National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds has fired back at the Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s calls for a state of emergency (SoE) to tackle crime, arguing that such responses do not produce meaningful long-term changes.
During her tenure as prime minister under the then People’s Partnership administration in 2011, Persad-Bissessar introduced a state of emergency in several designated ‘hotspot’ areas across T&T.
The SoE, which was implemented in response to a series of murders, lasted from August to December of 2011 and resulted in several suspected criminals being arrested, only to be eventually released owing to a lack of evidence.
Several of those detained during the SoE eventually sued the State for wrongful imprisonment.
During the Opposition’s first Anti-Crime Town Hall meeting on Monday, Persad-Bissessar renewed calls for a SoE.
However, during his address at a People’s National Movement public meeting in San Juan last night, Hinds disagreed with the suggestion, noting that such strategies did not get to the root cause of the violence.
Responding to recent comparisons with Jamaica’s own SoEs in certain parishes to clamp down on criminals, Hinds said this did not have a long-term effect, noting that murders continued in Jamaica even in the midst of the lockdowns.
“Well, unfortunately, to show these things don’t necessarily work, because they don’t get at the root causes of crime. We had that here in 2020 and 2011 and we didn’t get at the root causes of crime. So it has it’s purpose but not to get at the root causes of these crimes that we facing,” Hinds said.
“I want to tell you by the 15th of this month Jamaica was having murders in the midst of all of these state of emergencies. We know from their experience that is not necessarily the formula.”
In his own suggestion, however, Hinds urged the national community, including the Judiciary, to collaborate against criminality.
He said laws for people caught in possession of environmentally protected wildlife currently carry stiffer penalties than people found with guns and ammunition and urged the Judiciary to reconsider what he described as a “slap on wrist” punishment.
“We all live here, we all suffer here at the hands of these criminals, including the Judiciary, and pay attention to the way we respond to criminality in this country.”