Jamaica Comes In At #5 In New Murder Hotspot Study

Crime scene in Kingston where an 11-month-old was murdered on Easter Monday.
Crime scene in Kingston where an 11-month-old was mur­dered on Easter Monday.

Jamaica comes in at num­ber 5 on the Homicide Monitor Map by the Igarape Institute of Brazil which reveals the glob­al dis­tri­b­u­tion of homi­ci­dal vio­lence. Latin America and the Caribbean dom­i­nate the top 10 spots on the state-of-the art inter­ac­tive map, with three Caribbean coun­tries, name­ly Anguilla, US Virgin Islands and Jamaica com­pris­ing the Caribbean contingent.

On Jamaica, the report notes, “In Jamaica, the gov­ern­ment is try­ing to dri­ve down the rate by using the threat of the death penal­ty, as well as police patrols, cur­fews and actions to break up and con­trol gangs.” The Homicide Monitor Map’s data was com­piled from pub­licly report­ed killing reports from 219 coun­tries from the new cen­tu­ry to the lat­est avail­able year.

Surprisingly, the US Virgin Islands comes up as the third most dan­ger­ous place in the world for mur­der with a rate of 52.6 per 100,000 per­sons. Half of the vic­tims of the Brazilian study showed they were aged between 15 and 29 with 92 per cent being male. More than 75 per cent were killed by guns.

Honduras has the high­est mur­der rate in the world, with 7,172 killings in 2012 – that’s 85.5 per 100,000 people.

The top 10 coun­tries for mur­der, accord­ing to the new study, are:

1. Honduras
2. Venezuela
3.US Virgin Islands
4. Belize
5. Jamaica
6. El Salvador
7. Anguilla
8. Guatemala
9. Swaziland
10. Columbia

Courtesy of Loop News Service