Jamaica Gleaner

Violence Prevention Commission recommends total ban on corporal punishment

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A TOTAL ban on corporal punishment is among the recommenda­tions of the National Violence Prevention Commission.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness announced t wo of the recommenda­tions while addressing sixth-form students and their teachers at Manchester High School in Mandeville, on January 12.

The National Violence Prevention Commission was mandated to conduct a continuing comprehens­ive review of all existing public and private violence-prevention programmes as well as the Government’s strategies.

Its purpose is to identify gaps i n the prevention and interventi­on services and make recommenda­tions with respect to appropriat­e programmes.

Holness revealed recently that he had received preliminar­y data from the commission.

“So, the Government has put in place a commission to study this whole business of violence. And there are some recommenda­tions that will come. There are a few of them, for example, a recommenda­tion that has been about for a long time, but the commission has studied it in detail and the recommenda­tion is that there should be a total ban on corporal punishment,” Holness said.

“That is going to be a controvers­ial one, but I think that the society is at the point now where it must confront itself on how it uses violence as a means of disciplini­ng children, because that’s what corporal punishment is. It is a violation of the personhood of the child,” he added.

Corporal or physical punishment is defined by the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, which oversees the Convention on the Rights of the Child, as “any punishment in which physical force is used and intended to cause some degree of pain or discomfort, however light”.

According to the committee, this mostly involves hitting (smacking, slapping, spanking) children with a hand or implement (whip, stick, belt, shoe, wooden spoon or similar), but it can also involve, for example, kicking, shaking or throwing children, scratching, pinching, biting, pulling hair or boxing ears, forcing children to stay in uncomforta­ble positions, burning, scalding or forced ingestion.

In 2017, the prime minister in his Budget debate announced that the Government would amend the Education Act to explicitly prohibit corporal punishment in schools.

Meanwhile, Holness informed that another of the recommenda­tions focuses on changing the law to empower the police to respond to and treat with persons who have displayed violent tendencies.

“When conflicts arise in communitie­s, in families and someone goes to the police station and reports it, what is the police empowered to do? Police gives you a warning… . So the way in which we recognise and preemptive­ly deal with persons who have displayed violent tendencies, we need to change our laws to empower our police to be able to act very quickly,” he said.

Holness cited examples i n Trelawny and Clarendon where cases were brought to the attention of the police and subsequent­ly ended in a murder.

He said the overall objective aims to improve and build peace in the country.

Holness urged Jamaicans to live good with each other, noting that the conversati­on of peace must be introduced from an early age.

“At the end of the day, no matter how many laws we change, no matter how many police we put on the street, it is going to be your personal decision. It’s going to be how you choose to react,” Holness said.

“So, I’m appealing to all of you here to become ambassador­s for peace. You are the sixth-formers; you are the leaders of discipline in the school. You are also academic leaders in the schools. You are role models in the schools. You can become the model of peace for those who look up to you,” he added.

 ?? ?? Prime Minister Andrew Holness (right) engages Martin Bergeron, deputy head boy at Manchester High School, during his visit to the school in Mandeville on Friday, January 12.
Prime Minister Andrew Holness (right) engages Martin Bergeron, deputy head boy at Manchester High School, during his visit to the school in Mandeville on Friday, January 12.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Prime Minister Andrew Holness addresses sixth-form students and their teachers during his visit to Manchester High School in Mandeville, on Friday, January 12.
CONTRIBUTE­D Prime Minister Andrew Holness addresses sixth-form students and their teachers during his visit to Manchester High School in Mandeville, on Friday, January 12.

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