Criminologist: Proactive justice system key to managing gun violence

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Police and crime scene investigators process the crime scene of a murder and attempted robbery at Pennywise Plaza, La Romain. Photo by Marvin Hamilton

CRIMINOLOGY lecturer and author Wendell Wallace says the justice system in this country has to adapt and make changes, particularly through legislation, to fulfil its mandate in order to deal with the ever increasing scourge of gun violence.

The establishment of gun courts, denying bail for those charged with gun offences, and implementing a “three-strike” rule via legislation, he suggested, are among the numerous tangible solutions.

Wallace, a lecturer in the Criminology and Criminal Justice Unit at the University of the West Indies (UWI) St Augustine Campus, was speaking at a forum recently hosted by the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies on the topic of gun-related violence and homicide in Caribbean societies, which offered expert insights into data and reflected on potential action to improve the worsening statistics.

“What can we do? Because we don’t only want to highlight these problems? We want that we look for some solutions.”

He said the the justice system “can do a lot.”

Wallace said a multifaceted, evidence-based approach to is needed to address the complex problem of gun violence and the justice system.

He highlighted data showing that between 2010-2016, there were 2,212 victims of homicide by firearms, 95 per cent of them being male. He said this is comparable with Jamaica where approximately 90 per cent of the victims are male.

Recently, acting Commissioner of Police McDonald Jacob announced that 7,000 guns had been recovered by police over the last ten years.

On Saturday, the police issued another statement saying the number of guns seized for the year had crossed 500.

Jacob also noted that 87 per cent of all murders in TT over the past decade were committed using guns.

These statistics are particularly noteworthy, he said, since no English-speaking country in the Caribbean manufactures firearms. Most are believed to be imported from the US and Brazil and slip through the borders.

“That begs the question,” he said. “Are we suffering from a gun-violence crisis as it relates to TT?”

Wallace noted the drastic increase of guns being used in homicides around the year 2000.

He highlighted the statistics from 2010-2016, showing the Port of Spain Police Division leading the nine divisions with 593 murders involving guns, followed by the Northern Police Division with 463 and the Western Police Division in third with 260 murders.

The Tobago Police Division saw the least number of murders involving guns, totalling 13 for the seven-year period.

As Wallace, noted, however, Tobago experienced three murders involving firearms in only three days, last month.

“If we were to use some conjecture here, we will suggest that the numbers for the Tobago Police Division will certainly increase.

He spoke further on potential ways the justice system can address gun-related violence.

Wallace noted that Jacob expressed regret about TT’s gun culture, and former Commissioner of Police Gary Griffith’s suggestion that those charged with gun possession not be allowed bail.

Griffith also called for the court to increase penalties for firearm offences.

“We need a multifaceted approach; a uni-dimensional approach will not work. And the justice system can either use a prevention approach or an intervention approach or a combination of both.”

Among Wallace’s solutions offered included gun amnesties, which he admitted “tend not to work for criminals (because) that’s their tool of trade.”

Establishing gun courts is another potential part solution.

“The research has shown that this tends to work in that you are able to process these criminals faster.

“We must also have enhanced reporting mechanisms and protection for witnesses in gun-related crimes,” Wallace said.

“We can use focus deterrents. We can use outreach activities, public education campaigns. We can also use intervention strategies.

“We need to use some awareness campaigns so that all juveniles and others can be aware of the dangers of using fire.”

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Beetham man shot by police, assault rifle seized

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo: Port of Spain General Hospital.

A 30-year-old Beetham man is in the hospital after he was shot by police for pointing an assault rifle at officers early on Sunday morning.

Police said officers of the Guard and Emergency Branch (GEB) were on patrol on Ninth Street, Beetham Gardnes, just after 12 am, when they saw several men with guns running along the street.

Police chased the men. One of them was armed with an AR 15 and pointed it at police from a nearby back street.

Officers shot the man and took him to the hospital.

The machine gun and 22 rounds of 5.56mm ammunition were also seized.

As of midday on Sunday, the man received emergency surgery and was warded at the hospital in serious condition.

Police from the Port of Spain Division, Inter Agency Task Force and the Guard and Emergency Branch also visited the scene.

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Bandits held for robbing Valencia doubles vendor

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo –

Three men were held shortly after they robbed a Valencia doubles vendor at his home early on Sunday morning.

Police said at around 1.55 am, the vendor was at home at La Platta Gardens with his workers preparing for the day’s sale when they saw three men walking through the yard.

The bandits stormed the house and ordered the vendor and workers to lie on the ground.

The workers were beaten and robbed of their jewellery, cellphone and a total of $7,000 in cash.

The bandits then escaped in a black Nissan Almera which was parked nearby.

The police were called and officers from the Valencia CID saw a car matching the description of the bandits’ car and stopped it at KP Lands, Valencia.

They searched the car and found several of the items that were reported stolen in the backseat.

The 18-year-old driver and 21-year-old passenger were arrested and interviewed.

Investigators also visited a house in Valencia where they found more stolen items and arrested a 23-year-old man who was inside at the time.

The three men were taken to the Sangre Grande police station and are expected to be interviewed on Sunday.

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Active COVID-19 cases at 63 with one new infection

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

Another person has tested positive for the novel coronavirus in the past 24 hours, according to the Ministry of Health today.

Consequently, active COVID-19 cases in Guyana have gone up to 63, that is, 62 persons in home isolation and the remaining one person in institutional isolation.

There is one other person also in institutional quarantine.

Guyana’s COVID-19 death toll remains at 1281, while some 70,036 persons have recovered from the life-threatening virus to date.

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L’?quipe ha?tienne finit ? la 4e place

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste

Apr?s avoir rat? l’occasion de se hisser en finale, la s?lection ha?tienne de football des amput?s a, contre toute attente, termin? ? la 4e place de la Coupe du Monde, en se faisant battre sur le score de (4-2, mi-temps (2-2) par l’Ouzb?kistan lors de la petite finale disput?e, ce dimanche 9 octobre au NEF stadium (Galatasaray) en T?rkiye.

Tout avait pourtant bien d?but? pour les Grenadiers amput?s qui ont d?clench? les hostilit?s par Redondo El Principe Richard. Ce dernier n’a mis que cinq minutes pour ouvrir le score pour Ha?ti (5e, 1-0). Ainsi, Redondo avait pris seul le classement du meilleur buteur de la comp?tition avec 9 r?alisations.

En r?action, Homid (14e, 1-1) allait r?tablir l’?quilibre au tableau d’affichage pour l’Ouzb?kistan, ancien vainqueur de la comp?tition en 2010 en Argentine. Les Ouzbeks qui ne sont gu?re ?branl?s malgr? les assauts r?p?t?s des Ha?tiens, ont pris l’avantage au score par Aziz (17e, 1-2).

Avant la pause, Saviola Charles (19e, 2-2) ? la suite d’une frappe splendide, a permis ? Ha?ti de revenir ? hauteur de l’Ouzb?kistan.

Dans le deuxi?me acte, les deux protagonistes veillent au grain, de quoi ?viter d’encaisser de but. Dans la foul?e, Saviola Charles, ? maintes reprises, avait la possibilit? de faire le break pour Ha?ti, mais ? chaque fois, il confond vitesse et pr?cipitation. En toute fin de rencontre, Aziz (47e et 49e) a tu? le r?ve de voir Ha?ti terminer ? la troisi?me place de la Coupe du Monde de football des amput?s, en inscrivant deux buts pour permettre ? l’Ouzb?kistan de s’imposer (4-2).

Le constat final est que la s?lection ha?tienne de football des amput?s ?choue au pied du podium en prenant la 4e place sur 24 pays qui participent ? cet ?v?nement sportif plan?taire. Les Grenadiers, du 1er au 9 octobre, auront fait la fiert? de toute un peuple, ils ont fait mieux que beaucoup de nations ayant la r?putation de pays riches dans cette comp?tition. On n’oubliera jamais qu’ils ont remport? quatre des sept matches jou?s, en battant entre autres, la France (6-0) et les USA (6-2).

Pour certains observateurs, il ne manque pas grand-chose pour qu’Ha?ti devienne dans quatre ans le pays champion de la Coupe du Monde de football des amput?s. Mais pour y arriver, il faut que l’on continue d’encadrer l’Association Ha?tienne de Football des Amput?s (AHFA) pour qu’elle puisse trouver les moyens ad?quats pour aider les joueurs et le staff technique.

En prenant la 4e place de cette Coupe du Monde de football des amput?s, tenue en T?rkiye, la s?lection ha?tienne de football des amput?s fait mieux que toutes les ?quipes nationales de football (toutes cat?gories confondues) repr?sentant Ha?ti ? une phase finale de Coupe du Monde de 1974 ? nos jours.

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Hurricane Julia hits Nicaragua with torrential rainfall Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Hurricane Julia hit Nicaragua’s central Caribbean coast on Sunday after lashing Colombia’s San Andres island, and a weakened storm was expected to emerge over the Pacific.

Julia hit as a Category One hurricane early Sunday with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph (140 kph), though its winds had dipped to tropical storm force, 70 mph (110 kph), by late morning as it pushed across Nicaragua with heavy rains.

The US National Hurricane Center said Julia was centered about 65 miles (105 kilometers) east-northeast of Managua, the capital, and was moving west at 15 mph (24 kph).

It said life-threatening flash floods and mudslides were possible across Central America and southern Mexico through Tuesday, with the storm expected to bring as much as 15 inches (38 centimeters) of rain in isolated areas.

Colombia’s national disaster agency reported Sunday that Julia blew the roofs off at least five houses and knocked over trees, but there were no reported casualties as it blasted past San Andres Island east of Nicaragua.

In Nicaragua, Vice President Rosario Murillo told TN8 television that there had been no reports of deaths so far, but power and communications were cut in some areas. She said that 9,500 people had been evacuated to shelters.

Local news media showed images of trees toppled across roads.

Guillermo Gonz?lez, director of Nicaragua’s Disaster Response System, told official media that people at high risk had been evacuated from coastal areas by noon Saturday. The army said it delivered humanitarian supplies to Bluefields and Laguna de Perlas for distribution to 118 temporary shelters.

The storm was forecast to emerge over the Pacific and skirt the coasts of El Salvador and Guatemala, a region already saturated by weeks of heavy rains.

In Guatemala, storms since early May had already caused at least 49 confirmed deaths, with six people missing. Roads and hundreds of homes have been damaged, Guatemalan officials say.

In El Salvador, where 19 people have died this rainy season, the worst rainfall was expected Monday and Tuesday, said Fernando L?pez, the minister of environmental and natural resources. Officials said they had opened 61 shelters with the capacity to house more than 3,000 people.

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WATCH: Gov’t ministers blast ‘one-house’ rhetoric from critics Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Two Government ministers are pushing back at criticisms of the Government’s New Social Housing Programme (NSHP), arguing that ‘one house’ is better than no house for those in need.

There has been much criticism, especially from supporters of the Opposition People’s National Party (PNP), of the NSHP, suggesting that it will not address the housing needs locally, as relatively few houses are being built under the initiative.

In fact, Prime Minister Andrew Holness was blasted by Opposition Leader Mark Golding for attending several NHSP handing-over ceremonies.

“We see the prime minister going around the country to make a big deal over handing over one house here and one house there,” Golding said at a PNP political meeting in July.

“He came to my constituency to Hopeful Village and handed over one house and it was a house that cost over $9 million to build. One person got the benefit of that house when hundreds and thousands have got nothing.

“Comrades, that is not balanced development! That is not putting the people in the centre of development of the country,” suggested Golding then.

However, Local Government and Rural Development Minister, Desmond McKenzie, and Minister without Portfolio in the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM), Floyd Green, rubbished the “one house” argument at the handing-over of two houses under the NSHP programme in Central Kingston on Thursday.

According to McKenzie, the handing over of even one house is still an achievement.

“The need for housing is a number one priority for the Government of Prime Minister Andrew Holness, and there are some persons who are critical, talking about all we doing is going around and handing over one house,” said McKenzie.

“Is better we hand over one (house) more than don’t hand over none at all, and it is not the impact of the one house that matters, it is what the one house has to support, because there are families that don’t have a fraction of one that are grateful for whatever they get,” he declared.

McKenzie, a former Mayor of Kingston and the current Member of Parliament (MP) for West Kingston, said the Holness Administration will not be dissuaded by what he described as “silly criticisms”.

“We are not going to be deterred by any silly criticisms about our policies. It is our responsibility as Government to respond to the social needs of areas such as Southside and other communities right across the country,” he argued.

For Green, who was the guest speaker at the handing-over ceremony, he said critics of the NSHP programme are “disconnected” from the realities of Jamaica.

“… When I hear some of them run up and down and talk about house and one-one house, you know what I realise? They are disconnected from Jamaica,” he asserted.

“They don’t appreciate people because a house is not (just) a house; a house is about the people who are benefiting from the structure that you have put in place,” said Green.

Under the programme, the minister said 98 houses have been completed, with another 50 houses under construction. He said approximately 500 Jamaicans across the island are benefiting from the initiative.

“Isn’t that a Government who cares?” asked Green.

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Haynes: Guaracara Tabaquite road needs fixing

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

One of the roads which needs clearing in Guaracara. –

TABAQUITE MP Anita Haynes is calling on the government to give urgent attention to the 17km mark at the Guaracara/Tabaquite road.

In a press release, Haynes said the Works Ministry cleared the roadway in September, but was blocked by landslip debris again.

She said, “This is a matter of urgent public safety.

“The land is still moving and the road is becoming increasingly compromised.”

She said the road, which was once a two-way, has been reduced to a single lane and was“becoming narrower day by day, with vehicles being forced to drive along the edge of the retaining wall.”

She said she wrote to the Planning Ministry last month for support to get legal access to the land which is privatelt owned.

She said the ministry referred the matter to the Environmental Management Authority (EMA).

“Ultimately, as the investigations continue, the responsibility of the land owner will be determined. Until such time, I am calling on the Ministry of Works and Transport to continue to assist us with clearing the roadway so that members of the public can traverse safely.”

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Yellow-level adverse weather alert discontinued

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

In this file photo a woman braves heavy rainfall on Queen Street, Port of Spain. Photo by Angelo Marcelle

The yellow-level adverse weather alert has been discontinued.

Around 4 pm on Sunday, the Met Office said the potential for “impactful rainfall and thunderstorm activity” reduced significantly .

The alert went into effect at 8am on Sunday.

“While some cloudiness is expected to persist overnight with a few showers likely, the possibility of thunderstorms have decreased to 30-40 per cent as atmospheric conditions are now less favourable.”

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Hadad hails ‘positive step’ as TTFA audited financial statements approved

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Tobago

In this March 24 file photo, chairman of the FIFA-appointed normalisation committee, speaks at a media conference at the Courts Mega Store, San Juan. – ROGER JACOB

JONATHAN RAMNANANSINGH

TRINIDAD and Tobago Football Association’s (TTFA) audited financial statements for 2020 and 2021 have been approved by its membership.

The approval came with “some conditions” but these are expected to be ironed out and made official, within the coming days.

TTFA normalisation committee chairman Robert Hadad and Eastern Football Association president (EFA) Kieron Edwards breathed a sigh of relief following the membership’s decision to finally approve the Aegis Business Solutions-audited statements.

Both administrators were upbeat on the landmark move and believe it’s a step in the right direction for TT football.

“It is another positive step in football after the recent Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act approval. We are excited about moving football forward and working with the football fraternity to get the sport back to a level we can all be proud of.

“Our doors are opened to the stakeholders and we look forward to working with them. Let’s get going together,” Hadad said.

The welcomed approval came 17 days after the association’s annual general meeting (AGM), where it was decided to postpone the action, and hold talks with the normalisation committee to address some minor concerns raised by members.

Edwards said, “The financials were approved but with some conditions. The normalisation committee would have to provide some further documents to the audited statement but that would be provided. It should be a simple process.”

At the EGM, Edwards said members showed strong interest in clarifying certain issues, holding persons accountable and ensuring their questions did not go unanswered.

He was, however, pleased the TTFA had arrived at such a crucial juncture and communication between the normalisation committee and members had improved for the betterment of TT football.

“This approval was the first time I felt that football is going in a right direction, especially when members are asking pertinent questions towards important issues. We have to continue the process.

“Once documents are brought before us to approve, it cannot be a rubber stamp. We (membership) have to look at the information before us and make proper representation.

“So when we cast that vote of approval, it must be one that we are comfortable with and we can take back to our members and let them know that a decision was made in the best interest of the TTFA,” he added.

Edwards said there was positive feedback from the normalisation committee and confirmed that Hadad mentioned that they “need to do a little better with communication.”

The future looks promising, he told Newsday.

“We look forward to seeing this level of communication and dialogues continue in a respectful manner in which it did for matters going forward. We continue to look forward to better and brighter days ahead for football.

Of the 48 TTFA members, approximately 30 were present for Saturday’s EGM. The approval of financial statements for 2020 and 2021 was the only item on the EGM agenda.

Edwards added that the approval is one of several requirements needed by FIFA for the TTFA to request its FIFA Forward Funding.

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