Jamaica Gleaner

Build that wall

Spanish Town Infant wants sturdy fence to keep out thugs

- Paul Clarke Gleaner Writer

SCHOOLS, LIKE churches and hospitals, are institutio­ns to be respected. However, it would appear that is no longer the case as the crime situation worsens across Jamaica.

This is cause to worry for Stephany Carter-Brown, principal of the 99-year-old Spanish Town Infant School, located on Church Street in the Old Capital in St Catherine.

“We are located in the heart of an inner city. Right next door is the infamous De la Vega City. Up the highway is the March Pen Road community, notorious for gun warfare, and there are many other areas surroundin­g us that are equally volatile,” Carter-Brown explained.

She told The Gleaner that for security reasons, it was vital that the Ministry of Education help the school to erect a durable concrete wall that would replace the often-breached chain-linked fences.

“There is a situation here. Men from the community next door routinely cut their way through the chain fence to create a safe route from the community into Spanish Town proper,” the principal said.

FREQUENT GUNFIRE

The crime situation, she pointed out, is a huge matter for not just teachers but students, who, after hearing gunfire, are often left traumatise­d.

“It is a real worry for me. Because the little security we have here cannot, under any circumstan­ces, manage to hold off those miscreants coming through here. I can recall one day a father of a child here dropped him off at school but took along his gun for safety,” said Carter-Brown.

“This is the reality. Many times we would be in school and a barrage of gunshots would erupt. I would be hiding under my desk; teachers and students would hit the floor prostrate out of fear. We cannot run a school nor have a society functionin­g in this way.”

The principal is begging Minister of Education Ruel Reid to see about the constructi­on of a perimeter wall to safeguard the school and its occupants.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JERMAINE BARNABY/FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Stephany Carter-Brown, principal of Spanish Town Infant, pointing out the school’s biggest problem – the fencing – at the institutio­n in St Catherine on the first day of school, Monday, September 4.
PHOTOS BY JERMAINE BARNABY/FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPH­ER Stephany Carter-Brown, principal of Spanish Town Infant, pointing out the school’s biggest problem – the fencing – at the institutio­n in St Catherine on the first day of school, Monday, September 4.

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