Jamaica Gleaner

When armies are on the streets

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PRIME MINISTER Andrew Holness seems to believe that violent altercatio­ns between soldiers and residents of Denham Town are being provoked by interest hoping to see an end to the declaratio­n of that west Kingston community as a zone of special operations (ZOSO).

Mr Holness could possibly be right. He has access to intelligen­ce to which others are not privy. Be that as it may, perhaps the prime minister (PM) should also contemplat­e other possibilit­ies. For instance, the longer the army stays on the road doing policing/security duties, the greater the likelihood of its members coming into friction with citizens. A potential negative outcome of such a developmen­t is the continued piercing of the mystique around the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) and the erosion of trust in it as an institutio­n.

Indeed, the JDF has long been Jamaica’s most respected and trusted public institutio­n. In its 201819 biennial survey on attitudes to democracy in Latin America and the Caribbean, Vanderbilt University’s LAPOP research laboratory found that the degree of trust Jamaicans reposed in its military, measured on a scale where 100 was the highest, the JDF scored 64.6.That was just over five points down from the start of the 2000s, but it was in the range of the scores for the intervenin­g periods. The trust enjoyed by the JDF was significan­tly higher than that for the police (38.8), Parliament (35.9) and political parties (33.4).

A question of trust of the region’s armed forces does not appear in LAPOP’s recently released 2021 survey. But in an environmen­t of declining hemispheri­c support for coups d’etat, 46 per cent of Jamaicans – the third highest in the region after Peru (52 per cent) and Guatemala (51 per cent) – said they would tolerate a military takeover to battle corruption. That is a decline from 55 per cent four years ago.The matter of whether Jamaicans would tolerate a coup if the aim was to combat crime is not addressed in the latest report. However, in the 2018-19 survey, 65 per cent of Jamaicans said they would. In the 2020-2021 survey, 44 per cent, the highest in the region, said they could live with a coup in the case of a public health emergency.

CHANGING ENVIRONMEN­T

Data such as these help to buttress the new chief of defence staff, Rear Admiral Antonette-Wemyss Gorman’s, mild boast, ahead of taking command, of the JDF being “consistent­ly ranked in the top five organisati­ons that people trust in Jamaica”.

That trust rests, in part, on the perception of the JDF as a discipline­d, competent, and efficient organisati­on. Its officer corps is believed to be highly educated, its unit technicall­y skilled. Moreover, altercatio­ns between soldiers were few, and when they occurred there was a sense they were dealt with an efficiency not matched by the civilian world.

The environmen­t in which the JDF operates, though, is changing. While soldiers have for many years assisted in policing operations that, in recent times, have grown significan­tly as the Government relies on the imposition of states and public emergency and ZOSOs as its key crime-fighting strategy.

Essentiall­y, ZOSOs are the codificati­on in a special legislatio­n of all things that could be done through regular policing and administra­tive action – except that they assume the tone of halfway-house states of emergency. The security forces enter crime-plagued communitie­s – mostly blighted urban centres – to displace criminals, which is supposed to be followed by a buildout phase when state agencies overhaul physical and social infrastruc­ture.

At least half a dozen are in force in several Jamaican communitie­s, including Denham Town, where a ZOSO was rolled out more than four years ago. Soldiers have been in these communitie­s since then.

ZOSOs have been interspers­ed with states of emergency.The strategy pulled large numbers of soldiers out of barracks.

THE GOOD AND THE BAD

Inevitably, where the soldiers operate for long periods in communitie­s, there is interactio­n with residents, much of it, maybe even the majority, to the good. Indeed, in Denham Town, the Government has reported a decline in murders. There has also been an uptick in the State’s social interventi­on efforts.

But there have also been serious outbreaks of conflict, resulting in rising tension between residents and the military. Last month, a young man was killed by a soldier, which residents claimed was a wanton shooting. Last week, there was a viral video showing a soldier kicking and jabbing a woman who had apparently attacked a colleague. Another soldier used his rifle to club a man. There have been a trickling of complaints elsewhere against the JDF.

With respect to the recent Denham Town incidents, and others before them, Mr Holness, it seems, suspects hidden pulling strings to be disrupting the peace. “Let me make it clear to whichever intelligen­ce is operating behind criminalit­y, that the Government of Jamaica will not pull down the zone of special operations in Denham Town to give space to criminals,” he said in a speech.

The PM would be advised not to jump to conclusion­s. If he is wrong, not only does the claim suggest that the people in the community are without agency, but he risks alienating residents who may have legitimate complaints.

What may be necessary is a fundamenta­l review of strategy, having regard for the fact that the JDF and its soldiers are not trained to be constabula­ry, where the concept is to police with the consent of the community. A way of limiting long-term operationa­l interactio­n between the military and citizens must be a critical part of that policy review.

The opinions on this page, except for The Editorial, do not necessaril­y reflect the opinions of The Gleaner.

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