Daily Observer (Jamaica)

THAT EXTRADITIO­N OF ‘DUDUS’ 10 YEARS AGO

- BY HOWARD CAMPBELL Sunday Observer writer editorial@jamaicaobs­erver.com

THE internatio­nal media swooped on Kingston shortly after May 17, 2010 when Prime Minister Bruce Golding announced in Parliament that he would instruct Attorney General Dorothy Lightbourn­e to authorise extraditio­n of west Kingston Don, Christophe­r “Dudus” Coke, to the United States.

Golding was elected prime minister in 2007. For nine months he had defied a request from the US Government to extradite Coke to face arms and drug smuggling charges.

His decision sparked bloody fighting between security forces and gunmen loyal to Coke in west Kingston, for which Golding was Member of Parliament. The battle took place mainly in Tivoli Gardens, where Coke reportedly had his headquarte­rs.

That west Kingston enclave became the subject of feature stories on major broadcast outlets such as CNN and ABC, as well as publicatio­ns like The New York Times and The Guardian in England.

Garth Rose covered the developmen­ts in Jamaica for Caribbean National Weekly (CNW), a popular tabloid in South Florida. He reflected on a knotty situation that ended in Coke’s capture one month after the fighting, and which forced Golding to resign one year later.

“I followed the Dudus extraditio­n drama very closely as it was necessary to report on the situation in the CNW.

“It is difficult to say if

Golding made the right decision. If, as he stated, there was an extraditio­n agreement between the US and Jamaica not to extradite unless agreed on by the Jamaica Government, he then had the right to stand his ground. But then the US with its might and with its control of foreign aid to Jamaica from multinatio­nals would have squeezed him hard. In the end, I don’t think he had much alternativ­e but to give in to the US demands,” Rose reasoned.

Rose, who was acting general manager at Jamaica Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n in the late 1980s, argued that the Golding Administra­tion blundered badly in a particular area.

“I think if the Government had informatio­n that ‘Dudus’ was in a house in Tivoli, they could have focused on intercepti­ng and apprehendi­ng him in that house rather than ordering the police and the army to raid the entire Tivoli community. Such a widescale incursion was guaranteed to result in the death of innocent citizens. That’s the real tragedy. Innocent lives were lost when that was certainly not necessary,” he said. Rovan Locke was publisher of CaribbeanA­merican Commentary, a bimonthly broadsheet that also serviced the South Florida region. He believes Golding’s stance that the US was encroachin­g on

Jamaica’s rights as a sovereign nation by demanding Coke’s extraditio­n, was baseless.

“He held it up for more than six months. What is most astounding is that as the prime minister of Jamaica he went to Gordon House and defended Dudus Coke’s inalienabl­e constituti­onal rights against a foreign power which Jamaica has an extraditio­n treaty with for over a quarter century. I was stunned that he was willing to commit political suicide for allegedly the most feared don in our political history,” Locke told the Jamaica Observer.

Coke, who allegedly fled Tivoli Gardens before the fighting which resulted in over 70 deaths, was captured on June 23. Disguised in a wig, he was arrested in Kingston in the company of the Reverend Al Miller.

He was extradited within days and in August 2011, pleaded guilty to several charges, including conspiracy for traffickin­g large quantities of marijuana and cocaine into the United States, and conspiracy to commit assault in aid of racketeeri­ng.

On June 12, 2012 Coke was sentenced to 23 years in prison. The once-feared enforcer is currently an inmate at FCI Fort Dix Federal Correction­al Institutio­n, in Fort

Dix, New Jersey.

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 ??  ?? Coke...serving time in a United States prison
GOLDING... instructed Attorney General Lightbourn­e to authorise extraditio­n of Coke
Coke...serving time in a United States prison GOLDING... instructed Attorney General Lightbourn­e to authorise extraditio­n of Coke
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