Jamaica Homicides Jump 20 Per Cent, Highest Level In 5 Years

KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — Violent rival­ries among Jamaica’s lot­tery scam rings have helped to dri­ve the Caribbean island’s homi­cide rate to the high­est lev­el in five years, accord­ing to police.

The Jamaica Constabulary Force said the coun­try had at least 1,192 slay­ings in 2015, a rough­ly 20 per­cent increase from the pre­vi­ous year. There were 1,005 killings in 2014, the low­est annu­al total since 2003 in this coun­try that has long strug­gled with vio­lent crime. Jamaica had about 45 slay­ings per 100,000 peo­ple in 2015, keep­ing it ranked among the most vio­lent coun­tries in the world. In recent years, the UN list­ed the island as hav­ing the world’s sixth-worst homi­cide rate. The World Bank ranked Jamaica in the top five in 2013. By com­par­i­son, Chicago, which has rough­ly the same pop­u­la­tion as Jamaica at 2.7 mil­lion, had 468 killings in 2015.

Last year’s total is a long way from National Security Minister Peter Bunting’s goal of reduc­ing the annu­al homi­cide num­bers to 320 killings by 2017. He first stat­ed this goal short­ly after start­ing as nation­al secu­ri­ty min­is­ter in ear­ly 2012. Bunting, who had called the reduc­tion in 2014 a break­through in the fight against crime, said offi­cials “will not be deterred or daunt­ed by this set­back”. Authorities attribute the rise in killings to clash­es among lot­tery scam rings over mon­ey and “lead lists” con­tain­ing iden­ti­ty infor­ma­tion about tar­gets liv­ing abroad, most­ly in the United States. Fighting between gangs has long been blamed for the major­i­ty of Jamaica’s homicides.

Herbert Gayle, an anthro­pol­o­gist of social vio­lence at Jamaica’s University of the West Indies, Mona, said Wednesday that author­i­ties have not addressed the root cause of vio­lence in Jamaica, so it was only a mat­ter of time before killings ticked upward. While killings increased last year, oth­er crimes, such as rape, aggra­vat­ed assault, rob­beries and lar­ce­nies, decreased.  Jamaica homi­cides jump 20 per cent, high­est lev­el in 5 years