High Crime Rate A Shadow Over Caribbean Tourism — Study

AMI, United States (AFP) — The Caribbean and its pris­tine beach­es may be a tourist mag­net, but life in par­adise comes at a price: the soar­ing vio­lent crime rate is high­er than in Latin America or Africa.The study, made pub­lic Tuesday by the Interamerican Development Bank, is based on a sur­vey of 3,000 crime vic­tims in each of five coun­tries: the Bahamas, Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados, Jamaica and Suriname.

While the non-vio­lent crime rate is low, vio­lent crime rates “are among the high­est in the world”, the report says.

Nearly one in three said they had lost some­one to vio­lence. Guns are used about twice as often in rob­bery and three times as often in assault in the Caribbean as com­pared with the glob­al aver­age,” the report said.

The aver­age rate “of vic­tim­iza­tion by assault and threat (6.8 per cent) is high­er than in any oth­er region, includ­ing Latin America (4.7 per cent)” or Africa (5.2 per cent). The report states that almost half of all crimes go unre­port­ed to the police. The vic­tims are main­ly 18 to 25 year-old’s who live in poor neigh­bor­hoods far from the tourist resorts.

The Caribbean region “is right­ful­ly known for its beau­ty, warmth, cul­ture, music and, yes, beck­on­ing envi­ron­ment”, said Therese Turner-Jones, who heads the bank’s Caribbean Department.

But the dark­er side of hav­ing some of the world’s high­est vio­lent crime rates remains a cause for concern.”

One area of spe­cial con­cern is vio­lence against women and children.

We found that tol­er­ance of vio­lence against women and chil­dren is high­er than com­pa­ra­ble regions,” said Heather Sutton, the report’s lead researcher.

According to the study, one out of three adults approve beat­ing a woman if she is unfaith­ful, a rate high­er than in the United States or Latin America.

The lit­er­a­ture shows that high tol­er­ance is pre­dic­tive of high lev­els of actu­al vio­lence. This is one impor­tant risk fac­tor that per­pet­u­ates the cycle of vio­lence and delin­quen­cy,” the report said.