| Despite a few quiet periods, the situation
of crime continues to worsen and very badly indeed!
Within the past week we have in the Federation experienced
three back to back murders, none of which fits the conventional
wisdom in terms of the nature of the incidents that
we have grown to expect. The robbery that went bad for
the 70 plus taxi driver and the apparently botched robbery
of the three month returned nationals, elderly couple,
from the UK have like an iron pen emblazoned the point
that our violence problem is not just 'bad guys killing
bad guys'. We have been warned not to delude ourselves
into thinking that the situation doesn't affect us.
It impacts in a real way every single tourist, citizen
and resident. Obviously, a tourist could be killed;
citizens can continue to be slain innocently for just
being in the wrong place at the right time and any resident
could become a victim of a serious crime on St. Kitts
and Nevis.
With all the power that they wield
generally, our politicians either claim no responsibility,
admit privately to being out of ideas or have just
become plain deafened to the noise of war in the camp.
Without an immediate and dramatic change of course,
with one single incident we risk reversing much if
not all of the economic gains made to date.
Some may ask how did we become so
violent when we were once so peaceful? One may ask
similarly, how is it that the violence we experience
in our country these days is not going away despite
the many sermons from the politicians' bully pulpits
and the deliberate attempts to intervene. Have those
sermons been perceived as mere hypocrisy? If you hold
a knife in one hand and a gun in the other, then ask
me to stop my violence, will I be able to overlook
the blatant contradiction? More to the point, if bellicose
comments about your political rivals belch from your
mouth and from the same mouth are words of exhortation
to make peace and not engage in violence, will you
be effective? Perhaps not!
We need solutions and we need them
now! Many ideas have been discussed, summits and conferences
on crime convened; task forces set up and a host of
other so called interventions employed. My favorite
one is an FBI Consultant. Yet, the cure for the tumor
on our national pride continues to elude us. I have
written extensively on the many things that I think
are wrong, often suggesting various strategies which
I thought would be useful if tried. I have for example
mentioned repeatedly that the biggest obstacle to
solving our crime and security problem is, that as
a nation, we are overly focused on politics and allocate
far too little of the country's resources to fighting
crime. Put differently, the same paradigm used fifty
to one hundred years ago; the same security infrastructure
and mind set are being used, notwithstanding the fact
that the challenges we face are obviously exponentially
many times greater today than then. If we added up
all the money borrowed and spent on government initiatives
that were aimed at garnering and salvaging votes,
on both islands, and used even a fraction to attend
urgently to security, we could have prevented the
present free fall over the precipice. We simply only
need to take a small portion of it and pay our police
officers a better salary, hire from outside the top
brass or at least part of it, buy more vehicles for
the police so their response time could be significantly
improved (they don't do badly with the existing constraints)
and ensure that every precinct is run with state of
the art equipment and facilities. Let's forget about
the rehearsal of what's wrong and focus on solutions!
Clearly, our problem is not that we
lack solutions. We know exactly what is needed. We
lack the political will however! And the electorate
has inexplicably refused to hold the political leadership
accountable for the abysmal management of this our
biggest challenge to date.
Resources are needed to assist single
parts and households without biological fathers either
present or attendant. Resources are needed to create
and support community programs that will reach at
risk boys (and girls frankly), enabling academic,
vocational and emotional/spiritual potential. Resources
are desperately needed to beef up our security apparatus,
i.e. the criminal justice system generally, which
includes strategies for more innovative, effective
and efficient prosecution and sentencing, more robust
rehabilitation programs as well as more judges and
magistrates to prevent back-log in the courts.
The governments on both islands need
to act swiftly in getting these done. Both governmental
leaders should immediately reach out a hand of diplomacy
to the opposition and respectfully seek collaboration
and vow to end the rancor especially with respect
to crime. The present rhetoric, full of political
fodder and preachy acquiescence to the criminals,
should be replaced with words of atonement for past
wrongs. We need instead, speeches that accept full
responsibility (I don't mean blame) for the present
crisis and that express a solid commitment to fixing
it, come hell or high water.
We need far fewer persons in the country
with influence complaining about one thing or other
with respect to the leader of the country but then
praising him profusely and admiringly for being such
a clever politician. More next week on solutions.
Political leaders are only part of the solution on
crime and security. They are responsible for the leadership,
setting the tone in the country conducive to crime
or peace and for provision of the resources to fight
it. The rest of us have a lot more of the work to
do.
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