker was entitled to his personal opinions.

Brown, one of the most senior opposition senators, stirred outrage on April 23 when he vowed to go to the gallows if any attacker “violates” his daughter or any other female member of his family.

“So I don’t need a lawyer, once the jungle justice in the absence of the rule of law kicks in. I have held that view for many, many years,”he said then.

His elevation of jungle justice in the most murderous nation, per capita, on Earth has drawn condemnati­on by politician­s and civil-society advocates alike.

Brown eventually withdrew the comments, but did not disavow the opinion.

Golding, an attorney-at-law and former minister of justice, said that the country’s justice system should be strengthen­ed to increase public confidence “so they don’t have any kind of inclinatio­n or desire to take the law into their own hands”.

“This is not something that I can support and it is not something that the PNP supports, but we are also a democratic party and people are entitled to their own opinions,” he said on the sidelines of the launch of the PNP’s junior shadow Cabinet at his West Kings House office on Monday.

Golding, who was elevated to opposition leader and PNP president after Peter Phillips stepped aside in the wake of an electoral landslide last September, said that he would prefer that members not publicly profess views that contradict­ed the party’s policies.

But in an apparent attempt to soften the rap on Brown’s knuckles, Golding sought to frame Brown’s outburst as part of the cut and thrust of democracy.

“I think it is inevitable that it will occasional­ly arise and it is something which I think is part of running a democratic party and I think the alternativ­e, which is to suppress freedom of speech, is far worse,”he said.

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