Jamaica Gleaner

St James emergency derailed

- Horace Levy Horace Levy is a human-rights lobbyist. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com and halpeace.levy78@gmail.com.

IAM in agreement with Arlene Harrison Henry, the public defender, that the state of public emergency in St James should be ended rapidly.

First, the public emergency is being used to justify detentions on a mass scale, which is a serious violation of human rights. The length of time that the young people are detained, the conditions of their detention, the damage it does to their lives in loss of jobs, and the pain it causes them and to families, these add up to gross injustice.

If this continues, we would have to accuse the prime minister of hypocrisy, of lying. He called on the security forces to respect rights. He asserted that the rights were being respected.

The fact is, however, that from the beginning, and in the face of repeated exposure, there has been gross violation of rights by mass detention. Of the more than 1,700 young people detained, only a small fraction deserving of it have been kept back for further investigat­ion. The absence of preparatio­n to keep detainees in decent conditions reveals a deliberate don’t-care approach from the outset.

This further means that the State has not valued the West Kingston Commission’s condemnati­on of the mass detention of more than 4,000 that occurred in the Tivoli incursion of May 2010. It is repeating the same useless and cowardly behaviour of the security forces.

Second, there is a serious need to address murder elsewhere. The murder rate islandwide is still four per day. Sharp increases of 11 and 12 per cent in Clarendon and Westmorela­nd, and of 253 per cent in St Andrew South, are clamouring for attention. And I have picked parishes and divisions where not just the percentage­s, but the actual numbers, are very high – 41, 47 and 60 murders, January 1 to April 14.

FEEL SAFE

Of course, some Montegonia­ns, the big business (not small) people, want the state of emergency to continue; they feel safe. But ending the emergency need not mean abandoning the parish to the previous rampant actions of gangs. No. The security forces must continue their control of main thoroughfa­res and their manning of the various entries to Montego Bay. They should by now have sufficient informatio­n on the more volatile communitie­s to be able to keep them stable, so mobile squads should remain and be active.

Third, emergency powers further entrench the wrong approach to policing and detentions that the constabula­ry has practised over the years. The rule that the police consistent­ly ignore is that detention must be carried out on the basis of a reasonable suspicion. It means that just scraping up every young man in an area is in violation of this rule.

My basic message is that another year of 1,616 murders is not acceptable. Neither is a year of 1,500 murders, nor of 1,300, 1,100, 1,000, nor 800. These are not just numbers. They are our Jamaican people’s lives we are talking about.

It means that effective and immediate action islandwide is needed. This calls for a different strategy that relies not solely on repression, which 56 years of practice have demonstrat­ed to have failed. The strategy must incorporat­e serious prevention, not the ‘face card’ we have in the present ZOSOs. The latest homicides in Denham Town, which are not the first, show up their failure. It is time to admit failure.

 ?? FILE ?? This rifle and ammunition were found during an operation by the military and police in Montego Bay, St James, under the public state of emergency. There has been disappoint­ment that the volume of firearms seized in St James has not been congruent with...
FILE This rifle and ammunition were found during an operation by the military and police in Montego Bay, St James, under the public state of emergency. There has been disappoint­ment that the volume of firearms seized in St James has not been congruent with...
 ?? IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A man slows his bicycle to watch members of the Jamaica Defence Force preparing a camp in Norwood, St James, as they dig in for the state of emergency.
IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER A man slows his bicycle to watch members of the Jamaica Defence Force preparing a camp in Norwood, St James, as they dig in for the state of emergency.
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