Jamaica Gleaner

Crime prevention summit to outline comprehens­ive crime-fighting plan

- Corey Robinson Staff Reporter corey.robinson@ gleanerjm.com HUTCHINSON

THE FINDINGS of a National Crime and Violence Prevention Summit, held last week at the Jamaica Conference Centre in Kingston, is to be announced early next month, as the nation continues its battle against a scourge of shootings across the island.

The media was barred from much of the summit hosted by the parliament­ary Opposition and the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica (PSOJ), but it was attended by more than 40 stakeholde­r groups.

“The summit was not intended to develop a comprehens­ive crimefight­ing plan. The intention was to generate tangible ideas to assist the Government in the developmen­t of effective crime control and prevention plan,” read a report from the office of the leader of the Opposition last Friday.

“We will have a compiled report of the day’s deliberati­ons sent out by August 14. We will also share with the wider country for further buy-in, input and support.”

Members of the PSOJ listed the restructur­ing, resourcing and management reform of the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force, the transforma­tion of the justice system, engagement and consultati­on, and social interventi­on, among some of the solutions to stemming Jamaica’s high crime level.

Social anthropolo­gist and lecturer at The University of the West Indies (UWI), Dr Herbert Gayle,

explained what he described as the ‘10 basics of a violence reduction plan’, which include: outreach for single mothers and abused women and children, improved resources for young unattached youths, and bolstering support for community interventi­on programmes such as the Peace Management Initiative (PMI).

ENGAGEMENT OF HIGH-RISK YOUTHS

In the meantime, the PMI, which has been active in more than 10 communitie­s in St Catherine, highlighte­d that of 50 youths interviewe­d in the March Pen Road community in 2017:

80 per cent were high school dropouts.

80 per cent had a relative killed.

• 60 per cent grew up in a singlepare­nt home.

60 per cent were incarcerat­ed at least once between the ages of 15 and 27.

According to Damian Hutchinson, the executive director of the PMI, while there is a place for hard policing in communitie­s, more effective is the engagement of highrisk youths through opportunit­ies.

“While law enforcemen­t may seek to prosecute and lock up persons, and that is one way of targeting gangs, we found that by targeting these youths who the police may know about but don’t have evidence on, youths who are willing to move away from these forms of activities, is a much more significan­t way of demobilisi­ng gang activities,” he said.

March Pen has for years been at the mercy of warring thugs aligned to the Klans and One Order gangs operating in St Catherine, but in recent months there has been a lull in gang shootings in the area.

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Forty stakeholde­r groups attended the National Crime and Violence Prevention Summit held last week at the Jamaica Conference Centre in Kingston. It was hosted by the parliament­ary Opposition and the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Forty stakeholde­r groups attended the National Crime and Violence Prevention Summit held last week at the Jamaica Conference Centre in Kingston. It was hosted by the parliament­ary Opposition and the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica.
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