Terrorism In Jamaica

Let us walk hand in hand and help break down the bar­ri­ers in those zones of exclu­sion that cre­ate havens for criminality.”

These inspir­ing words from the 2011 prime minister’s inau­gu­ra­tion speech seem to have been for­got­ten by every­one, even the speaker.

The recent March Pen mas­sacre remind­ed many of sim­i­lar inci­dents that took place on Barnes Avenue in south St Andrew in 2005 and Lauriston in St Catherine in 2011.

October 5, 2005 is not a date that Randall Brown will for­get. Residents remem­ber the blood-cur­dling screams of his 10-year-old niece, Sasha Brown, as she called out to her neigh­bours for help as fire rav­aged the house she was locked in. The house was shot up and set on fire by masked gun­men. Gerald Brown, 60, his wife Dorcas, 50, and their daugh­ter Janice, 25, were killed along with Sasha.
chang

http://m.jamaicaobserver.com/mobile/news/Massacre-at-Barnes-Avenue — -7-years-on_12707224)

Church min­is­ter Charmaine Rattray and her 19-year-old daugh­ter were yes­ter­day morn­ing behead­ed by gun­men who invad­ed their Lauriston home.

The two were attacked just after dawn by the men armed with guns and machetes and who kicked open the door to their home as they slept. The women’s heads were tak­en from the scene by the cul­prits, who had inflict­ed numer­ous chop wounds to the vic­tims’ bodies.

Residents lis­tened and cow­ered help­less­ly as the women’s hor­ri­fied screams pierced the morning’s silence.” (

http://m.jamaicaobserver.com/mobile/news/Two-women-beheaded_9264403)

Sombre was the gen­er­al mood yes­ter­day at 7 March Pen Road… where five per­sons, includ­ing three chil­dren, were shot, killed and their homes torched ear­ly last Sunday morning.

Two of the chil­dren killed, accord­ing to a fam­i­ly mem­ber who request­ed that his name not be used in this sto­ry, were mur­dered exe­cu­tion style. He toldThe Gleaner that the two chil­dren, aged nine and 14 years, were tied up by the hood­lums and then shot.

‘You hear like dem a kick off di gate. When dem kick off di gate, you hear explo­sion, [shots] fir­ing non-stop and a bare peo­ple a scream… All in a mi mind, ‘mi a try come to the scream­ing, but mi couldn’t because it was a lot of them and dem a fire shot.’ ” (http://​jamaica​-glean​er​.com/​a​r​t​i​c​l​e​/​l​e​a​d​-​s​t​o​r​i​e​s​/​2​0​1​6​1​0​1​1​/​f​i​e​r​y​-​s​c​r​e​a​m​s​-​k​i​d​s​-​t​i​e​d​-​s​h​o​t​-​1​4​-​y​-​o​-​p​a​r​a​l​y​sed)

We have wit­nessed so many such acts of ter­ror­ism in this sup­pos­ed­ly blessed land that we have become numb. No one even seems to care any­more when even chil­dren get mur­dered in these ‘zones of exclusion’.

We can only judge our politi­cians by what they do and not what they say. In the after­math of the Barnes Avenue inferno

Nationwide radio had a vig­il. Not a sin­gle politi­cian from either side turned up. Not then prime min­is­ter, P J Patterson. Not then Opposition leader, Bruce Golding. Not then min­is­ter for chil­dren affairs, Portia Simpson Miller. Not then area Member of Parliament, Omar Davies.

Reducing crime in Jamaica is going to be an obvi­ous­ly com­plex long-term under­tak­ing. Showing you care about the vic­tims of crime, par­tic­u­lar­ly the chil­dren, is not.

When chil­dren are burned to death and heads chopped off, is it too much to expect our polit­i­cal lead­ers to demon­strate human decen­cy and compassion?

This time around, media pres­sure has forced our elect­ed heads to show some lev­el of con­cern for the fam­i­ly of the vic­tims. Both mum­bled the usu­al, “We must stop these das­tard­ly crim­i­nal acts.” And near­ly a week after the March Pen slaugh­ter, Opposition Leader Portia Simpson Miller actu­al­ly showed up at the site of the mur­ders. The prime min­is­ter has so far only promised that he will vis­it soon.

Andrew Holness has repeat­ed­ly stood before the nation and pro­claimed that “I am dif­fer­ent”. Well, actions speak loud­er than words. So far, his atti­tude towards the mas­sacre of our chil­dren by blood­thirsty crim­i­nals is indis­tin­guish­able from that of his predecessors.

Basic steps could cer­tain­ly reduce the fre­quen­cy of these acts of terrorism.

‘There are law-abid­ing cit­i­zens there, but the bad roads and zinc fence, because of the struc­ture, it har­bours all dif­fer­ent types of peo­ple. It needs to be restruc­tured and organ­ised, and the Government needs to get the Jamaica Social Investment Fund (JSIF) involved,’ [Bishop Rohan] Edwards said.

He said that JSIF did work on the main road, but ‘not for the com­mu­ni­ty, like they did for areas like Jones Avenue, Homestead, Central Village and others’.

‘Pull down the zinc fences, the police have a prob­lem patrolling. They need to get atten­tion. Until they do that, it’s going to con­tin­ue to har­bour types of peo­ple that can cre­ate may­hem,’ Edwards said.” (‘Bad March Pen Memories — Recent killings take res­i­dents back to 2000 ‘Black Friday’’ [http://​jamaica​-star​.com/​a​r​t​i​c​l​e​/​n​e​w​s​/​2​0​1​6​1​0​1​4​/​b​a​d​-​m​a​r​c​h​-​p​e​n​-​m​e​m​o​r​i​e​s​-​r​e​c​e​n​t​-​k​i​l​l​i​n​g​s​-​t​a​k​e​-​r​e​s​i​d​e​n​t​s​-​b​a​c​k​-​2​0​0​0​-​b​l​a​c​k​-​f​r​i​day])

But no one seems to care enough to start the process.

And so we sit and won­der what Jamaican place name we will hear of next where lit­tle chil­dren are delib­er­ate­ly burnt to death and teenage girls’ heads are chopped off.

kob.​chang@​fontanapharmacy.​com
Story orig­i­nat­ed here: http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​c​o​l​u​m​n​s​/​T​e​r​r​o​r​i​s​m​-​i​n​-​J​a​m​a​i​c​a​_​7​7​372