Crime and the absence of political will
Monday, September 15, 2008
Police Commissioner Hardley Lewin's assertion that a shortage of human and material resources is hampering the anti-crime fight, published in Saturday's edition, is old hat.
We have been hearing it for more years than we care to remember.
It speaks to something we have consistently said in this space - that the approach by successive governments to the fight against criminals reflects a disgraceful absence of political will.
We are told that despite a commitment back in the 1990s to boost numbers to 12,000, there are still fewer than 8,500 enlisted police officers. This in a country of 2.8 million with a rate of violent crime and murder among the world's highest.
We are told that in St Thomas, a parish of 94,000 people with areas where crime is a big problem, there are only 220 police personnel - a ratio of 427.2 persons per police officer.
Given the inherent danger to life and limb of being a policeman (or woman) in Jamaica it is understandable that the attrition rate is high and recruitment difficult. Our problem is that words aside, we have never had the impression that recruitment to the police force - in terms of an increase in numbers - is being treated as a real priority.
The police commissioner said that among the measures he is taking is to return police officers now holding desk jobs to front-line duties while recruiting civilians to fill the desk job vacancies. Here is something else we have been hearing for years - proof yet again of that disgraceful lack of political will.
Jamaicans have been saying for a very long time that crime is our number one problem. It is time we start acting as if we believe it.
Governments clearly have been badly at fault. But in a real sense the absence of political will we have seen from our leaders reflects a widespread ambivalence at large in our society. There is the anger, fear and disgust at the daily reports of atrocities carried out by the evil ones among us. But there is plenty of opposition and questioning of proposals to equip and strengthen the hands of the security forces and the judiciary.
There are those who feel, for example, that large expenditure to boost numbers and equip a "corrupt" police force could be better spent on social intervention programmes. This newspaper and all reasonable people agree that social interventions are necessary if we are to bring crime to heel over the long term.
But as this newspaper has pointed out before, those programmes are doomed if we are not able to reassert control in our crime-strafed communities. Which, in the short term, can only be achieved by police action.
Yes. Our police force is tainted by corruption, brutality and crudity. Yes, we must clean up the force.
But it is also crucial that all stakeholders in this society appreciate that without an equipped and empowered police force, criminals will have their way
Monday, September 15, 2008
Police Commissioner Hardley Lewin's assertion that a shortage of human and material resources is hampering the anti-crime fight, published in Saturday's edition, is old hat.
We have been hearing it for more years than we care to remember.
It speaks to something we have consistently said in this space - that the approach by successive governments to the fight against criminals reflects a disgraceful absence of political will.
We are told that despite a commitment back in the 1990s to boost numbers to 12,000, there are still fewer than 8,500 enlisted police officers. This in a country of 2.8 million with a rate of violent crime and murder among the world's highest.
We are told that in St Thomas, a parish of 94,000 people with areas where crime is a big problem, there are only 220 police personnel - a ratio of 427.2 persons per police officer.
Given the inherent danger to life and limb of being a policeman (or woman) in Jamaica it is understandable that the attrition rate is high and recruitment difficult. Our problem is that words aside, we have never had the impression that recruitment to the police force - in terms of an increase in numbers - is being treated as a real priority.
The police commissioner said that among the measures he is taking is to return police officers now holding desk jobs to front-line duties while recruiting civilians to fill the desk job vacancies. Here is something else we have been hearing for years - proof yet again of that disgraceful lack of political will.
Jamaicans have been saying for a very long time that crime is our number one problem. It is time we start acting as if we believe it.
Governments clearly have been badly at fault. But in a real sense the absence of political will we have seen from our leaders reflects a widespread ambivalence at large in our society. There is the anger, fear and disgust at the daily reports of atrocities carried out by the evil ones among us. But there is plenty of opposition and questioning of proposals to equip and strengthen the hands of the security forces and the judiciary.
There are those who feel, for example, that large expenditure to boost numbers and equip a "corrupt" police force could be better spent on social intervention programmes. This newspaper and all reasonable people agree that social interventions are necessary if we are to bring crime to heel over the long term.
But as this newspaper has pointed out before, those programmes are doomed if we are not able to reassert control in our crime-strafed communities. Which, in the short term, can only be achieved by police action.
Yes. Our police force is tainted by corruption, brutality and crudity. Yes, we must clean up the force.
But it is also crucial that all stakeholders in this society appreciate that without an equipped and empowered police force, criminals will have their way
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