We Must Secure Our Country And See To The Rights Of Citizens At The Same Time

Arlene Harrison Henry(OPD)

There are roles with­in soci­eties which strive for the rule of law and the prin­ci­ples of basic human rights to have gen­uine, bal­anced and vig­i­lant over­sight of Governmental activ­i­ties.
Nevertheless, those over­sights have to be exe­cut­ed against a fun­da­men­tal under­stand­ing of the role and respon­si­bil­i­ty the gov­ern­ment has in pro­tect­ing the broad­er soci­ety from harm.
They must also be bal­anced against the lim­i­ta­tions of gov­ern­ment to ade­quate­ly ful­fill all best prac­tices with­in the frame­work of its finan­cial constraints.

It as against this back­ground that I am unsure whether in Jamaica’s case, the Office of Public Defender and it’s prin­ci­pal offi­cer, Arlene Harrison-Henry is ful­ly con­ver­sant of those respon­si­bil­i­ties to which the Government is oblig­at­ed.
There is always room for improve­ment and in the Jamaican pub­lic sec­tor, hard­ly any­one could rea­son­ably argue that there is due dili­gence in the dis­pen­sa­tion of all pub­lic func­tions.

Harrison-Henry was tes­ti­fy­ing before the Internal and External Affairs Committee of Parliament yes­ter­day, on the effects of the State Of Emergency (SOE) in the parish of Saint James.
The (SOE) was ini­ti­at­ed to stem the blood­shed and the mas­sive loss of life in the parish as a result of what the police con­tend is gang vio­lence.

The Public defend­er laid out a raft of issues which she tells the com­mit­tee her office have found lack­ing and are in breach of the Charter of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms.[sic]
Among the issues, she laid out are the following.….




(1)Up to October 9th, 3,687 per­sons, pri­mar­i­ly young men, have been detained, since the dec­la­ra­tion of the SOE on January 18, 2018.

Typically, this is what hap­pens in (SOE), secu­ri­ty per­son­nel oper­at­ing in the dark (intel­li­gence wise) are forced to scrape up large num­bers of young men whom they believe may be involved in crim­i­nal activ­i­ties.
Given the lim­i­ta­tions tech­no­log­i­cal­ly, the police have to embark on a slow delib­er­a­tive process of sift­ing through latent fin­ger­prints which may or may not exist, of those who may have pre­vi­ous­ly passed through the sys­tem. 
This is a slow anti­quat­ed sys­tem which requires time. Admittedly, it is not the bests sys­tem but it is the sys­tem we have.
This is not the fault of the police.



(2) Only a frac­tion of the peo­ple detained are charged with actu­al crimes, accord­ing to Harrison-Henry.

It would be nice if the law of aver­ages were more in favor of the good guys who are risk­ing their lives, try­ing to pro­duce a safer Jamaica.
If they did they would­n’t be the law of aver­ages now would they? 
Since they aren’t, the over­worked, under­paid, police have to sort through the detainees the old-fash­ioned way.
The police would be glad to have real-time intel­li­gence if Harrison Henry has it, this would go a long way in elim­i­nat­ing some of the incon­ve­niences she com­plains about.

(3) Poor qual­i­ty of food for peo­ple picked up and detained and unsan­i­tary con­di­tions around food.

There is no excuse for this and there will be none com­ing from me.

(4) Detentions are main­ly men from com­mu­ni­ties such as Rose Heights, Norwood, Granville, Flanker. She point­ed out that the bulk of the detainees are young men between the ages of 19 and 25.

That is police busi­ness, the so-called pub­lic ‑defend­er must con­cen­trate on what it is that she and her staff are tasked with doing.
The secu­ri­ty forces have a respon­si­bil­i­ty to take the fight to crim­i­nals regard­less of where they are from, regard­less of their age group.

(5) Concern that police offi­cers and sol­diers some­times take pho­tographs of detainees on their mobile phone. This has impli­ca­tions for the fair­ness of an iden­ti­fi­ca­tion parade for exam­ple.

Members of the Security forces have a respon­si­bil­i­ty to act with pro­fes­sion­al­ism, nev­er­the­less, in the bar­ren intel­li­gence land­scape in which they oper­ate almost blind­ly, it is com­mend­able that mem­bers of the force whose respon­si­bil­i­ty it is to con­tain crim­i­nals are act­ing proac­tive­ly in this regard.

(6) Harsh con­di­tions under which detainees are held at the Freeport Police Station lock-up, which is the hub of the SOE activ­i­ties in St James.

This is a long­stand­ing issue which spawns admin­is­tra­tion of both polit­i­cal par­ties across sev­er­al decades.
It is impor­tant that gov­ern­ment under­stand that if its agents are going to vio­late peo­ple’s basic rights by detain­ing them the least it [must] do is pro­vide them with decent accom­mo­da­tions, food, and health­care for the dura­tion of their incarceration.

See sto­ry here. http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​f​r​o​n​t​-​p​a​g​e​/​d​e​p​l​o​r​a​b​l​e​-​p​u​b​l​i​c​-​d​e​f​e​n​d​e​r​-​o​u​t​l​i​n​e​s​-​s​h​a​b​b​y​-​c​o​n​d​i​t​i​o​n​s​-​f​o​r​-​d​e​t​a​i​n​e​e​s​-​i​n​-​s​t​-​j​a​m​e​s​-​s​o​e​_​1​5​0​3​5​1​?​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​=​1​606

The tes­ti­mo­ny of the Public Defender is sched­uled to resume some­time in the near future to com­plete the delib­er­a­tions on its report.
In light of that, I will nat­u­ral­ly with­hold some of my com­ments.
Nevertheless, it is instruc­tive to observe that nowhere in the report­ing in [the link above] is there any acknowl­edg­ment of the fact that as a result of the actions of the secu­ri­ty forces there has been a marked drop in the num­ber of mur­dered St. James residents.

What I con­clude from this is that there are two com­pet­ing objec­tives at work, nei­ther of which works for the greater good of the Jamaican peo­ple.
On the one hand, the secu­ri­ty forces must find a way to bal­ance deal­ing with the exis­ten­tial issue of vio­lent crimes while tak­ing care as best it can to pro­tect the rights of the most vul­ner­a­ble.
For its part, those who pur­port to pro­tect the rights of the pub­lic must demon­strate that they under­stand the exi­gen­cies of the sit­u­a­tions the nation faces and the con­straints under which the gov­ern­ment is forced to oper­ate.
Neither of these two posi­tions is mutu­al­ly exclu­sive if the egos and per­son­al agen­das are discarded.