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In broad daylight
this week Nevis experienced yet another murder - a
brutal execution style - mafia-esque - gang-like slaying.
In Gingerland, near a large supermarket, but even
closer to the high school, (students visibly and understandably
shaken) and not far at all from the primary school,
indeed very close to the Police Station, another youth
gunned down at relatively close range while painting
a citizen's railing and gate. The assassin was reportedly
masked and seen running through the bush. Reports
indicate that he was apprehended later that day. If
the right man was indeed caught we should applaud
the good efforts of the police and a community that
is beginning to appreciate that without its assistance
the violence and crime will not see a reduction -
not now, not ever!
Instead of getting
better, the state of the nation's security proverbially
worsens before our very eyes and as we speak. The
more vulnerable of the two islands in terms of an
adequate security infrastructure, Nevis as predicted,
is being used as the battleground for St. Kitts' much
more serious gang violence, since Nevis is the weak
link in the chain and the most porous part of the
system.
Interestingly and
eerily, a sitting prime minister has never been closer
to Nevis' politics! Can the Premier and the Prime
Minister not figure out a solution to the present
decline in security and the dramatic upsurge in violence
and crime on Nevis? Might we see an amendment to the
Constitution proposed that allows the Premier to become
minister of national security? According to the Premier
the recent move to vacate the Nevis legal adviser
post and upgrade it to Minister of Justice and Attorney
General was designed to help Nevis in several ways,
not the least of which was to purportedly devolve
powers from the Federal Government to the NIA. Might
Nevis be assisted more or less perhaps with the Prime
Minister being allowed to dabble increasingly into
Nevis' politics? Can we expect to see an increase
in force strength on Nevis any time soon for example?
Shouldn't we expect perhaps an assistant commissioner
stationed on Nevis?
As represented in
the Observer Newspaper, Friday, March 5 Edition, in
commenting on the PM's weekly radio address the previous
tuesday, the PM reportedly states that a teenage shooting
at a house party was insanity and a form of psychosis.
He went on to comment on the big picture of crime
and the social ills in our society, offering a fix
to the 'far reaching effects of these violent crimes'
by stating, "we have to find effective and lasting
ways to dramatically strengthen those psychological,
physical, moral internal personal restraints that
keep law abiding citizens law abiding."
Well to do this Mr Prime Minister we need dramatic
and immediate increases in the spending on social
services to provide desperately needed resources for
parents and families. Psychologists, counselors, therapists
and social workers brought in to the Federation to
bolster the dearth of these services, could greatly
achieve this objective. Values have badly eroded in
our society, parents appear to no longer be in charge
of their youths and social institutions generally,
including the family, have weakened considerably over
the past twenty or so years. Mr PM, ranting, preaching,
moralizing and lecturing families is not the answer,
frankly! They need professional guidance and support
since many of them have lost their way for a variety
of reasons.
With a population size of close to 50,000, the Federation
has only a handful of trained persons to supposedly
confront the many social ills which plague the society.
This is tantamount to sending an army of 15 to fight
a war against an army of 15,000. Crime and violence
represent only a symptom of much deeper problems in
our Country. Some of these bigger problems are social,
some are spiritual, some political while some are
obviously economic. But, we must be clear as a nation
and understand that violence among youth, a gang culture,
dramatic increases in house break-ins and robberies
which now take on a more brazen and violent feature
than ever, are symptomatic of much broader and more
deep seated challenges which we face as a people and
a country.
The Prime Minister
in that particular radio address on March 2nd, went
on to discuss his thoughts on the solution to our
nightmare. He called for "national multi-lateral
dialogue to identify ways of raising upstanding, socially
responsibly children as a means of reversing or eliminating
the recent trend of societal dysfunction among the
youth". Mr PM did you mean dialogue among politically
homogeneous entities to further political ends and
objectives? Or did you mean REAL dialogue Sir? Dialogue
between persons of different political persuasions
which you would initiate; dialogue between key stakeholders
in the private and public sector? Or are we perhaps
Mr PM all dialogued out? And now perhaps we just need
ACTION!
Concerted action that
shores up the weakened areas in families who need
parental and child guidance to figure out how to raise
children who simply are out of control. Action that
provides much greater attention and funding to the
Operation Future initiative which brings together
VOLUNTEER dedicated police officers with persons from
the private sector to the primary school children
every week with strategies aimed at both intervention
and prevention. Action Mr PM that brings all of your
police officers together immediately through a properly
directed, well coordinated training program focused
on the virtues and urgency of community policing.
Action Mr PM that would aggressively recruit new officers
and add force strength, vehicles, up to date equipment;
dignity, better salaries and working conditions for
our hard working men and women in uniform who risk
their lives every day trying to protect us all without
much support and appreciation.
We do need action
now and an abrupt end to dialogue without sure and
steadfast action! Our Prime Minister needs to, and
I humbly offer for his consideration, reassess his
entire approach to law enforcement and security. While
it may be no fault of theirs per se, the PM needs
to look at his managers and evaluate their effectiveness
with a results based, hard look and hold accountable
his commissioners, superintendents and all those in
leadership in national security, including his highly
and over-paid FBI Consultant.
In my view he needs to see the problem of crime as
not just being symptomatic of something deeper (and
address the deeper issues) but appreciate that to
properly resolve and address it means a two pronged
approach: the law enforcement side and the more long
term social strategies that aim at preparing the Country's
next generation - and put badly needed resources in
both areas at the same time. Finally, the community
needs to become more actively involved and have a
specific role in the fix. One of the ways to do this
is to try what has recently worked extremely well
in Barbados with a community group called, "Crime
Stoppers" who have successfully set up a program
to get the community to offer tips to the Police without
fear of reprisal and recrimination or worry about
anonymity since the tips and reports to the police
are taken by international operators based in Canada
who have no way of knowing who the callers are. 357
tips were reported by a previously terrified public
in a year with a number of crimes being solved as
a result, including murders and robberies.
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