Wednesday, January 5, 2011

CRIME AND THE UNDER-DEVELOPMENT OF BARBADOS

No less than five young Barbadians were brutally murdered in the twelve day holiday period between the 22nd of December 2010 and the 2nd of January 2011 – supposedly a period of peace and goodwill.

The horror started three days before Christmas when young Roderick Jones and Christopher Charles literally stabbed each other to death, and continued with a 17 year old Barbadian teenager opening fire on a ZR van full of passengers and ending the life of Sheldon Taylor with a bullet.

We then proceeded to usher in our new year with the slaying of 29 year old Anderson Brathwaite in Cane Hill, St. George, and with the equally senseless and brutal shooting death of young Adrian Nervais at Sargeant’s Village, Christ Church.

Barbadians need to ponder long and hard on the significance of these cold, ugly and undeniable social facts!

The reality is that if the murder rate continues at such a pace for a whole year, we would rack up no less than 152 murders per annum. And this would be a per capita murder rate far in excess of Trinidad’s 500 per annum or Jamaica’s 1000 per annum!

These murders, coming in the wake of the horrific “Campus Trendz” mass homicide of September 3rd, 2010, in which the lives of six young Barbadian women were extinguished, should clearly tell us that something is fundamentally wrong in our country.

But if something is fundamentally wrong in our nation, why are we not hearing the voices of our official leaders – our Prime Minister, our Attorney-General, the leader of the Opposition, the Bishop of the Anglican Church, the head of the Christian Council, the chairman of our Private Sector Association and Congress of Trade Unions – addressing the sources and causes of the social disease and rallying Barbadians to mount a collective national response?

How is it that political parties and their functionaries can tell us that the major issue in the upcoming St .John By-Election will be the matter of the unfinished St. John Polyclinic, when Barbadian youth are murdering each other at an alarming rate? Does Hudson Griffith or Mara Thompson have anything at all to say on the issue of fratricidal violence and murder among the youth of Barbados?

Barbadians need to take their heads out of the sand and recognize that our nation has started to exhibit all of the social maladies associated with a society shaped by the value system and cultural imperatives of United States of America-based liberal Capitalism.

The self-centredness, the psychological alienation, the lack of human empathy, the breakdown of a sense of community, the contempt for persons who are considered to be weak or social failures, the seeming addiction to mindless entertainment, the consumerist life-style, the enjoyment of entertainment based on violence and sensation, the dissipation of belief in a spiritual dimension and in transcendental spiritual values, are all embedded in the social, cultural, business and governance structures that Barbados’ private and public sector establishment have either actively promoted or acquiesced in over the past quarter century.

We note that Mr. Darwin Dottin, our Commissioner of Police, has stated that the Police will be responding to the crime situation with a combination of “tough measures” and an intervention by the Ministry of Family.

We would just like to warn Commissioner Dottin that to date the Ministry of Family has not distinguished itself by demonstrating that it has any deep understanding of the predicament our society is in.

We would also like to remind him that for several years now our Peoples Empowerment Party (PEP) has been urging him to have the Royal Barbados Police Force stage a “National Consultation On Crime” through which the Police would seek to “ground” with our people in their communities, and to establish a greater rapport between grass-roots communities and the Police Force. We are confident that this approach will achieve much more success than the so-called “tough measures” that are being contemplated.

The bottom-line is that Barbados is facing a deeply rooted problem that goes to the very foundations of our society and nation. If it is to be solved, it will call for enlightened and informed leadership on the part of individuals and organizations that genuinely care about this country and its people.

The PEP is ready, willing and able to play its part in finding and implementing relevant solutions.

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