Israel-Palestine: As Stabbings, Shootings Kill Dozens, Endless Occupation Fuels Vengeful Resistance

U.S. Criticizes Settlements While Giving Israel "Carte Blanche" to Continue Occupation
U.S. Criticizes Settlements While Giving Israel “Carte Blanche” to Continue Occupation

The death toll from vio­lence in Israel and the Occupied Territories has increased with new Palestinian stab­bing attacks and an inten­si­fied Israeli crack­down. On Sunday, an attack­er iden­ti­fied as a 21-year-old Arab cit­i­zen of Israel knifed an Israeli sol­dier to death and then opened fire at a bus sta­tion in Beersheba, wound­ing 10 peo­ple. The attack­er was killed. In an appar­ent case of racial pro­fil­ing, a mob of sol­diers and bystanders then shot and beat an Eritrean man to death, mis­tak­en­ly think­ing he was a sec­ond assailant. After seal­ing off East Jerusalem neigh­bor­hoods last week, Israel is widen­ing its crack­down on Arab res­i­dents and con­tin­u­ing mil­i­tary oper­a­tions across the West Bank and Gaza. The United Nations says last week was the dead­liest for Palestinians in the West Bank and Israel in 10 years, rais­ing con­cerns “of exces­sive use of force, and vio­la­tions of the right to life and secu­ri­ty of the per­son.” We are joined by two guests: Jamil Dakwar, a Palestinian human rights lawyer with Israeli cit­i­zen­ship, and Nathan Thrall, senior ana­lyst at the International Crisis Group whose new arti­cle for The New York Times is “Mismanaging the Conflict in Jerusalem.”

AMY GOODMAN: The death toll from vio­lence in Israel and the Occupied Territories has increased with new Palestinian stab­bing attacks and an inten­si­fied Israeli crack­down. On Sunday, an assailant iden­ti­fied as a 21-year-old Arab cit­i­zen of Israel knifed an Israeli sol­dier, then opened fire at a bus sta­tion in Beersheba with the soldier’s rifle, wound­ing 10 peo­ple. The sol­dier and the attack­er died. In an appar­ent case of racial pro­fil­ing, a mob of sol­diers and bystanders then shot and beat anoth­er man to death, mis­tak­en­ly think­ing he was a sec­ond assailant. Video footage shows the crowd kick­ing and assault­ing the vic­tim, 29-year-old Haftom Zarhum, as he lies on the ground. Zarhum lat­er died in the hos­pi­tal. He had been seek­ing asy­lum in Israel from his native Eritrea. The inci­dent comes after Israeli forces shot dead five Palestinians accused of stab­bing attacks, includ­ing three in the occu­pied West Bank city of Hebron.

After seal­ing of East Jerusalem neigh­bor­hoods last week, Israel is widen­ing its crack­down on Arab res­i­dents. A new bill before Parliament would give forces stop-and-frisk pow­ers to search any­one in the streets with­out cause. In addi­tion to severe restric­tions on move­ment, Israel is also erect­ing a wall in East Jerusalem that would sep­a­rate Palestinian neigh­bor­hoods from a near­by Israeli set­tle­ment. Israeli forces mean­while con­tin­ue mil­i­tary attacks across the West Bank and Gaza, raid­ing vil­lages and fir­ing on Palestinian demon­stra­tions. Over the week­end, a group of some 200 Israeli set­tlers report­ed­ly attacked two Palestinian vil­lages in the West Bank with firebombs.

The surge in Palestinian knife attacks and protests is par­tial­ly fueled by con­cerns over Israeli con­trol of the Al-Aqsa Mosque com­pound and vis­its there by far-right Israelis. On Sunday, Israel reject­ed a French pro­pos­al to deploy inter­na­tion­al observers at the flash­point holy site. Speaking today in Madrid, Secretary of State John Kerry backed Israel’s rejec­tion of a for­eign pres­ence at the Temple Mount, but said he would meet with both Israeli and Palestinian lead­ers in the com­ing days.

SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY: Israel has every right in the world to pro­tect its cit­i­zens, as it has been, from ran­dom acts of vio­lence. But in my con­ver­sa­tions with the prime min­is­ter, as well as with King Abdullah and the for­eign min­is­ter of Jordan, they have expressed a desire to try to see this process be able to find a way of mak­ing cer­tain that every­body is clear about what is hap­pen­ing with respect to the Temple Mount.

AMY GOODMAN: The over­all death toll stands at 44 Palestinians and eight Israelis this month. The U.N. says last week was the dead­liest for Palestinians in the West Bank and Israel in 10 years, rais­ing con­cerns, quote, “of exces­sive use of force, and vio­la­tions of the right to life and secu­ri­ty of the person.”

Joining us now are two guests. Here in New York, Jamil Dakwar is with us. He’s a human rights lawyer, a Palestinian cit­i­zen of Israel who pre­vi­ous­ly worked as senior attor­ney at Adalah, a lead­ing human rights group in Israel. And in Jerusalem, Nathan Thrall is with us, senior ana­lyst at the International Crisis Group cov­er­ing Gaza, Israel, Jordan and the West Bank. His new arti­cle for The New York Times is head­lined “Mismanaging the Conflict in Jerusalem.”

Nathan, let’s start with you in Jerusalem. What is hap­pen­ing there, and why do you believe that the sit­u­a­tion is so out of con­trol at this point?

NATHAN THRALL: So what’s hap­pen­ing now in Jerusalem is check­points are going up all over the east. At the exits to Palestinian neigh­bor­hoods in occu­pied East Jerusalem, you have big con­crete cubes going up and very, very long lines for Palestinians to exit their neigh­bor­hoods. And there is a sense among Palestinians in East Jerusalem that they are being pun­ished for these so-called lone wolf stab­bing attacks that have tak­en place so far. The oth­er morn­ing, res­i­dents of one neigh­bor­hood, where basi­cal­ly the traf­fic police, the park­ing — peo­ple who give park­ing tick­ets nev­er go, came and left 500-shekel tick­ets on everybody’s car. And there are a series of small steps like this that are lead­ing a lot of Palestinians in East Jerusalem to feel that they’re being col­lec­tive­ly pun­ished for what’s going on now.

I live right at one of the seam neigh­bor­hoods between the east and the west, and it’s filled with bor­der police who are basi­cal­ly stop­ping a high pro­por­tion of the Palestinian men who are walk­ing from one side of the city to the oth­er. Many of them work in the west side of the city. You had men­tioned a moment ago that there is a con­sid­er­a­tion of allow­ing the police to do stop-and-frisk with­out cause. You know, that’s news to the res­i­dents of Palestinian East Jerusalem, who are stopped and frisked with­out cause all the time and are being stopped and frisked with­out cause today. So the sit­u­a­tion in Jerusalem is extreme­ly tense. People are eye­ing one anoth­er sus­pi­cious­ly. A Palestinian woman in West Jerusalem was walk­ing around today and was telling me how peo­ple were star­ing at her, sur­prised that she was walk­ing around there.

So, the attacks don’t seem to have any kind of orga­nized lead­er­ship behind them, which makes them much more dif­fi­cult for any­body to stop. And one of the big prob­lems here is we don’t have an orga­nized polit­i­cal lead­er­ship in Jerusalem, a Palestinian polit­i­cal lead­er­ship in Jerusalem, which means that there’s no one for the Israelis to talk to in order to try and calm the situation.

AMY GOODMAN: I want­ed to go right now to what hap­pened on Sunday. The Israeli prime min­is­ter, Benjamin Netanyahu, reject­ed Palestinian con­cerns over the Temple Mount.

PRIME MINISTER BENJAMIN NETANYAHU: The rea­son the sta­tus quo has been vio­lat­ed is not because we changed it. We didn’t change any­thing. The orders of prayer, the vis­it­ing rights have not changed for the last 15 years. The only thing that’s changed are Islamist hood­lums, paid by the Islamist move­ment in Israel and by Hamas, who are enter­ing the mosque and try­ing to put explo­sives there, and, from there, emerge and attack Jewish vis­i­tors to the Temple Mount, and Christian vis­i­tors. That’s the only change in the sta­tus quo. Israel will pro­tect the holy site, will guard the sta­tus quo. Israel is not a prob­lem on the Temple Mount, Israel is the solution.

AMY GOODMAN: That’s Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime min­is­ter. We’re also joined by Jamil Dakwar, human rights lawyer, a Palestinian cit­i­zen of Israel, who pre­vi­ous­ly worked as a senior attor­ney at Adalah, a lead­ing Israeli human rights group. Your response to what Netanyahu just said?

JAMIL DAKWAR: Well, I think that what is real­ly strik­ing here is that the Israeli gov­ern­ment, every time there is any kind of a rise in ten­sion and cri­sis and use of vio­lence, it turns into mil­i­taris­tic approach towards deal­ing with the Palestinians. It’s using that same old poli­cies of a crack­down, on col­lec­tive pun­ish­ment, on see­ing the Palestinians with no real­ly val­ue of their life and their basic human rights. The response, and par­tic­u­lar­ly on the issue of sta­tus quo, you know, Israel is the only coun­try that is allowed to change the sta­tus quo in Jerusalem, and it’s been chang­ing that for years, for decades. And yet, if a coun­try or polit­i­cal par­ty is sug­gest­ing a change of the sta­tus quo towards more peace­ful res­o­lu­tion, towards more pro­tec­tion of civil­ians, then that is always reject­ed. So I think there is, clear­ly, a going back to giv­ing now the Israeli gov­ern­ment and Benjamin Netanyahu a pre­text to go — what he real­ly would pre­fer to do is to con­tin­ue his poli­cies of aggres­sion against Palestinians.

Certainly, this is going to be more and more dif­fi­cult, because in Jerusalem, in East Jerusalem, the rea­son that there is no lead­er­ship is because Israeli poli­cies were crack­ing down on insti­tu­tions. The Orient House was closed by the Israeli gov­ern­ment. The Palestinians who were elect­ed by their own peo­ple were not allowed to engage in polit­i­cal activ­i­ties. Many of them were impris­oned. So that, in and of itself, clear­ly shows that the Israeli gov­ern­ment wants to see only its own inter­est, mean­ing the Jewish Israeli inter­est in Jerusalem, and that con­tin­ue to per­pet­u­ate the sit­u­a­tion both in East Jerusalem and in the West Bank as a mil­i­tary occu­pa­tion, which is now near­ing 50 years.

AMY GOODMAN: Explain what has caused this lat­est esca­la­tion of vio­lence, from your per­spec­tive. Where did you grow up, by the way?

JAMIL DAKWAR: I grew up in Haifa. I went to school at Tel Aviv University. I remem­ber when I went to law school at Tel Aviv University, there were very, very dif­fi­cult times. There were times when there were sui­cide attacks going on inside Israel. Those hap­pened in response to the set­tler going to Hebron mosque and killing prayer — Palestinians who were pray­ing in the mosque. That kind of blew up the whole sit­u­a­tion. And it was clear that with­out crack­ing down on the set­tler vio­lence, with­out end­ing Israel’s set­tler activ­i­ty in the West Bank, there is no way that the Palestinians will sit back and allow the Israeli gov­ern­ment to con­tin­ue to con­trol their life in every way.

So I think the esca­la­tion that we’re see­ing now has been mount­ing, has been build­ing, because of what’s hap­pened in the last sev­er­al years. There is no hope for any real, nor­mal life. This is the new nor­mal for the Palestinians, which is mil­i­tary occu­pa­tion con­tin­ues unabat­ed, the Israeli gov­ern­ment con­tin­ues to send set­tlers to the West Bank. There’s a crack­down round­ing up chil­dren, Palestinian chil­dren, in night raids, doc­u­ment­ed by Palestinian and Israeli human rights orga­ni­za­tions. These kinds of things will make Palestinians despair or make the Palestinians, some of them, to resort to vio­lence and do what they are doing. And I think that is what is real­ly concerning.

AMY GOODMAN: Are these knife attacks new?

JAMIL DAKWAR: These knife attacks are new, although in the — we’ve seen in the — this is not the first time that there were these kinds of wave of knife attacks. And it hap­pened dur­ing the Shamir — appeared in the ’80s. They were very much sim­i­lar, in a sit­u­a­tion where the Palestinians were real­ly giv­ing up on their hope to have a nor­mal life. I think that there’s now also — there’s the impact on their lack of abil­i­ty to be able to express themselves.

You men­tioned the Arab Palestinian cit­i­zen who stabbed the sol­dier. The over­whelm­ing major­i­ty of Palestinian cit­i­zens are peace­ful. They’ve been peace­ful in their activ­i­ties for their entire career, and yet the Israeli gov­ern­ment is crack­ing down on their lead­er­ship, is crack­ing down — there are home demo­li­tions inside Israel, dis­place­ment of Arab Bedouin com­mu­ni­ties. That is mak­ing peo­ple see that despite the fact that you are mak­ing an effort to be a cit­i­zen, a law-abid­ing cit­i­zen, the Israeli gov­ern­ment is say­ing, “No, you are not wel­comed here. You are an ene­my. You are not going to be enjoy­ing the same basic rights as oth­ers in the country.”

AMY GOODMAN: On Sunday, a Palestinian report­ed­ly opened fire at a cen­tral bus sta­tion in the south­ern Israeli city of Beersheba, killing a sol­dier and wound­ing 11 oth­er peo­ple. He had tak­en the gun of the sol­dier. Afterward, the Israeli police spokesper­son, Micky Rosenfeld, addressed reporters.

MICKY ROSENFELD: As a result of the attack where the ter­ror­ist had a pis­tol and opened fire, we have six peo­ple that were injured, four of them being police offi­cers injured inside the cen­tral bus sta­tion. One man was severe­ly tak­en to hos­pi­tal and received med­ical treat­ment. Unfortunately, con­firmed that he passed away a few min­utes ago. Heightened secu­ri­ty is con­tin­u­ing in the area, and our police units are still in and around the cen­tral bus station.

AMY GOODMAN: Israeli eye­wit­ness to the shoot­ing, Sima Koseshvili, called for greater security.

SIMA KOSESHVILI: [trans­lat­ed] Do I need to live in a world where I am afraid to leave home to go to my col­lege stud­ies, to work or to go shop­ping? Everything is fright­en­ing, and I want the police to take more action and increase their secu­ri­ty presence.

AMY GOODMAN: Nathan Thrall in Jerusalem, can you talk about what hap­pened there in Beersheba? First you had the killing of both the Palestinian gun­man and the Israeli sol­dier, many oth­er peo­ple also injured, and then the Eritrean man being beat­en to death in a case of appar­ent­ly mis­tak­en identity.

NATHAN THRALL: Yes. Frankly, I know about as much as what — as much as you do about what hap­pened there. I wasn’t there, and I’ve seen the reports and watched some of the videos. And I’ve seen that the gov­ern­ment has, you know, acknowl­edged that a trag­ic mis­take was made. But beyond that, I don’t know the details of the incident.

AMY GOODMAN: The sig­nif­i­cance of this?

JAMIL DAKWAR: The sig­nif­i­cance is that, look, what’s hap­pen­ing is that now any­one appears to be an Arab Palestinian. And that starts with the racial pro­fil­ing, stop-and-frisk, that is a dai­ly expe­ri­ence of Palestinians. But also Israeli Jews who are Arab Jews, who come — [Sephardic] Jews, who appear to some Israelis or to the Israeli secu­ri­ty forces as sus­pi­cious Arab Palestinians, some of them are even being attacked. I think this is going out of con­trol, because the Israeli gov­ern­ment and the politi­cians are spread­ing those state­ments, mak­ing those state­ments that are very dan­ger­ous state­ments, encour­ag­ing cit­i­zens to take arms and shoot peo­ple, shoot to kill. And there are now human rights reports inves­ti­gat­ing the shoot-to-kill orders. This amounts to extra­ju­di­cial killing. There need to be clear inves­ti­ga­tions of these instances. You have peo­ple who did not pose any immi­nent threat to addi­tion­al peo­ple; even if they com­mit­ted crimes, they still should not be exe­cut­ed right on the spot. And that, I think, will bring the sit­u­a­tion to a much worse, because peo­ple are mis­trust­ing any­one who is a Palestinian, who is an Arab, who appears to be Palestinian, and that’s why the Eritrean refugee got in that sit­u­a­tion. And the lynch­ing — there’s sit­u­a­tions where a sol­dier is stand­ing by, secu­ri­ty forces stand­ing by and not pro­tect­ing those civil­ians. That, in and of itself, is a huge, dan­ger­ous esca­la­tion that I think even worse than the act of lone­ly or indi­vid­ual tak­ing some knives and stab­bing peo­ple, because that frus­trates entire — puts entire com­mu­ni­ties at risk, when law enforce­ment car­ries those attacks and crack­downs and opens fire with no respect to human life.

We see a sit­u­a­tion that real­ly requires more atten­tion and more action, not just — you know, con­dem­na­tion of acts of vio­lence is the easy part of this. What is real­ly need­ed to be done is what needs to be done about the sit­u­a­tion, the sit­u­a­tion of the occu­pa­tion, the sit­u­a­tion on East Jerusalem. And what we’re not hear­ing, what are the solu­tions, includ­ing admin­is­tra­tion offi­cials. Every time Secretary Kerry tries to say some­thing right, whether it’s the recent com­ment that he made, where he said, “Well, we’ve seen build­ing of set­tle­ments, an expan­sion, etc. That is now — and now we’re see­ing vio­lence.” So he’s mak­ing the right con­nec­tion, a very log­ic, com­mon­sense con­nec­tion, and yet he had to retract those state­ments, even though he’s real­ly say­ing what every­body knows, what every­body knows in the Obama admin­is­tra­tion, what every­body knows here in the United States, that set­tle­ments are ille­gal, and yet they are now get­ting full sup­port from this Israeli gov­ern­ment, and is now build­ing on turn­ing this con­flict into a reli­gious war. And I think that is real­ly the crit­i­cal point where I think we need to be very, very con­cerned about. People who know the sit­u­a­tion know that if you are going to speak to the youth about reli­gious wars and agi­tate them, they will take things like this, they will take knives and stab peo­ple. And with­out lead­er­ship, with­out any hope, with­out a future, this will become the norm. And unfor­tu­nate­ly, that would be a very dan­ger­ous route to go to.

AMY GOODMAN: Is there a role for the ICC here, the International Criminal Court?

JAMIL DAKWAR: Well, the ICC, as you know, there’s a pre­lim­i­nary inves­ti­ga­tion of the sit­u­a­tion in Israel and Palestine, par­tic­u­lar­ly the sit­u­a­tion of Palestine after Palestine joined the ICC. There were calls to ask the pros­e­cu­tor to look at the alleged crimes com­mit­ted in the recent month. I believe it will be a lit­tle bit dif­fi­cult for the pros­e­cu­tor to jump at this issue. There’s a sig­nif­i­cant devel­op­ment that hap­pened just last week with the ICC pros­e­cu­tor ask­ing to open full inves­ti­ga­tion in Georgia. That will be an impor­tant — has impor­tant impli­ca­tions on the sit­u­a­tion in Palestine, because this will be — if this full inves­ti­ga­tion will move for­ward, will be the first non­state par­ty full inves­ti­ga­tion that is tak­ing place in the ICC, which could, again, delay, on one hand, the Palestinian sit­u­a­tion, but, on the oth­er hand, would also set impor­tant prece­dent for that. I think, most impor­tant­ly, there should be a clear deter­rence to the Israeli gov­ern­ment from clear state­ments made, that the Israeli gov­ern­ment can­not con­tin­ue these actions with no con­se­quences. There is no account­abil­i­ty. We know from reports like B’Tselem, Yesh Din, Al-Haq and oth­er orga­ni­za­tions that inves­ti­ga­tions with­in the Israeli mil­i­tary are dis­cred­it­ed, they’re not cred­i­ble, they’re not seri­ous, and there­fore, at some point, there will be action by legal mech­a­nisms, includ­ing the ICC, to look into the crimes that are com­mit­ted in the occu­pied Palestinian territory.

AMY GOODMAN: On Saturday, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and his coun­ter­part in Jerusalem, Nir Barkat, vis­it­ed Israeli stab­bing vic­tims recov­er­ing in the hos­pi­tal. On Sunday, Mayor de Blasio vis­it­ed the Western Wall and toured the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial Museum. He signed the guest book at the muse­um, “Never again,” then made a statement.

MAYOR BILL DE BLASIO: We’re here at a painful moment. We’re here at a moment where peo­ple are afraid, where peo­ple are strug­gling, because of the vio­lence in their midst every sin­gle day late­ly, more and more ter­ror­ist attacks on absolute­ly inno­cent civil­ians, some­thing uncon­scionable and unac­cept­able, accord­ing to all our val­ues, and some­thing that must end.

AMY GOODMAN: Nathan Thrall, I want­ed to get your com­ment — also the Joint Chiefs of Staff chair, Marine General Joseph Dunford, in addi­tion to de Blasio, are in Israel — to what you believe needs to be done and what de Blasio said.

NATHAN THRALL: So, what we’re see­ing is the begin­ning of the United States com­pen­sat­ing Israel for the Iran nuclear deal, and they’re dis­cussing now increas­ing the $3 bil­lion in aid that Israel receives each year. And regard­ing de Blasio’s state­ment, of course attacks on civil­ians are hor­ri­ble, and all of this death is hor­ri­ble. In terms of look­ing at the root caus­es, I see very lit­tle being done to address that.

What we’re see­ing right now among Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, and par­tic­u­lar­ly in Jerusalem, is a real sense that the idea of a Palestinian state with a cap­i­tal in Jerusalem is escap­ing them. Jerusalemites have felt for many years that they are los­ing Jerusalem. They feel that they’re los­ing con­trol over Al-Aqsa Mosque, as well. And so, they’re — the oth­er guest had men­tioned that the insti­tu­tions of the Palestinian polit­i­cal lead­er­ship used to exist in Jerusalem. The PLO had some­thing called the Orient House, which was its head­quar­ters in Jerusalem, that had been — that has been shut down and is shut down. And, you know, Jerusalem has been sep­a­rat­ed by an enor­mous wall from the rest of the West Bank. And when Palestinians come and vis­it from Gaza, for exam­ple — those few who are allowed exit per­mits and do get to come to Jerusalem — they’re in shock at what they see. And see­ing it with their own eyes and going around the West Bank, they come to the con­clu­sion that the pos­si­bil­i­ty of sep­a­rat­ing Israel from an inde­pen­dent Palestinian state passed a long time ago.

And nobody is offer­ing any kind of solu­tions or answers to Palestinians, includ­ing their own lead­er­ship. And I think that’s a big part of why you see Palestinians actu­al­ly act­ing right now out­side of the polit­i­cal fac­tions that dom­i­nate Palestinian pol­i­tics. Palestinians feel like those fac­tions are not offer­ing any solu­tions and that they are tak­ing mat­ters into their own hands. So, the cen­ter of some of the fight­ing against Israel has occurred specif­i­cal­ly among those groups who are not under Palestinian Authority con­trol. The Jerusalem — Jerusalemites, of course, are not at all under Palestinian Authority con­trol. The Palestinian Authority is for­bid­den from act­ing in any form in Jerusalem — and in oth­er domains, as well. Villages in the West Bank who are fight­ing against the wall cut­ting through and tak­ing part of their land also find — many of them are out­side of the Palestinian Authority’s con­trol and there­fore are able, actu­al­ly, to fight Israel. The same thing with hunger-strik­ing pris­on­ers and with Gazans now, who are approach­ing the bor­der fence every day and throw­ing rocks, and get­ting shot and killed in the process.

So, I think that Palestinians, in gen­er­al, feel that they are approach­ing the end of an era, and that era is the era that was inau­gu­rat­ed with President Mahmoud Abbas’s elec­tion in January 2005. This came just after Yasser Arafat had died and at the end of a very bloody and painful intifa­da, one that was bloody and painful for both sides. And what Abbas rep­re­sent­ed for Palestinians was a chance to try a total­ly dif­fer­ent strat­e­gy, one that was not based on armed con­flict, one that would basi­cal­ly give Israel exact­ly what it most want­ed, which is secu­ri­ty, and to coöper­ate with Israel, ful­ly in secu­ri­ty, to hunt down mil­i­tants in the West Bank and to pre­vent attacks against Israelis, against set­tlers. And Abbas — if you ask the Israeli secu­ri­ty estab­lish­ment, they will say that Abbas has deliv­ered that in spades. And what the secu­ri­ty offi­cials say is, you know, “We view our job as to pro­vide the calm that allows the polit­i­cal lead­er­ship to reach out and to make a deal, or at least to improve the sit­u­a­tion.” Even if you don’t have a final peace agree­ment, there are a thou­sand things that Israel can do to make life bet­ter for Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem and Gaza. And a lot of the anger — sorry.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, I just — we have to wrap up, but I want­ed to bring Jamil Dakwar back in. Go ahead with “a lot of the anger,” and then I’m going to go back to Jamil.

NATHAN THRALL: Sure. OK, sure. I just want­ed to say that a lot of the anger is a sense that that strat­e­gy, that was inau­gu­rat­ed with Abbas’s elec­tion in January 2005, has been giv­en 11 years now to play itself out, and it hasn’t achieved any­thing. And it hasn’t real­ly eased life or restric­tions on Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank and Jerusalem. And so, what Palestinians are doing now is, in a very non­strate­gic and emo­tion­al way, rebelling against that, with­out a clear vision of where they’re headed.
See more here : Israel-Palestine: As Stabbings, Shootings Kill Dozens, Endless Occupation Fuels Vengeful Resistance

These Asswipes Believe The Laws Of The Country Should Not Apply To Them , This Is Why The Little Man Commits Crime

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Most of you who fol­low my Blogs have from time to time seen me go absolute­ly berserk on some enti­ties in Jamaica who believe the rule of law does not apply to them>
Some of them believe that what­ev­er sta­tion they occu­py that par­tic­u­lar dis­ci­pline and those so involved with them are immune from crim­i­nal pros­e­cu­tion. In short they believe they should nev­er be spo­ken to by police much less be arrest­ed even when they are caught crim­i­nal­ly cul­pa­ble. Some of the enti­ties I have named over the years include the sup­posed Human Rights agen­cies, the Norman Manley law School,those who sit in Judgement, the so-called-big-man ‚but most of all these despi­ca­ble vul­tures called “Criminal lawyers”.
Those of you who won­der why crime is so per­va­sive on the Island look no fur­ther , the lit­tle man on the street believe he is the only one sub­ject­ed to the laws and the prover­bial “big man is immune from pros­e­cu­tion”.
Where did the lit­tle man on the street get that feel­ing from?

If you are won­der­ing what those who feel the laws should not apply to them and their kind look like ? Look no fur­ther than the piece of shit pic­tured below.

President of the bar Asscociation of Jamaica Donovan Walker
President of the bar Asscociation of Jamaica Donovan Walker

Now read the story.

Chief Justice Zaila McCalla has launched a probe into the cir­cum­stances sur­round­ing how an attor­ney-at-law was arrest­ed inside the Supreme Court build­ing. The inves­ti­ga­tion was prompt­ed by a com­plaint from the Jamaican Bar Association. Association President, Donovan Walker, says the con­cern has also been raised with the Minister of Justice and the Commissioner of Police. Attorney, Earl Melhado, was arrest­ed on October 9 by inves­ti­ga­tors from the Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency (MOCA) as he exit­ed a court­room at the Supreme Court. According to Walker, this was an unprece­dent­ed move. The Bar Association pres­i­dent argues that arrest­ing an offi­cer of the court with­in the precincts of the Supreme Court build­ing sends a bad sig­nal. According to him, the action may be seen as an act of con­tempt. President of the Jamaican Bar Association, Donovan Walker, Walker argues that the dig­ni­ty of the courts must be observed by all offi­cers of the court, includ­ing the police.

This despi­ca­ble piece of crap does not care that his col­league com­mit­ted an offence for which he was arrest­ed, which is what ulti­mate­ly brings the courts into dis­re­pute and is dis­re­spect­ful to the process, he has a prob­lem with the police arrest­ing him with­in the con­fines of the courts.
What he wants is that it be kept secret.
We will not keep secret what these pre­ten­tious ass wipes are doing to Jamaica. Every year sev­er­al lawyers are struck from the list of those allowed to prac­tice law on the Island. Most of them are struck from the list for steal­ing clients money .
That is what dis­hon­ors the courts and is con­temp­tu­ous of the kan­ga­roo court sys­tem which obtains on the Island, not the actions of the police.
When you are alleged to break the law the law arrests you wher­ev­er when­ev­er, however

Dr.-Carl-Williams Commissioner of Police
Dr.-Carl-Williams
Commissioner of Police

This arro­gant son of a bitch wants the world to believe that arrest­ing one of his col­league is bad for the courts but the actions which pre­cip­i­tat­ed the arrest is not worth mentioning.
I hope the jack­ass of a police Commissioner does not get in the way of this arrest or those involved in it or we will move moun­tains to sup­port these officers.
Enough of those good old boys network.
While the Chief Justice is sup­pos­ed­ly inves­ti­gat­ing I would encour­age her to see if she can find out what hap­pened to the Cuban Light Bulb case why no one was pun­ished for what was a clear and unequiv­o­cal act of thievery.
The Country and the world would also like to know how one damn lit­tle back­wa­ter mag­is­trate can cir­cum­vent the entire process with­out consequence?

UPDATE .….…

Former Inspector Dadrick Henry
Former Inspector Dadrick Henry

In 2012 my for­mer team mem­ber Dadrick Henry was arrest­ed right there on the premis­es when police offi­cers rushed in and arrest­ed him in the pres­ence of his lawyers who scam­pered for cov­er.
Conspicuously present was a news team as well, in a mat­ter of min­utes it was
break­ing news on Television.
The Charlatan who heads the crim­i­nal lawyer fra­ter­ni­ty and his Organization had no com­ment then, no one thought it was out of the ordi­nary>.
Inspector Henry had just giv­en evi­dence in one of the very same Kangaroo court­room.
Inspector Henry was an offi­cer of the court!!!
Where was the Bar Association then. ?
We are going to make sure that this spe­cial treat­ment stop.
Jamaica a fi di whole a wi .
Nu man nu big­ga dan nu man, a wah du dem bway deh?

Trudeau Wins Canada’s Prime Minister Race; Harper Steps Down As Head Of Conservatives

Trudeau wins Canada's prime minister race; Harper steps down as head of Conservative
Trudeau wins Canada’s prime min­is­ter race; Harper steps down as head of Conservative

Canadians vot­ed for a sharp change in their gov­ern­ment Monday, return­ing a leg­endary name for lib­er­als, Trudeau, to the prime min­is­ter’s office and resound­ing­ly end­ing Conservative Stephen Harper’s near-decade in office. Justin Trudeau, the son of late Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, became Canada’s new prime min­is­ter after his Liberal Party won a major­i­ty of Parliament’s 338 seats. Trudeau’s Liberals had been favored to win the most seats, but few expect­ed the final mar­gin of vic­to­ry. “Tonight Canada is becom­ing the coun­try it was before,” Trudeau said.

He said pos­i­tive pol­i­tics led to his vic­to­ry. “We beat fear with hope,” Trudeau said. “We beat cyn­i­cism with hard work. We beat neg­a­tive, divi­sive pol­i­tics with a pos­i­tive vision that brings Canadians togeth­er. Most of all we defeat­ed the idea that Canadians should be sat­is­fied with less.” Harper, one of the longest-serv­ing Western lead­ers, stepped down as the head of Conservatives, the par­ty said in a state­ment issued as the scope of the loss became appar­ent. Tall and trim, Trudeau, 43, chan­nels the star pow­er — if not quite the polit­i­cal heft — of his father, who swept to pow­er in 1968 on a wave of sup­port dubbed “Trudeaumania.” Pierre Trudeau, who was prime min­is­ter until 1984 with a short inter­rup­tion, remains one of the few Canadian politi­cians known in America, his charis­ma often draw­ing com­par­isons to John F. Kennedy.

Justin Trudeau, a for­mer school­teacher and mem­ber of Parliament since 2008, becomes the sec­ond-youngest prime min­is­ter in Canadian his­to­ry. Trudeau has reen­er­gized the Liberal Party since its worst elec­toral defeat four years ago when they won just 34 seats and fin­ished third behind the tra­di­tion­al­ly weak­er New Democrat Party. Trudeau promis­es to raise tax­es on the rich and run deficits for three years to boost gov­ern­ment spend­ing. His late father, who took office in 1968 and led Canada for most of the next 16 years, is a sto­ried name in Canadian his­to­ry, respon­si­ble for the coun­try’s ver­sion of the Bill of Rights.

A bach­e­lor when he became prime min­is­ter, Pierre Trudeau dat­ed actress­es Barbra Streisand and Kim Cattrall and mar­ried a 22-year-old while in office. Canada has shift­ed to the cen­ter-right under Harper, who has low­ered sales and cor­po­rate tax­es, avoid­ed cli­mate change leg­is­la­tion and clashed with the Obama admin­is­tra­tion over the Keystone XL pipeline. “The peo­ple are nev­er wrong,” Harper said. “The dis­ap­point­ment is my respon­si­bil­i­ty and mine alone.” Harper said he called Trudeau to con­grat­u­late him. The Trudeau vic­to­ry will ease ten­sion with the U.S. Although Trudeau sup­ports the Keystone pipeline, he argues rela­tions should not hinge on the project. Harper has clashed with the Obama admin­is­tra­tion over oth­er issues, includ­ing the recent­ly reached Iran nuclear deal. Trudeau’s oppo­nents pil­lo­ried him as too inex­pe­ri­enced, but Trudeau embraced his boy­ish image on elec­tion day. Sporting jeans and a var­si­ty let­ter jack­et, he posed for a pho­to stand­ing on the thighs of two his col­leagues to make a cheer­lead­ing pyra­mid, his cam­paign plane in the back­drop with “Trudeau 2015” paint­ed in large red letters.

A sea of change here. We are used to high tides in Atlantic Canada. This is not what we hoped for,” said Peter MacKay, a for­mer senior Conservative Cabinet min­is­ter, short­ly after polls closed in Atlantic Canada. The Liberals were elect­ed or were lead­ing in 185 dis­tricts, with Trudeau win­ning his Montréal dis­trict. The par­ty need­ed 170 to gain a majority.

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The Conservatives were next with 97, fol­lowed by the New Democrats at 28 and Bloc Québécois with nine. Harper, 56, vis­it­ed dis­tricts he won in the 2011 elec­tion in an attempt to hang on to them. On Saturday, he posed with Toronto’s for­mer crack-smok­ing may­or, Rob Ford, in a con­ser­v­a­tive sub­urb. Harper had said he would step down if his par­ty did­n’t win the most seats. Former col­leagues of Harper said he would be per­son­al­ly dev­as­tat­ed to lose to a Trudeau, the lib­er­al lega­cy he entered pol­i­tics to destroy. Harper’s long-term goal was to kill the wide­ly entrenched notion that the Liberals — the par­ty of Pierre Trudeau and Jean Chretien — are the nat­ur­al par­ty of gov­ern­ment in Canada, and to rede­fine what it means to be Canadian.

Hurt when Canada entered a mild reces­sion this year, Harper made a con­tro­ver­sy over the Islamic face veil a focus of his cam­paign, a deci­sion his oppo­nents seized on to depict him as a divi­sive leader. “Canadians reject­ed the pol­i­tics of fear and divi­sion,” New Democratic Party leader Tom Mulcair said of the Harper Conservatives. Nelson Wiseman, a polit­i­cal sci­ence pro­fes­sor at the University of Toronto, said Canadians ral­lied around the Liberals as the anti-Harper vote. The New Democrats suf­fered a crush­ing defeat, falling to third place after win­ning offi­cial oppo­si­tion sta­tus in the last elec­tion. “I con­grat­u­lat­ed Mr. Trudeau on his excep­tion­al achieve­ment,” Mulcair said. Paula Mcelhinney, 52, of Toronto vot­ed Liberal to get rid of Harper. “I want to get him out; it’s about time we have a new leader. It’s time for a change,” she said.
Read more here :Trudeau wins Canada’s prime min­is­ter race; Harper steps down as head of Conservatives

Cops On The Hunt For Trelawny Cabbie Killer

Fifty-two-year-old Eric Lee Anderson died after he was shot in the head.
Fifty-two-year-old Eric Lee Anderson died after he was shot in the head.

CAREY PARK, Trelawny — The Trelawny police have launched a mas­sive man­hunt for a gun­man who brazen­ly mur­dered a taxi oper­a­tor and shot and injured a female cop and a motorist along the Carey Park main road in Trelawny, Sunday evening.

The deceased has been iden­ti­fied as 52-year-old Eric Lee Anderson of Zion dis­trict in the parish.

According to the police, Anderson was ply­ing the Ocho Rios to Montego Bay route when an argu­ment over fare devel­oped between him­self and one of the five pas­sen­gers he was transporting.

The row­dy pas­sen­ger report­ed­ly bran­dished a gun and fired a shot from a win­dow of the mov­ing motor vehi­cle. He then ordered Anderson not to stop upon reach­ing a sec­tion of the Carey Park main road where a police ser­vice vehi­cle was spot­ted. Read more here :Cops on the hunt for Trelawny cab­bie killer

Singing Kumbaya Will Not Do Shit To Stop Crime, Murderers Must Be Exterminated From Society

Holding hands and singing kumbaya will not stop crime neither will asking for Divine intervention, tough no nonsense no holes barred approach will
Holding hands and singing kum­baya will not stop crime nei­ther will ask­ing for Divine inter­ven­tion, a tough no non­sense no holes barred approach will.

The coun­try said it did not want so called “super-cops”, at least the pre­ten­tious social climbers from upper Saint Andrew did so real police offi­cers exit­ed the stage and left.

Many of us were say­ing this from Carolyn Gomes head­ed the crim­i­nal Rights Group which went by the acronym (JFJ) .
Both polit­i­cal par­ties joined with (JFJ) and Gomes, (FAST), The Human Rights Council, The nor­man Manley Law School. Some sec­tors of the University of the West Indies , The PMI, The Bar Association, The Public Defender’s office, the General media, and yes many who sit on the Bench in judge­ment of crim­i­nals are crim­i­nal cod­dlers them­selves and of course a host of oth­ers helped in reshap­ing the Police depart­ment mak­ing it a paper tiger.
For all intents and pur­pos­es the JCF is noth­ing more than a park­ing lot for peo­ple who left the University of the West Indies could find no work and was seek­ing a paycheck.
Terrence Williams (right) commissioner of the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM), Hamish Campbell, (centre) IDECOM's assistant commissioner and Dave Lewis, INDECOM's director of complaints central region at a Gleaner Editors' Forum last Friday. (Source: jamaicagleaner.com)
Terrence Williams (right) com­mis­sion­er of the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM), Hamish Campbell, (cen­tre) IDECOM’s assis­tant com­mis­sion­er and Dave Lewis, INDECOM’s direc­tor of com­plaints cen­tral region.
In many instances the police force is a large bunch of wus­si­fied know noth­ings who as one my friends said runs away at the first sound of gunfire.
This of course is true as I found out in 1988 when three of us encoun­tered a deter­mined assas­sin on Blackwood Terrace. The punk opened fire at point blank range hit­ting a man we were escort­ing home. He had just made a report at the sta­tion about a threat on his life.
I total­ly under­stand the press­ing incli­na­tion to run the oth­er way when the sounds of a .45 revolver rever­ber­ates in the nar­row con­fines of the zinc fences which adorned both sides of Blackwood ter­race then.
In the pitch black­ness of the night the next muz­zle-flash I saw was that of the weapon being dis­charged and the bul­let hit­ting me in the hip to but­tox area of my left side as I grabbed the assailant try­ing to neu­tral­ize him before he could turn the weapon on me.
By this time my two com­rades had long decid­ed they weren’t going to wait around to fig­ure out whether it was a “dup­py or a gun­man” they were gone.
It was­n’t my train­ing , it was deter­mi­na­tion but most of all unbri­dled anger that that piece of excre­ment had shot a total­ly inno­cent man and had the gall to shoot me.
Under no cir­cum­stances would I be a vic­tim to this punk nei­ther would the tar­get of his ini­tial mur­der­ous intent. Minutes lat­er with blood soaked shoes I hoist­ed the groan­ing man’s hand around my neck and began the labo­ri­ous trek down to Red Hills Road where we parked the police car.
In my waist was my ser­vice pis­tol and in my pock­et was the gleam­ing .45 revolver I took from the piece of human waste.
Police offi­cers can­not be afraid to be police, either you are or leave.
Members of the JCF are scared shit­less to do their job because one lit­tle man with a napoleon­ic com­plex has hijacked the process and the stu­pid Jamaican pub­lic has it’s head too far up it’s col­lec­tive ass it fig­ure it out.
As a for­mer front-line cop I want to hear noth­ing from arm-chair gen­er­als nor key­board heroes who don’t know shit about what it takes to do Police work in that place.
Gomes
Gomes
The Police force has got­ten worse instead of bet­ter in every way .
Of course one can­not exclude the fact that the JCF was front-loaded with thou­sands of poor­ly trained, and in many cas­es bare­ly com­pe­tent mem­bers of the ISCF who under­went no retraining. 
Additionally there is the issue of the women now in the depart­ment , many of whom make no dif­fer­ence in the fight against crime.
This is in no way an attempt to dis­par­age the con­tri­bu­tion nor the capa­bil­i­ties of women in general.
It is mere­ly a hon­est assess­ment of the facts as I saw them over the years.
I have worked with some capa­ble women and I know for cer­tain many of them are as capa­ble as some men are and in rare cas­es more so.
Notwithstanding, in the con­text of Jamaican police train­ing and prece­dent of women as effec­tive crime fight­ers the vast major­i­ty of female offi­cers have been mere win­dow dressing.
Again let me has­ten to say this is not an indict­ment on all female offi­cers, and yes there have been no short­age of dead-wood male officers.
With that said I fun­da­men­tal­ly believe that were the pow­ers that be seri­ous about crime fight­ing the entire JCF would have to be debriefed and retrained then the oth­er com­po­nents added in order to secure a com­pe­tent and capa­ble Police Department.
Of course one has to rea­son­able debate whether the grandiose know noth­ing vil­lage lawyers which form a huge part of the Jamaican pop­u­la­tion, many of whom spend the bet­ter part of their day on web­sites and oth­er social media crit­i­ciz­ing every­thing the police does actu­al­ly deserve a com­pe­tent police force?

Suffering’ Early Retirees From JCF Threaten Lawsuit

download (11)A group of police offi­cers, who opt­ed for ear­ly retire­ment from the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF), is now threat­en­ing legal action against the Government for out­stand­ing compensation.

The dis­grun­tled retirees said they are fac­ing severe hard­ship, that they are at a stage of des­per­a­tion after years of being told to “hold strain”, and that they will be tak­ing their grous­es to the Office of the Public Defender.

Is more than 30 years of my life I served my coun­try, nev­er miss a day from work, and after all of that I made the deci­sion to retire from the JCF on the promise that if I took up the ear­ly retire­ment offer I would be ful­ly com­pen­sat­ed. Now almost two years have passed and still noth­ing has hap­pened,” a 57-year-old com­plainant told Jamaica Observer recently.

He, like the oth­er retirees quot­ed for this sto­ry, asked not to be named or pho­tographed for fear of retribution.

My life has now fall­en into sham­bles,” the frail-look­ing man added, with tears freely flowing.

He showed a doc­u­ment from a finan­cial insti­tu­tion warn­ing that his house would be placed on auc­tion with­in a few days if he did not make out­stand­ing payments.

According to anoth­er, who said he retired after 35 years of ser­vice, his daugh­ter is in need of life-sav­ing surgery which he’s not able to afford.

I don’t know where to turn. As a big man I cry so much time,” he said. “I can’t cry anymore.”

A 59-year-old retiree said his case was so dire he could no longer find basic items such as food.

I cred­it from the shops in my area so much, promis­ing them that I would get my pen­sion,” he said. “I am now afraid to go back home to face this embar­rass­ing sit­u­a­tion.” He too served in the JCF for over 30 years.

It hard to see me spend all my life serv­ing a cause, risk­ing life and limb to serve and pro­tect; and what do we get?” he said before break­ing down.

He claimed that many of his for­mer col­leagues died wait­ing on the promised payment.

To make mat­ters worse, the retirees said, they have received reports that some who were late appli­cants to the ear­ly retire­ment incen­tive pro­gramme have been receiv­ing pay­ments ahead of them.

However, Lucius Thomas, the for­mer com­mis­sion­er of police — who heads the wel­fare com­mit­tee review­ing, among oth­er things, the pen­sion of retired police­men and women — has sought to clar­i­fy the issue.

Read more here : ‘Suffering’ ear­ly retirees from JCF threat­en lawsuit

Crime In Jamaica Can Only Be Dealt With If We Are Prepared To Overturn The Apple Cart.

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It’s almost impos­si­ble to keep up with the killings in Jamaica these days, there are sim­ply too many killings on a dai­ly basis for one to come to grips with them so we relate to only those with extreme shock value.
We don’t both­er pay­ing atten­tion to the body dis­cov­ered with chop wounds in bush­es, or the woman found in a gul­ly raped and mur­dered. Neither are we con­cerned about the body of a man dis­cov­ered with gun­shot wounds in cane fields . Those we don’t both­er to count. Those are par for the course. For those killings we cre­ate a men­tal dis­con­nect and we men­tal­ly move on.

We have desen­si­tized our­selves to the num­ber of mur­ders on the Island despite the dis­tinct like­li­hood of one get­ting gunned down based on the sheer vol­ume of killings and the small­ness of the space in which they occur.
Staying alive in Jamaica has become an ardu­ous dai­ly challenge.
Law abid­ing Jamaicans have large­ly resigned them­selves to the like­ly real­i­ty they will die by the gun if not today then some­time in the not too dis­tant future.
Jamaica did not get to this place overnight it took decades to get there and it cer­tain­ly will not change overnight.

For decades Jamaicans have sub­con­scious­ly built their homes and dec­o­rat­ed them with ornate iron­work- grill fortifications.
It was an uncon­scious state of met­al sur­ren­der to the forces of evil and may­hem. It said if I die I would pre­fer not to die in my home and cer­tain­ly not while I sleep.
Unfortunately that tac­it and unwit­ting agree­ment with the pur­vey­ors of mur­der did not pre­clude them from the vicious blood­lust of the Island’s killer, they sim­ply ripped the grill apart and vis­it death and destruc­tion anyway.

Firefighters work at putting out a blaze that gutted this fourbedroom house at 3 Benson Terrace in Norbrook, St Andrew.
Firefighters work at putting out a blaze that gut­ted this four bed­room house at 3 Benson Terrace in Norbrook, St Andrew.

The truth is that the for­ti­fi­ca­tions would be worth­while if there was a capa­ble and com­pe­tent Police depart­ment capa­ble of respond­ing with­in sec­onds of receiv­ing dis­tress calls.
Nevertheless in the mur­der cul­ture of Jamaica none of it makes sense because in the end one has to brave the dan­gers of step­ping out­side their home where the pos­si­bil­i­ty of get­ting gunned down is one in 30.000.
Thus far this year over a thou­sand peo­ple have been report­ed mur­dered. This num­ber is in no way cred­i­ble when con­sid­ered against the many peo­ple who sim­ply dis­s­a­pear and are nev­er seen again.

The Government and the Police ratio­nal­ize the may­hem by seek­ing to con­sole the nation and the world with plat­i­tudes . They argue that the bulk of the mur­dered vic­tims are con­nect­ed with the lot­to scam trade which is rife on the Island.
As if those lives are disposable.
What we have learned over the years is that the “lot­to-scam” devel­oped on the Island because many of the chief oper­a­tives were and still are mem­bers of the rul­ing People’s National Party Administration.
It has now metas­ta­sized into a much larg­er prob­lem involv­ing peo­ple from all walks of life includ­ing Police, cler­gy and Jamaicans from all walks of life.

The pop­u­lar cul­ture now treat this scourge which attacks the vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty of aged for­eign­ers as a nec­es­sary evil . Some with­in the Administration have called for those ben­e­fit­ting from it to spend some of the ill-got­ten pro­ceeds on education.
In oth­er words they want the pro­ceeds of crime spent on edu­cat­ing young­sters . Despite the fact that the illic­it gains ought to be con­fis­cat­ed and if pos­si­ble returned to their right­ful own­ers or at worse spent putting those involved in jail.
It’s a regres­sive rea­son­ing which makes sense to Administration offi­cials many of whom are involved or oth­er­wise believe the word “edu­ca­tion” jus­ti­fies the tak­ing of prop­er­ty from the old and vul­ner­a­ble and giv­ing it to the poor.
It is a kind of Robin-Hood men­tal­i­ty which finds com­fort and fer­tile soil only in a place like Jamaica and cer­tain­ly among the warped think­ing of Jamaicans.

HOW DID JAMAICA GET TO THIS?
Well inten­tioned People Jamaicans and oth­ers, have asked me how did the once beau­ti­ful Island get to this ?
On every occa­sion I answer “the Island is still beau­ti­ful, the peo­ple are the problem”
The peo­ple are opin­ion­at­ed , igno­rant and in most cas­es hell-bent on giv­ing their opin­ions on things they haven’t both­ered to study or acquaint them­selves with.
Everyone has opin­ions on every­thing they know noth­ing about.
That’s a seri­ous prob­lem. We dis­agree not because we have facts in sup­port of our posi­tion but sim­ply for the sake of being disagreeable.
Some seem to rel­ish try­ing to impress oth­ers they are smart. Unfortunately we end up with a coun­try that is now a crim­i­nal paradise.

So when I answer peo­ple’s ques­tions on my coun­try’s crime prob­lem I tell them there are a lot of morons who are inform­ing the debate.
I tell them there is no seri­ous com­mit­ment to the rule of law.
I tell them we are a nation of intel­lec­tu­al­ly chal­lenged monday-morning-quarterbacks.
I tell them we pon­tif­i­cate and we grand­stand because we are a nation full of shit.
Yes I also tell them we are a nation which glo­ri­fies crim­i­nals and hate police offi­cers and the rule of law because we are too stu­pid and full of shit to under­stand the val­ue of a sta­ble society .

I explain to them that we have a Government and a polit­i­cal sys­tem which sur­vives and thrives on crime.
That yes politi­cians encour­age crime as a way of life while they pil­fer pub­lic funds and fat­ten their wallets.
I take pains to explain to them that the Government look the oth­er way because it is inher­ent­ly cor­rupt and that it allows crim­i­nal­i­ty as an escape valve for those in the coun­try who have crim­i­nal inten­tions and to cov­er it’s own incompetence.
I explain that our police is under­staffed , under­paid, under-equipped, under-trained ‚under­paid and unappreciated.
Nevertheless I tell those who will lis­ten that the police lead­er­ship is incom­pe­tent, mis­guid­ed, afraid and basi­cal­ly no help to the offi­cers who need their sup­port in the streets.
I explain that young offi­cers are not prop­er­ly super­vised , they are basi­cal­ly unaware of their pow­ers and thus they are hes­i­tant and con­fused , some­thing which is not lost on the Island’s grow­ing crim­i­nal fraternity.

See evi­dence here :POLICE SPOT CHECK IN TRELAWNY TURNS DEADLY

When I dis­cuss our nation’s crime sit­u­a­tion with oth­ers they ask why is crime such a thriv­ing busi­ness with the police unable to do any­thing about it ? I tell them the above and I also tell them that rather than fix those prob­lems the Government dou­bles down by throw­ing it’s sup­port behind anoth­er lay­er of bureau­cra­cy which feeds the ego of some but does noth­ing to stop seri­ous crime on the island. When they ask what I mean?
I explain that the empha­sis is not on elim­i­nat­ing crime it is about mak­ing sure the police can­not appro­pri­ate­ly go after criminals.
So in many cas­es the police does­n’t anymore.
FEDERATION BLAST INDECOM, RIGHTS GROUP, POLITICIANS, AT SLAIN COPS FUNERAL

Criminals are embold­ened the more we go after police who have to deal with them. It requires a del­i­cate bal­ance of ensur­ing that our police offi­cers show fideli­ty to the laws they are sworn to uphold while they tena­cious­ly go after those who make con­scious deci­sions to cause harm to others.
As we strive to hold our offi­cers account­able we must bal­ance that desire with an unre­lent­ing sup­port of them as they root out the most vicious vile crea­tures from among us.
Our soci­eties depend on it.
In Jamaica some of the edu­cat­ed spend their time show­ing just how great they are at observ­ing the let­ter and the spir­it of the law , usu­al­ly all their efforts in that regard are expend­ed set­ting vicious killers free.
If crime in Jamaica is ever to be seri­ous­ly tack­led the entire apple cart must be overturned.
Any yes it may mean cut­ting off the head of the snake.

Police Spot Check In Trelawny Turns Deadly

The scene on Carey Park main road in Trelawny where a taxi driver was shot dead and a policewoman shot and injured. (Photo: Mark Cummings)
The scene on Carey Park main road in Trelawny where a taxi dri­ver was shot dead and a police­woman shot and injured. (Photo: Mark Cummings)

Information is sketchy at this time, but OBSERVER ONLINE has learnt that the taxi oper­a­tor was killed by gun­men who were trav­el­ling in his car, after he was sig­nalled to stop by police officers.

After the dri­ver brought the motor vehi­cle to a halt, alleged eye­wit­ness­es say the gun­men opened fire on the taxi dri­ver and then turned their weapons on the cops, injur­ing a woman constable.

She has since been tak­en to hos­pi­tal and is report­ed­ly in seri­ous condition.

The gun­men escaped on foot.

It is not clear if the oth­er pas­sen­gers in the motor vehi­cle were injured.

Mark Cummings
Story orig­i­nat­ed here..Police spot check in Trelawny turns deadly

Thanks To Dr Criss And SUNY Choir . Rest In Peace Kodi K Beckles

Thanks to SUNY Plattsburgh Associate Professor of Chemistry and Music Director for the SUNY Plattsburgh College Gospel Choir, Dr. Dexter Criss and the choir for tak­ing the long trip down from Plattsburgh New York to deliv­er an awe­some evening of musi­cal excel­lence at the Beulah Baptist Church at the Invitation of our senior Pastor the Reverend Dr. Jesse Voyd Bottoms.

Dr Criss and Plattsburgh choir in concert at Beaulah Baptist Church Poughkeepsie
Dr Criss and Plattsburgh choir in con­cert at Beaulah Baptist Church Poughkeepsie

Scenes from the performance of the SUNY Plattsburgh Gospel choir in concert at Beulah Baptist Church
Scenes from the per­for­mance of the SUNY Plattsburgh Gospel choir in con­cert at Beulah Baptist Church

More of that wonderful evening of music and fellowship
More of that won­der­ful evening of music and fellowship

Together with the Marist College and Beulah Baptist Church Choirs
Together with the Marist College and Beulah Baptist Church Choirs

Our son Kodi Kadeem Beckles attended Suny Plattsburgh before he was taken from us . Our lives will never ever be the same . Every day I grieve and cry for you my son .
Our son Kodi Kadeem Beckles attend­ed Suny Plattsburgh before he was tak­en from us .
Our lives will nev­er ever be the same .
Every day I grieve and cry for you my son .

Our family... Nothing make our days easier since you left ... For me I simply try to survive each day I wake up . I never wanted to live in a world without you.
Our fam­i­ly…
Nothing make our days eas­i­er since you left …
For me I sim­ply try to sur­vive each day I wake up .
I nev­er want­ed to live in a world with­out you.

I grieve each day while I hold onto his word , it's all I have, that one day we will be reunited , now I simply live for that day. For no deeper love have any parent felt for his child. No deeper pain has a parent felt for his child. For no greater burden has life been since you left.
I grieve each day while I hold onto his word , it’s all I have, that one day we will be reunit­ed , now I sim­ply live for that day.
For no deep­er love have any par­ent felt for his child.
No deep­er pain has a par­ent felt for his child.
For no greater bur­den has life been since you left.

If You Thought Police Violence Was Bad On The Streets Look At What’s Happening In American Schools

In this inci­dent you will see what is hap­pen­ing in America today even as America seeks to tell oth­er Nations how to behave it’s Jackbooted goons are actu­al­ly doing this to lit­tle boys.
Oh by the way did I men­tion that this is not hap­pen­ing on the streets, this kind of Governmental aggres­sion is actu­al­ly hap­pen­ing in the schools.
On Wednesday, fel­low stu­dents and friends of 15-year-old Tyler Deburgo filmed him being need­less­ly body slammed by a police offi­cer at William Tolman High School in Pawtucket, R.I.

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From the looks of the video and inter­views with eye­wit­ness­es, Tyler was an inno­cent onlook­er as his friend, Ivander, was being arrest­ed by police inside of the school. When the offi­cer grabs Tyler by the throat and bru­tal­ly slams him to the ground, you can hear the out­rage from fel­low stu­dents grow­ing and teach­ers attempt­ing to calm them down. It’s hor­ren­dous that this lev­el of bru­tal­i­ty is hap­pen­ing inside of our schools. Just last week in Texas, a very sim­i­lar case of police bru­tal­i­ty took place.

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Murder Toll Moves Close To 1,000 Mark

 file photo of police at a crime scene.
file pho­to of police at a crime scene.

CRIMINALS who con­tin­ue to wreak hav­oc across the island have now snuffed out the lives of close to 1,000 peo­ple since the start of the year. Statistics gath­ered by the Jamaica Observer showed that, up to the 14th of October, 981 peo­ple have been killed, which is a 25.4 per cent increase in killings when com­pared to cor­re­spond­ing peri­od last year when 781 mur­ders were record­ed. Statistics show that the parish of St James con­tin­ues to record the high­est num­ber of mur­ders, record­ing 171 so far, com­pared to 111 up to October 14 last year.

Clarendon fol­lows close­ly behind with 107 mur­ders, com­pared to 71 last year this time. Hanover also has record­ed a big jump, with 54 mur­ders up to October 14, com­pared to 30 over the same peri­od in 2014. Police say this is the high­est ever for the tiny parish. Police have blamed crim­i­nals involved in the lot­to scam for the bulk of mur­ders com­mit­ted in the west­ern parish­es. If the killings con­tin­ue at this rate, the coun­try could end the year with more than 1,200 mur­ders. The coun­try end­ed 2014.
Read more here : Murder toll moves close to 1,000 mark

Violence Erupts As Palestinians And Israel Forces Clash In Jerusalem, West Bank

A Palestinian uses a sling shot to throw stones during clashes with Israeli troops at Qalandia checkpoint between Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah (AP photo
A Palestinian uses a sling shot to throw stones dur­ing clash­es with Israeli troops at Qalandia check­point between Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah (AP photo

Violence between Palestinian pro­test­ers and Israeli secu­ri­ty forces spread beyond the walls of Jerusalem’s old city on Friday, with at least eight Palestinians shot in clash­es in the West Bank and Israeli police­men injured by fire­bombs in a restive part of the city. In a rare deci­sion, Israeli lead­ers called up a few hun­dred bor­der police reservists to beef up secu­ri­ty as ten­sions rise over Jerusalem’s most sen­si­tive holy site. One Israeli civil­ian has been killed in the vio­lence since Sunday. In the West Bank, vio­lent protests broke out after Muslim prayers Friday after­noon. The Palestinian Red Crescent said 8 Palestinians were seri­ous­ly hurt after being shot by live rounds. About 20 were light­ly hurt in clash­es with Israeli sol­diers, it said. Two Palestinians were shot and wound­ed while throw­ing fire­bombs at Rachel’s Tomb in Bethlehem, police said.

Palestinians also clashed with Israeli forces in Hebron, Qalandia and else­where. The police­men were attacked on Friday near the area in Jerusalem where an Israeli man died ear­li­er in the week after Palestinians pelt­ed his car with rocks. Palestinians threw fire­bombs and rocks at the offi­cers, and three of them were tak­en to a hos­pi­tal, author­i­ties said. Emergency ser­vices said one offi­cer was shot in the arm. Most of the unrest had until now focused on Jerusalem’s most sen­si­tive holy site — a hill­top com­pound sacred to both Jews and Muslims. The com­pound is a fre­quent flash­point and its fate is a core issue at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

It is known to Jews as the Temple Mount, site of the two bib­li­cal Jewish tem­ples and the religion’s holi­est site. Muslims revere it as the Noble Sanctuary and it is Islam’s third holi­est spot, where they believe Prophet Muhammad ascend­ed on a vis­it to heav­en. Since Israel cap­tured east Jerusalem from Jordan in 1967, Jews have been allowed to vis­it but not pray at the com­pound. Under an arrange­ment, Muslim author­i­ties man­age the site’s reli­gious and civil­ian affairs under Jordanian super­vi­sion, while Israeli police over­see secu­ri­ty. Palestinians say in the last two months there has been a new devel­op­ment where Israel has inter­mit­tent­ly restrict­ed some Muslims from the com­pound when Jews vis­it. Israel says this is to reduce fric­tion, but Palestinians claim that Israel intends to estab­lish Muslim-free Jewish vis­it­ing hours, which they fear could lead to upsets in the frag­ile arrange­ment in place.

Israel has reit­er­at­ed its posi­tion that it has no plans to change the sta­tus quo at the site. But even rumors to the con­trary are enough to spark vio­lence. The unrest began Sunday on the eve of the Jewish new year hol­i­day of Rosh Hashanah when Palestinians bar­ri­cad­ed them­selves inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque and threw rocks and fire­crack­ers at offi­cers. Police said pipe bombs were also found there.

Palestinians run as Israeli troops use a water canon to disperse protesters during clashes in Jalazoun refugee camp, near the West Bank city of Ramallah (AP photo)
Palestinians run as Israeli troops use a water canon to dis­perse pro­test­ers dur­ing clash­es in Jalazoun refugee camp, near the West Bank city of Ramallah (AP photo)

Rumors had been spread­ing among Palestinians of a “plot” to take over the site after activists from a Jewish group pub­li­cized a notice for “a mass vis­it to the Temple Mount” on Sunday. Police entered the hill­top com­pound three days in a row to dis­perse Palestinians who had holed up inside the mosque with stock­piles of rocks and fire­works. The Israeli response sparked con­dem­na­tions across the Arab world and con­cern that the ten­sions could spi­ral out of control.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas con­demned the clash­es in par­tic­u­lar­ly harsh lan­guage, claim­ing that none of Jerusalem’s holy sites belonged to Israel. Israel’s pub­lic secu­ri­ty min­is­ter Gilad Erdan on Friday blamed Abbas for “incite­ment and lies” that led to vio­lence. He said that by bring­ing explo­sive mate­ri­als and rocks into the holy site, pro­test­ers had turned the “house of wor­ship” into a “ware­house of terror.”

Earlier, parliament’s for­eign affairs and defense com­mit­tee decid­ed in a “spe­cial dis­cus­sion” Friday to call up bor­der police reserves to beef up secu­ri­ty. Police have put thou­sands of offi­cers on patrol. Authorities also banned Muslim men under the age of 40 from pray­ing at the site in an attempt to curb vio­lence as most­ly younger Palestinians throw rocks at the site. Saudi Arabia’s King Salman has tele­phoned world lead­ers includ­ing U.S. President Barack Obama, British Prime Minister David Cameron, Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, urg­ing them to take mea­sures at the U.N. Security Council to stem the unrest, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

He told the lead­ers in his calls Thursday that “such aggres­sion fla­grant­ly vio­lates the holi­ness of reli­gions and gives a hand to fan extrem­ism and vio­lence in the entire world,” the report said. He also spoke with Abbas con­cern­ing the devel­op­ments. Elsewhere in Israel, a rock­et fired from Gaza explod­ed in the bor­der town of Sderot on Friday evening, the mil­i­tary said. The town has been hard-hit by rock­ets from neigh­bor­ing Gaza, ruled by the Islamic mil­i­tant group Hamas, over the years. Israeli media said the rock­et Friday dam­aged a house and a bus. Nobody was hurt.
Violence erupts as Palestinians and Israel forces clash in Jerusalem, West Bank

Lamar Odom Fighting For His Life Found Unconscious In Nevada Brothel

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Lamar Odom

Fighting for His Life

Found Unconscious at Nevada Brothel

Lamar is still in a coma and his heart is fail­ing … our source says he is hav­ing seri­ous prob­lems with his kid­neys and lungs as well. Khloe Kardashian is cur­rent­ly by his side.

9:30 PM PT — Lamar is still alive, but he is breath­ing with the assis­tance of machines and remains in crit­i­cal con­di­tion … accord­ing to sources close to the situation.

7:15 PM PT — The Nye County Sheriff says the air­lift of Lamar had to be scratched because his 6′10″ frame was too big for the chop­per. Instead, he was rushed by ambu­lance to a Las Vegas hospital.

The Sheriff also says the call came in at 3:15 PM for an unre­spon­sive male at the Love Ranch. Paramedics treat­ed Odom and he was tak­en to a near­by hos­pi­tal. Sheriff’s detec­tives con­duct­ed an inves­ti­ga­tion at the broth­el. It’s unclear what, if any­thing, they found on scene.

7:05 PM PT — Sources tell us Khloe and Kim Kardashian … as well as Kris Jenner are head­ing to Las Vegas short­ly to see Lamar at the hos­pi­tal.update_grey_gray_barLamar Odom is fight­ing for his life after falling into uncon­scious­ness at Dennis Hof’s Love Ranch South in Pahrump, Nevada … TMZ Sports has learned.

Sources at the Love Ranch tell us … 35-year-old Odom arrived at the Ranch Saturday and was par­ty­ing with the girls for days. A source at the Ranch said Lamar was tak­ing an herbal sub­sti­tute for Viagra.

We spoke with Hof … who tells us Tuesday after­noon, a woman went into Odom’s room in the VIP suites and found him unconscious.

We’re told the woman began scream­ing for the man­ag­er — who called 911.

The man­ag­er rolled Lamar over on his side and saw “mucus-type liq­uid com­ing out of his nose and mouth.”

An ambu­lance took Lamar to Pahrump hos­pi­tal, where doc­tors intu­bat­ed him … an indi­ca­tion he could not breathe on his own.

We’re told Lamar is being air­lift­ed from the hos­pi­tal to Las Vegas for more treatment.

Our sources tell us, “It’s not good.”

We’re told Lamar had been par­ty­ing at the ranch by him­self — with no friends or entourage — and is now alone at the hospital.

The ranch staff says they want to be in the room with Lamar but since they’re not fam­i­ly they’re not allowed.

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Read more: http://​www​.tmz​.com/​2​0​1​5​/​1​0​/​1​3​/​l​a​m​a​r​-​o​d​o​m​-​u​n​c​o​n​s​c​i​o​u​s​-​b​r​o​t​h​e​l​-​h​o​s​p​i​t​a​l​/​#​i​x​z​z​3​o​Z​s​9​0​sh3

Criminal Coddling Court Of Appeal Blasts Bunting But The Minister Was Right In My Book

Panton
Panton

National Security Minister Peter Bunting signed a depor­ta­tion order against a Curaco nation­al Shurendy Quant in 2013 whom he labeled a drug king­pin and kicked his ass out of Jamaica and I say “BRAVO MINISTER”.
Quant was a pas­sen­ger trav­el­ling in a taxi­cab which the police stopped and searched in St Ann in which gan­ga was found the cab­driv­er claimed the wed was his.

Quant who was not a legal Jamaica res­i­dent was tak­en to the Police Narcotics Division in Kingston where depor­ta­tion pro­ceed­ings were com­menced against him despite the incom­pe­tent police not charg­ing him with a crime.T
his was an egre­gious error you nev­er release any­one in a sit­u­a­tion like this with­out charge let them go to court and let the court decide whether the cab dri­ver is lying about own­ing the weed.

Incredibly, though Quant was in the coun­try ille­gal­ly he was able to amass a legal team to fight his depor­ta­tion pro­ceed­ings which saw a Magistrate decide to hold Saturday court to try and stave off his depor­ta­tion before the date decid­ed on by the Minister.
How unusu­al is that?
Jamaican courts love crim­i­nals, not just Jamaican crim­i­nals , it does not mat­ter where they come from they find all sorts of bull­shit argu­ments to delay justice.
So the courts of appeals took on the Minister lam­bast­ing him for send­ing Quant packing.

Now retired court of appeal pres­i­dent Seymour Panton, in the rul­ing, said he was “sur­prised” that the min­is­ter “does not know that a res­i­dent mag­is­trate may prop­er­ly sit and dis­pose of mat­ters on days oth­er than those that have been gazetted”.
The court also slammed Bunting for claim­ing igno­rance of an order by the Supreme Court bar­ring Quant’s depor­ta­tion. “In light of the inte­gral func­tion the min­is­ter plays in the depor­ta­tion of an alien, the asser­tion that he was igno­rant of the court’s order stay­ing his order is curi­ous. It is cer­tain­ly odd, in light of the cru­cial role he plays or ought to play in a depor­ta­tion, that he did­n’t acquaint him­self with the out­come of the proceedings,”.
Panton ram­bled on that the Minister should have com­mend­ed the mag­is­trate for hold­ing court on a Saturday because the Minister and Police found it odd the kind of accom­mo­da­tion which was afford­ed this accused alien.

Needless to say this pub­li­ca­tion sup­ports the Minister whole­heart­ed­ly, screw the Cangaroo crim­i­nal cod­dling court and Panton .
Literally every week Jamaican nation­als are deport­ed back to the coun­try from sev­er­al coun­tries, why the hell should Jamaica not do the same?
Why should we accom­mo­date a for­eign­er with every spe­cial accom­mo­da­tion we can and worse who the hell was this guy that he gen­er­at­ed such a flur­ry of support?
Good one Minister Bunting.

Court Of Appeal Blasts Bunting

BUNTING…
BUNTING

THE Court of Appeal has chid­ed secu­ri­ty min­is­ter Peter Bunting for his depor­ta­tion of a Curaçao nation­al notwith­stand­ing a court order not to do so in April 2013.

The court also rapped the min­is­ter for “cas­ti­gat­ing” a mag­is­trate’s deci­sion to hear an appli­ca­tion on a Saturday from lawyers rep­re­sent­ing Shurendy Quant, whom he had labeled a drug kingpin.

The court last week described Bunting’s state­ment regard­ing the mag­is­trate as “unfor­tu­nate” and said the min­is­ter should have instead com­mend­ed the magistrate.

Retired Court of Appeal President Justice Seymour Panton, in the rul­ing, said he was “sur­prised” that the min­is­ter “does not know that a res­i­dent mag­is­trate may prop­er­ly sit and dis­pose of mat­ters on days oth­er than those that have been gazetted”.

The court also slammed Bunting for claim­ing igno­rance of an order by the Supreme Court bar­ring Quant’s deportation.

In light of the inte­gral func­tion the min­is­ter plays in the depor­ta­tion of an alien, the asser­tion that he was igno­rant of the court’s order stay­ing his order is curi­ous. It is cer­tain­ly odd, in light of the cru­cial role he plays or ought to play in a depor­ta­tion, that he did­n’t acquaint him­self with the out­come of the pro­ceed­ings,” the court noted.

Bunting had signed an order on Friday, April 5, 2013 for the depor­ta­tion of Quant, after a taxi in which he was trav­el­ling in St Ann was found to con­tain gan­ja that the dri­ver of the vehi­cle sub­se­quent­ly claimed.

Quant was not charged but was tak­en to the Narcotics Division in Kingston where his attor­ney Chukwuemeka Cameron inquired about his release to no avail.

His attor­ney applied for a writ of habeas cor­pus before the mag­is­trate on Saturday, April 6, 2013.

The mag­is­trate then adjourned the mat­ter to the Monday after lit­tle infor­ma­tion was forth­com­ing when she inquired from the police offi­cer present the rea­son for Quant’s detention.

At the adjourned hear­ing, a Detective Inspector Johnson pre­sent­ed the court with two orders signed by Bunting for Quant’s depor­ta­tion. This was the first time the appel­lant was made aware of the depor­ta­tion orders.

The offi­cer informed the court that there was no nar­cotics inves­ti­ga­tion against Quant.

The mag­is­trate then adjourned the mat­ter for April 11, 2013, dur­ing which time Quant’s legal team filed in the Supreme Court a habeas cor­pus appli­ca­tion and an appli­ca­tion for judi­cial review of the min­is­ter’s depor­ta­tion order.

Quant’s legal team also obtained an inter­im order stay­ing Bunting’s order of depor­ta­tion. However, Quant was deport­ed on April 11, 2013, a day before his chal­lenge of Bunting’s order was sched­uled for hear­ing in the Supreme Court.

On that same day, Bunting told a pub­lic lec­ture at the University of the West Indies regard­ing Quant that, “There was a clear nation­al secu­ri­ty inter­est here, an alleged nar­cot­ic king­pin, want­ed inter­na­tion­al­ly… Interpol arrest warrant.”

He called the Saturday sit­ting of the court to hear Quant’s mat­ter “very unusu­al, high­ly puz­zling” and added that “it was very strange to the police offi­cers as well”.

Prior to that, Quant was nev­er informed that he was viewed as a nar­cot­ic king­pin and that there was an Interpol war­rant for him, nor was he giv­en a rea­son for his deportation.

Following his depor­ta­tion, Quant filed con­tempt of court action in the Supreme Court against Bunting, among oth­er things. But the court ordered that Quant deposit a mil­lion dol­lars in an account to cov­er Bunting’s legal cost should he fail in his court action.

He suc­cess­ful­ly appealed the Supreme Court rul­ing, with the Court of Appeal deliv­er­ing its deci­sion last week that Quant does not have to deposit the one mil­lion dollars.

It’s in that deci­sion that the appel­late court blast­ed the minister.

The court said that Bunting’s com­ments, if he was prop­er­ly quot­ed, lend cre­dence to Quant’s alle­ga­tion that the min­is­ter’s pro­nounce­ments tend­ed to and/​or were cal­cu­lat­ed to inter­fere with the admin­is­tra­tion and/​or course of justice.

His state­ment inveigh­ing against the mag­is­trate for her indus­try is unfor­tu­nate. The ratio­nale for a mag­is­trate or judge mak­ing himself/​herself avail­able at any time of day or night is to pre­vent an irre­versible wrong occur­ring, such as unlaw­ful depor­ta­tion,” the court said.

There was noth­ing sin­is­ter about the judge sit­ting on a Saturday after­noon to hear an appli­ca­tion for a habeas cor­pus writ. It was her duty to sit and she ought to have been com­mend­ed rather than cas­ti­gat­ed and have asper­sions pub­licly cast on her char­ac­ter,” the court added. Read more here : Court of Appeal blasts Bunting

Wrong-headed Focus On Crime Incredibly Costly For Jamaicans

JAMAICA MUST TACKLE WAVE OF POLICE KILLINGS
This was the head­line Amnesty International post­ed on its web­site March 8th 2012 , that head­line is still there almost three years later.
Additionally the London based Human Rights Group pro­ceed­ed to say .…

Police on the scene where 48-year-old Stenneth Smith was killed in downtown Kingston
Police on the scene where 48-year-old Stenneth Smith was killed in down­town Kingston

Quote; The killing of 21 peo­ple by Jamaican police in just six days must be sub­ject to a thor­ough inquiry, Amnesty International said as it called on the author­i­ties to mount an effec­tive inves­ti­ga­tion into recent and past police oper­a­tions. Six of the killings took place dur­ing a sin­gle police oper­a­tion in Denham Town, West Kingston, on 5 March. A 13-year-old girl died after report­ed­ly being caught up in the cross-fire between police and crim­i­nal sus­pects. Forty five peo­ple have been killed by police in Jamaica so far in 2012, accord­ing to press reports. “The recent wave of police killings in Jamaica is shock­ing but unfor­tu­nate­ly not unprece­dent­ed,” said Chiara Liguori, Caribbean researcher at Amnesty International. “The prob­lem is that police con­tin­ue to enter mar­gin­al­ized inner-city com­mu­ni­ties as if every­one there was a crim­i­nal sus­pect.” The last time such lev­els of police vio­lence were record­ed was dur­ing the state of emer­gency in May 2010 in West Kingston, where 76 peo­ple were killed over two days dur­ing an oper­a­tion by secu­ri­ty forces. Almost two years on, no one has yet been held respon­si­ble for those killings, and an inves­ti­ga­tion car­ried out by the Public Defender is still to be con­clud­ed. “If human rights abus­es such as police killings go unpun­ished, it will only open the door for more abus­es to take place,” said Chiara Liguori. Jamaica also has a bad record in terms of hold­ing those respon­si­ble to account and pro­vid­ing jus­tice and repa­ra­tions to vic­tims’ fam­i­lies. Out of more than 2,220 fatal shoot­ings by police record­ed between 2000 and 2010, only two offi­cers have been convicted.

 US Embassy Donates Forensic Vehicles to indecom The emphasis is focused on hampering the police who go after criminals while the criminals have free hand to murder at will.

US Embassy Donates Forensic Vehicles to inde­com
The empha­sis is focused on ham­per­ing the police who go after crim­i­nals while the crim­i­nals have free hand to mur­der at will.

Amnesty International acknowl­edged that the cre­ation of the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) in August 2010 has been a cru­cial step towards enhanc­ing inves­ti­ga­tions of abus­es by the secu­ri­ty forces. However, the orga­ni­za­tion believes author­i­ties in Jamaica must ensure INDECOM is pro­vid­ed with suf­fi­cient resources and col­lab­o­ra­tion from oth­er state agen­cies to con­duct effec­tive inves­ti­ga­tions that actu­al­ly lead to jus­tice for the vic­tims. Amnesty International’s research on police killings in Jamaica found that effec­tive inves­ti­ga­tions are ham­pered by a lack of inde­pen­dence in the bal­lis­tic and foren­sic ser­vices and by lim­it­ed resources which often con­tribute to the lack of jus­tice. “Faced with anoth­er wave of killings by the secu­ri­ty forces in West Kingston, the Jamaican author­i­ties must take deci­sive steps to fight impuni­ty,” said Chiara Liguori.“They should make all need­ed resources avail­able to ensure a prompt, inde­pen­dent and effec­tive inves­ti­ga­tion of the recent killings and appoint an inde­pen­dent com­mis­sion of inquiry to ensure that all human rights vio­la­tions com­mit­ted under the state of emer­gency do not go unpun­ished.https://​www​.amnesty​.org/​e​n​/​l​a​t​e​s​t​/​n​e​w​s​/​2​0​1​2​/​0​3​/​j​a​m​a​i​c​a​-​m​u​s​t​-​t​a​c​k​l​e​-​s​h​o​c​k​i​n​g​-​w​a​v​e​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​k​i​l​l​i​n​gs/

Darlene street police station burned in 2010
Darlene street police sta­tion burned in 2010

It’s dif­fi­cult to tell the exact num­ber of Jamaicans who have been mur­dered in Jamaica since this state­ment was first released by the watch­dog group who cer­tain­ly were not killed by the Island’s secu­ri­ty forces .
However using crime sta­tis­tics pro­vid­ed by the police it is safe to say approx­i­mate­ly 4,800 Jamaicans have been report­ed killed since then.

There is a dis­tinct slant in the way this report was writ­ten to cre­ate false perceptions.The lan­guage is inflam­ma­to­ry and sug­ges­tive. The text devoid of bal­ance or con­text in which police killings occur in Jamaica.
Even if the state­ment was to be giv­en the time of day based on what one could argue is rea­son­able cause for con­cern, the lack of objec­tiv­i­ty and the gen­er­al one-sided slant of the report makes the writer and the Publication sig­nif­i­cant­ly less wor­thy of one’s time.

Hannah Town Police station burned 2010
Hannah Town Police sta­tion burned 2010

The report which offered a sweep­ing indict­ment and not much more, was equal­ly devoid of cred­i­bil­i­ty as it relates to the facts. No men­tion was made of the envi­ron­ment in which these police killings occurred.
No men­tion was made of the num­ber of offi­cers shot and killed.
There was no men­tion of the num­ber of offi­cers shot and injured
There was no men­tion of the fact that on aver­age 1600 homi­cides occur annually.
The very same decade would have seen rough­ly 16,000 Jamaicans slaugh­tered by criminals.
What the one-sided piece of pro­pa­gan­da-nar­ra­tive was con­cerned about was the num­ber of crim­i­nals killed by police.
Police and law abid­ing Jamaicans be damned.

Police personnel at the Denham Town Police Station hold hands in prayer after their colleague, Constable Lynden Barrett, was shot and killed in West Kingston.
Police per­son­nel at the Denham Town Police Station hold hands in prayer after their col­league, Constable Lynden Barrett, was shot and killed in West Kingston.

The Website the Guardian Reports the fol­low­ing since we actu­al­ly start­ed watch­ing inci­dents of police mur­der in the United States after the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson Missouri.
Fact: In the first 24 days of 2015, police in the US fatal­ly shot more peo­ple than police did in England and Wales, com­bined, over the past 24 years.
According to data col­lect­ed by the UK advo­ca­cy group Inquest, there have been 55 fatal police shoot­ings – total – in England and Wales from 1990 to 2014.
Fact: There has been just one fatal shoot­ing by Icelandic police in the country’s 71-year his­to­ry. The city of Stockton, California – with 25,000 few­er res­i­dents than all of Iceland com­bined – had three fatal encoun­ters in the first five months of 2015.
Fact: Police in the US fatal­ly shot more peo­ple in one month this year than police in Australia offi­cial­ly report­ed dur­ing a span of 19 years.

Zambrano-Montes was killed in February by offi­cers respond­ing to reports that he was throw­ing rocks at cars. The inci­dent was caught on video, with 17 shots fired; accord­ing to police, “five or six” struck Zambrano-Montes.

In Finland, accord­ing to chief inspec­tor Jukka Salmine, police fired just six bul­lets in all of 2013.By the num­bers: US police kill more in days than oth­er coun­tries do in years.

Baltimore Police officers arrest a man following the funeral of Freddie Gray near Mowdamin Mall
Baltimore Police offi­cers arrest a man fol­low­ing the funer­al of Freddie Gray near Mondawmin Mall

Despite the fact that American crim­i­nals are some­times heav­i­ly armed, in many cas­es where police mer­ci­less­ly shoot cit­i­zens the sit­u­a­tion is as such that cops in oth­er coun­tries would have faced mur­der charges had they act­ed similarly.
In many cas­es sit­u­a­tions are esca­lat­ed by police them­selves in the United States in order to arrest or cre­ate false jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for assault­ing and killing cit­i­zens usu­al­ly Blacks or latino.
As a for­mer Jamaican Police Officer myself who dealt with dan­ger­ous and deter­mined crim­i­nals and was shot in the line of duty I have looked at video inci­dent after inci­dent and end­ed up with the same conclusion.
In many cas­es where American cops use lethal force, even when they pre­tend to be reluc­tant to use it,they even­tu­al­ly end up using it and in the end it still could have been avoid­ed, à la the killing of Khijame Powell etal.

Khijame Powell killed unnecessarily by st Louis police.Yes you may be legally justified to kill, but are you morally justified?
Khijame Powell
killed unnec­es­sar­i­ly by st Louis police.Yes you may be legal­ly jus­ti­fied to kill, but are you moral­ly justified?

In oth­er words even in sit­u­a­tions where life is not in dan­ger, the sus­pect has nowhere to go and dia­logue can be used, they even­tu­al­ly talk but end up killing sus­pects because he stepped for­ward with a knife, or as they clas­si­cal­ly say in police jar­gon “he lunged at them”.
The media gen­er­al­ly gob­ble up that lie and not only present it as fact, they defend and metas­ta­size it into believ­abil­i­ty and authenticity.
The only com­po­nent nec­es­sary to pre­vent some of these killings is time. Police offi­cials are reluc­tant to spend the nec­es­sary time to de-esca­late sit­u­a­tions because killing some­one who yells at them is so eas­i­ly and read­i­ly jus­ti­fied in America. So they rapid­ly esca­late minor sit­u­a­tions use lethal force and walk away.
No mat­ter how much one speak on police atroc­i­ty in America he would not even begin to scratch the sur­face of what real­ly goes on just below the surface.
Whether it’s cops rid­ing up and sum­mar­i­ly shoot­ing 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland Ohio then cal­lous­ly neglect­ing to ren­der first aid, or the count­less peo­ple, most­ly Black Americans who have been sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly sent to prison on trumped up charges it’s all the same.
Or worse the sys­tem­at­ic crim­i­nal col­lu­sion and lack of will which exist in Prosecutor’s office and the bla­tant refusal to pros­e­cute mur­der­er cops à la Eric Garner etal.

IN ALL OF THIS AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL HAS BEEN MOSTLY SILENT

Eric Garner murdered in plain view of the world not even as ham indictment. It's go f**k yourselves black people
Eric Garner mur­dered in plain view of the world not even as ham indict­ment.
It’s go f**k your­selves black people

In all of this Amnesty International has been large­ly silent save and except where it is too embar­rass­ing to remain silent like when events erupt­ed in Ferguson Missouri.
Amnesty inter­na­tion­al’s pre­oc­cu­pa­tion seem large­ly to rest with small impov­er­ished nations with cor­rupt Governments who are afraid to speak out of fear because they are oth­er­wise inher­ent­ly corrupt.
So the mas­sive ille­gal killings by police in the United States and the atroc­i­ties being met­ed out to Palestinians in their home­land by occu­py­ing Israelis is sim­ply par for the course for Amnesty International.

The empha­sis in Jamaica is not about catch­ing and bring­ing crim­i­nals who mass-mur­der cit­i­zens to jus­tice, the empha­sis has shift­ed to find­ing police at fault who go after the mur­der­ous demons.
Criminals in some cas­es are stupid.
Not always, Jamaican crim­i­nals are usu­al­ly very savvy they under­stand how to ful­ly exploit weak­ness­es in the crim­i­nal Justice sys­tem and they do.
They under­stand that the hands of the police are tied because a few pre­ten­tious “uncle tom n*****s” , or as my friend calls them “boasie slaves” think crime can be wished away.
Others like the “crim­i­nal lawyers” [dual-mean­ing] who stand against any changes to the present sys­tem are reap­ing a wind­fall. They have a win-win sys­tem in place, they win when police go after the thugs, they win when the (inde­com act) goes after officers.
What’s not to like ?

Israel, Palestinian Territories Suffering Worst Period Of Unrest In Years

Israeli Zaka volunteers carry a body following a shooting attack on a bus in an east Jerusalem Jewish settlement adjacent to the Palestinian neighbourhood of Jabal Mukaber on October 13, 2015. Two attackers opened fire on a bus while another assailant carried out a car and knife assault in Jerusalem, leaving two people dead and five wounded in two separate incidents, Israeli authorities said. AFP PHOTO / THOMAS COEX        (Photo credit should read THOMAS COEX/AFP/Getty Images)
Israeli Zaka vol­un­teers car­ry a body fol­low­ing a shoot­ing attack on a bus in an east Jerusalem Jewish set­tle­ment adja­cent to the Palestinian neigh­bour­hood of Jabal Mukaber on October 13, 2015. Two attack­ers opened fire on a bus while anoth­er assailant car­ried out a car and knife assault in Jerusalem, leav­ing two peo­ple dead and five wound­ed in two sep­a­rate inci­dents, Israeli author­i­ties said. AFP PHOTO /​THOMAS COEX (Photo cred­it should read THOMAS COEX/​AFP/​Getty Images)

Palestinian men armed with knives and a gun killed at least three peo­ple and wound­ed sev­er­al oth­ers in a string of attacks in Jerusalem and near Tel Aviv on Tuesday, police said, on a “Day of Rage” declared by Palestinian groups. With the worst unrest in years in Israel and the Palestinian ter­ri­to­ries show­ing no signs of abat­ing, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called a secu­ri­ty cab­i­net meet­ing for 3 p.m. to dis­cuss what police said would be new oper­a­tional plans.

Officials said Israel’s pub­lic secu­ri­ty min­is­ter was con­sid­er­ing whether to seal off Palestinian neigh­bor­hoods in East Jerusalem, home of many of the assailants of the past two weeks, from the rest of the city. Unlike their brethren in the occu­pied West Bank, Palestinians in East Jerusalem can trav­el in Israel with­out restric­tions. Israel annexed East Jerusalem after a 1967 war in a move that is not rec­og­nized inter­na­tion­al­ly. Adding to a grow­ing sense of Israeli pub­lic inse­cu­ri­ty, two Palestinians shot and stabbed pas­sen­gers on a bus in Jerusalem, killing two and injur­ing four, police said. One of the assailants was killed, an ambu­lance ser­vice spokesman said, and the oth­er captured.

We don’t know what to do, or where to walk,” Avi Shemesh, a wit­ness to the attack, told reporters. “They are Israel-haters and they need to be elim­i­nat­ed.” Minutes lat­er, anoth­er Palestinian rammed his car into a bus stop in the cen­ter of Jerusalem, then got out and began stab­bing pedes­tri­ans, killing one and wound­ing six, police said. They said the attack­er had been “neu­tral­ized”, with­out say­ing what this meant. Seven Israelis and 27 Palestinians, includ­ing nine alleged attack­ers and eight chil­dren, have died in almost two weeks of street attacks and secu­ri­ty crack­downs. The vio­lence has been stirred in part by Muslim anger over increas­ing Jewish vis­its to the al-Aqsa mosque com­pound in Jerusalem, Islam’s holi­est site out­side the Arabian Peninsula.
Read more here :Israel, Palestinian Territories Suffering Worst Period Of Unrest In Years

Question: When Is Shooting A 12-Year-Old Child Reasonable?

headshot (1)

 Executive Director, Center for Constitutional Rights

Answer: When the child is Black and the shoot­er is a police officer.

Welcome to America, where #BlackLivesMatter is a trend­ing hash­tag, but police impuni­ty is a lethal real­i­ty of Black life.

There’s an old say­ing that the def­i­n­i­tion of a con­sul­tant is “some­one who bor­rows your watch to tell you what time it is.” That is true when it comes to police experts as well. Cops and pros­e­cu­tors come from the same cul­ture. So it sur­pris­es no one that the experts hired by Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy McGinty to inves­ti­gate the fatal shoot­ing of Tamir Rice are read­ing the time from the watch sup­plied by law enforce­ment and have come to the same con­clu­sions as the coun­ty police and (let’s be hon­est) McGinty him­self: that the shoot­ing was “rea­son­able.”

You’re not like­ly to find any law enforce­ment per­son with­in a 100-mile radius who would dare speak out and say what we all know: This went down bad­ly (not just “trag­i­cal­ly,” as one of the experts put it) and the offi­cers should be held account­able. Law enforce­ment cul­ture does­n’t allow for peo­ple to break ranks with­out con­se­quences. So please, let’s not call these hired con­sul­tants “inde­pen­dent” or “out­side” experts. Their per­spec­tive is whol­ly with­in the law enforce­ment world.

An inde­pen­dent inves­ti­ga­tion would have asked the ques­tion: If the 911 caller could see that the “sus­pect” was a child and the gun “prob­a­bly a fake,” why could­n’t trained police offi­cers see that? An out­side per­spec­tive would have tak­en note that police arrest white sus­pects with real guns all the time with­out fir­ing a shot, let alone killing the sus­pect with­in two sec­onds of arriv­ing on the scene. And any observ­er who real­ly believes that Black lives mat­ter as much as white lives would have expressed out­rage that the two offi­cers involved did not admin­is­ter first aid to Rice after he was shot. He died the next day, and it’s a more than rea­son­able ques­tion whether the offi­cers’ cal­lous dis­re­gard for his life was the dif­fer­ence between life and death.

Also rel­e­vant to those of us out­side the warped world of police cul­ture: last December the Cleveland Police Department was hit with a report by the Department of Justicecrit­i­ciz­ing the exces­sive use of force by offi­cers and the unnec­es­sary use of weapons. In May, white Cleveland police offi­cers sued their own boss­es for being dis­crim­i­nat­ed against in favor of Black offi­cers on the same force. They say that the brass treats them more harsh­ly than Black offi­cers after use-of-force situations.

In a cul­ture like that, where cops feel aggriev­ed because they are cops, and feel espe­cial­ly aggriev­ed because they are white cops, it’s no won­der that the coun­ty police who inves­ti­gat­ed the Rice shoot­ing have issued no rec­om­men­da­tion and that the hired experts found the shoot­ing “rea­son­able.”

Which brings us back to McGinty, the pros­e­cu­tor. He is tak­ing the now famil­iar “neu­tral” approach to indict­ing the cop who shot Rice, an aban­don­ment of a pros­e­cu­tor’s actu­al job that seems to apply only in cas­es where cops have shot a Black per­son. Add to that McGinty’s fail­ure to con­vict Officer Michael Brelo in the 2012 police killing of an unarmed Black cou­ple and I’m sure the Cleveland Police Department sees, like the rest of us do, that the writ­ing is on the wall for yet anoth­er pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al fail­ure when the police kill Black people.

There is noth­ing remote­ly “rea­son­able” about any of this
See orig­i­nal sto­ry here : Question: When Is Shooting a 12-Year-Old Child Reasonable?