Jamaica Gleaner

US slams Jamaica’s record on police killings, detentions

- Edmond Campbell/ Senior Staff Reporter

THE UNITED States administra­tion says it is deeply concerned about the high rates of killings in Jamaica, highlighti­ng the murder of women, even as it bemoans the “insufficie­nt response” by the Government to end the violence and hold the perpetrato­rs responsibl­e.

Latest crime statistics released by the police show that as at November 7 this year, 1,097 Jamaicans had been killed. This represents a 2.9 per cent decline over the 1,130 people murdered for the similar period in 2019.

Washington is also urging the Andrew Holness administra­tion to curtail abuses by the security forces and government agents involved in extrajudic­ial killings, arbitrary detention, and what it describes as life-threatenin­g prison conditions.

“While we commend the efforts taken thus far to remedy the lifethreat­ening conditions of Jamaica’s prisons and detention centres, the Government must continue to improve conditions and protect the human rights of those detained,”a US official told a United Nations body yesterday.

At the same time, the Canadian government has recommende­d that its Jamaican counterpar­t amend the INDECOM Act in line with recommenda­tions of the Joint Select Committee of Parliament in 2015 to give the oversight body the legislativ­e capacity to arrest, charge, and prosecute members of the security forces with unlawful killings and abuses of power.

These issues were among a litany of recommenda­tions and comments made yesterday as Jamaica’s human-rights record was extensivel­y examined by the United Nations Human Rights Council’s Universal Periodic Review (UPR) Working Group during a webcast on Wednesday.

“End abuses by security forces and other government agents involved in extrajudic­ial killings, arbitrary detention, and life-threatenin­g prison conditions and ensure swift accountabi­lity for those who commit abuses by implementi­ng existing mechanisms to investigat­e and punish abuses, and clearing administra­tive backlogs,” the US stated.

In July, Justice Minister Delroy Chuck signalled that he had changed its previous position of granting INDECOM powers to prosecute the police autonomous­ly.

Chuck said that he based his decision on the “belief that the increase in staffing at the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns will allow for the sufficient and timely decision on the files sent by INDECOM”.

During yesterday’s United Nations Human Rights Council’s UPR discussion, a representa­tive from the UK also expressed concern about the “high rate of fatal shooting incidents involving the security forces”.

TOP PRIORITIES

Addressing members of the UN body, Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Minister Kamina Johnson Smith said that the protection of human rights and the rule of law remain priorities for the Jamaican Government as evidenced by initiative­s undertaken by the administra­tion.

She told the group that Jamaica’s Ministry of National Security was developing the Law Enforcemen­t Protection of Integrity Act, which will define the standards of operation for all individual­s engaged in law-enforcemen­t activities to include considerat­ions for human rights.

Johnson Smith said that the Government is also promulgati­ng a less-lethal-weapons policy, which will provide a regime that will regulate access to less lethal devices such as pepper sprays for personal protection.

“The policy will also facilitate options for graduated use of force by the security forces in the applicatio­n of less lethal weapons such as electro shock weapons, thereby reducing the potential for excessive use of force against the public,” she explained.

The foreign affairs minister also highlighte­d that policy for the use of body-worn cameras in police operations was drafted in 2016. According to Johnson Smith, bodyworn cameras were required to enhance the provisions for human rights and human dignity and form part of the Government’s thrust to ensure that citizens’ human rights are not violated when police personnel are dealing with civilians.

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