Jamaica Gleaner

Limited resources hindering more SOPEs, ZOSOs – security heads

- Erica Virtue/Senior Gleaner Writer erica.virtue@gleanerjm.com

SEVERAL MORE communitie­s in Jamaica could have been declared zones of special operations (ZOSO) and others corralled under states of public emergency (SOPEs) if the security forces had more resources, including boots on the ground, the Internal and External Affairs Committee of Parliament was told yesterday.

Heads of the island’s public security apparatus, Major General Rocky Meade, chief of defence staff (CDS), and Police Commission­er Major General Antony Anderson, as well as personnel from the Ministry of National Security, took questions from the committee, and provided updates on the security situation in the country. They also addressed the new SOPE declared by Prime Minister Andrew Holness, in his capacity as minister of defence, on Sunday.

The declaratio­n was given on the advice of both the CDS and the police commission­er.

It was a second round of questions from committee member Horace Dalley that elicited the response from the army chief that more of Jamaica would be under enhanced security operations if the entities had the resources.

“When you look at the country, if we had enough resources, we could be doing several more communitie­s,” said Meade.

Dalley also asked both men if there was any truth that “a prison break” or an attempted bust from the Horizon Remand Centre last weekend influenced their decision in advising the prime minister to declare the latest SOPE, which covers the St Andrew South, Kingston Western and Kingston Central police divisions.

Meade made it clear that the current crime situation required that a number of factors be taken into considerat­ion, and given the seriousnes­s of SOPEs, in particular, it could not be declared as a knee-jerk reaction.

OTHER AREAS TARGETED

Continuing, he said, “There are several areas that, based on our assessment, could use our interventi­on, and we use some other factors which you would prefer us to not discuss, that details the sequencing. And it’s not that something happened the day, or the week before in a particular event. We already have a sense of the communitie­s that need interventi­on.”

For his part, the police commission­er said the areas under the enhanced security measures were found to have significan­t linkages to communitie­s currently under security operations.

“There are significan­t issues of linkages that were put into the overall mix, why we did what we did,” he said.

Earlier in his comments, Anderson was more direct about the connection­s. He said the communitie­s in the Corporate Area now under a security crackdown, have, for a long time, had significan­t numbers of shootings and killings, especially if the regions are taken individual­ly.

“From an intelligen­ce perspectiv­e, there are a number of linkages between a number of these areas and other areas that are experienci­ng challenges. There are linkages with St Catherine, St James, in the east (Kingston), Clarendon. There are all sorts of linkages. So, in prosecutin­g our operations and making these decisions, there is a lot of informatio­n beyond just a murder rate or shootings, but the murders and shootings are significan­t in those areas,” said Anderson.

He said there are few parishes where a state of emergency would not be declared.

Currently, ZOSOs are operationa­l in two areas, and SOPEs in three.

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? From left: Prime Minister Andrew Holness; Dr Horace Chang, minister of national security; Police Commission­er Major General Antony Anderson; and Chief of Defence Staff Major General Rocky Meade at Jamaica House during the announcing of the state of public emergency in sections of the Corporate Area on Sunday.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER From left: Prime Minister Andrew Holness; Dr Horace Chang, minister of national security; Police Commission­er Major General Antony Anderson; and Chief of Defence Staff Major General Rocky Meade at Jamaica House during the announcing of the state of public emergency in sections of the Corporate Area on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica