Friday, July 16, 2010
From Al Jazeera - Extraditing Coke
Thursday, July 15, 2010
JLP Elder Rethinking
Baugh laments government failure to boost development
DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER Dr Ken Baugh has lamented the failure of successive administrations to find a workable economic plan for the sustained development of the country.
Addressing the House Of Representatives during the 2010-2011 Sectoral Debate on Tuesday, Baugh said several initiatives have been pursued, "some of which should have brought us success, but it has not been achieved".
"The great social experiment of the 1970s, with the State controlling the commanding heights of the economy, together with the high price of oil, ended with economic collapse," Baugh said.
The Opposition People's National Party (PNP) had pursued the socialist agenda under the leadership of the late Prime Minister Michael Manley.
Baugh also knocked the folly of his party's 1980's free-market experiment.
He told Parliament that "the structural adjustment and deregulation of the economy in the 1980s, which gave rise to private sector-led growth, but with insufficient trickle-down effect" did not help the country either.
According to Baugh, not even the period which saw Jamaica focusing on export-oriented industries such as tourism, bauxite, agriculture and manufacturing helped the country achieve equality.
"Jamaica has never been successful in correcting the legacies of its past, principally the dismantled family and community institutions, poor infrastructure of water and roads and absence of the capitalisation for growth and recovery," Baugh said.http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20100715/news/news4.html
August Town From The Gleaner
August Town ceasefire stirring hopes
Nedburn Thaffe, Gleaner Writer
A pastor whose pulpit rests in the once crime-ridden August Town, St Andrew, community is now anticipating "prosperity" for the area as the guns have ceased barking, thanks to a successful peace agreement between warring factions.
Reverend Ezekiel Curtis, speaking at his Haven of Hope Open Bible Church in August Town on Sunday, told members of his congregation that out of the peace should come positive growth for the community.
"I have a dream for this community... Out of the peace we should expect productivity, and out of productivity should come prosperity," Curtis declared.
He was addressing his congregation during a special church service to commemorate the second anniversary of the signing of the peace agreement among the communities of African Gardens, Jungle 12, Gold Smith Villa, Colour Red, Judgement Yard and Bedward Garden, which for years, engaged each other in deadly clashes.
The agreement, drafted in 2008, saw members of all five warring factions agreeing to put an end to all conflicts for a period of five years. So far, the initiative has been reaping major success, according to reports from police and residents in the area.
Maintain the peace
The clergyman, while lauding the different agents instrumental in bringing about the peace the community is enjoying, urged his congregation to ensure it is maintained.
"We have to leave the four walls and go out in the communities ... the one and two scatter shots in the community, don't worry about them. When you want to change conditions in a community, sometimes you have to take unorthodox measures," the clergyman said. He added that a community which places little focus on preserving the peace will remain "stagnant".
Rev Curtis took the opportunity to lash out against church members who he said sometimes act as a deterrent to change and the preservation of the peace.
"Too many of us are compromising with the wrongdoers. Now is not the time to bow to donmanship. Come out of compromise, come out of solidarity with evil and wrongdoers," he urged.
While lamenting the negative impact crime has had on the community over the past years, the reverend told congregants that were it not for the violence in the area, real estate value in the community would have sky rocketed.
"If there were no violence in the community, many of us would have been rich. Research shows that real estate in the Kingston 7 area is of so much value, your house and land would appreciate so much over the years," he said, while highlighting the community's close proximity to the University of the West Indies.
Community members who stood outside the church ground as the clergyman welcomed the wind of change also attest to the relative peace the community is experiencing. 'Waggle,' 47, who told The Gleaner he has been living in the community all his life, said the peace in the community was like never before.
"Yeah man, we free fi walk anywhere we waan walk nowadays and nah affi worry seh nobody a go trouble you," he said, while noting that most of the wrongdoers have been killed.
Head of the August Town Transformation Initiative, Kenneth Wilson has attributed the lingering peace to several social intervention programmes taking place in the community, and the close relationship shared by members in the community and the police. "We encourage people to share the information with the police, and challenge everyone to get rid of the 'informer fi dead' culture," Wilson said.http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20100715/news/news9.html
This Morning I Woke Up Ina Curfew
130 detained in Eastern St Andrew curfew
BY KIMMO MATTHEWS Observer staff reporter matthewsk@jamaicaobserver.com
Thursday, July 15, 2010
ONE hundred and thirty persons were detained by the security forces yesterday during a curfew imposed on the Eastern St Andrew communities of Papine, Kintyre and August Town.
The curfew, which began at four o'clock yesterday morning, will remain in effect until 4:00 am tomorrow.
"The individuals, mostly males, were arrested following several searches carried out by police and members of the military," a senior policeman monitoring the operation told the Observer.However, the policeman said no weapon or any other illegal item was seized.
The boundaries of the curfew are north along an imaginary line from Papine Square to the Kintyre community; south along an imaginary line along the foot of Long Hill Mountain, between the August Town Quarry and Princess Alice Drive; east along the Bedward Gardens main road between Kintyre and August Town Quarry and west along Hermitage main road, University Drive and Golding Avenue.
It also runs between Papine Square and Princess Alice Drive.
During the curfew, persons within its boundaries are required to remain within their premises unless otherwise authorised in writing by a member of the security forces, police said in a statement.
Yesterday, several men were seen at the August Town Police Station waiting to be processed. Those who were left in the community had worried looks on their faces.
Meanwhile, all motorists entering and leaving the community were stopped and their vehicles searched by police and soldiers.
August Town, known for its frequent gang fights, has always been on the police radar.
Yesterday, the police warned that although they did not find any weapon or other illegal items, they would still be keeping an eye on the area.
Dozens of persons have been detained in the Corporate Area since the imposition of a limited State of Emergency in May, which was extended until the end of July to include St Catherine.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/130-detained-in-Eastern-St-Andrew-curfew_7799803
Dudus Captured From The NY Times - Jus' The Facts Ma'am
Suspected Drug Lord Taken in Jamaica
By MARC LACEY and KAREEM FAHIM
Published: June 22, 2010
MEXICO CITY — A reputed gang leader wanted in the United States on gun and drug charges was taken into custody by Jamaican authorities on Tuesday as the furious search for him, which set off violent clashes in Kingston, the Jamaican capital, entered its second month.Owen Ellington, commissioner of the police, the Jamaican Constabulary Force, later told reporters that the reputed gang leader, Christopher Coke, had been peacefully taken into custody while in a vehicle with the Rev. Al Miller, an evangelical preacher who helped arrange the recent surrender of Mr. Coke’s brother and sister.
Mr. Miller told reporters that Mr. Coke had contacted him Tuesday and asked for help in turning himself in at the American Embassy in Kingston. The two men were en route to the embassy when the police stopped the car and arrested Mr. Coke, he said. Mr. Coke is willing to forgo an extradition hearing and face trial in the United States, said Mr. Miller, of the nondenominational Whole Life Ministry.
Although Reverend Miller was released at the scene, Mr. Ellington later called on him to turn himself in to the authorities for questioning.
“I would like to appeal to the family, friends and sympathizers of Christopher Coke to remain calm and to allow the law to take its course,” Mr. Ellington said. “I would also like to reassure the citizens of Jamaica that the situation remains normal, there is no need for alarm and they can get about their business in the usual way.”
Witnesses outside a police station in St. Catherine Parish said Mr. Coke was wearing a bulletproof vest, and was seen being escorted to a helicopter.
Mr. Coke’s legal predicament strained relations between Jamaica and the United States and led to dozens of deaths over several days in late May as Jamaican security forces forced their way into Tivoli Gardens, the poor neighborhood that Mr. Coke controlled, in a futile effort to apprehend him.
Known as Dudus,Short Man and President, Mr. Coke, 42, was indicted last August in New York on charges that he had controlled an international drug ring from his Kingston stronghold. Prosecutors say Mr. Coke’s confederates in New York sent him part of their drug proceeds and shipped guns to him that he used to bolster his authority.
Mr. Coke’s case shed light on the longstanding practice in Jamaica of politicians and gang leaders sharing power, for the benefit of both. The gang leaders help turn out the vote at election time. In exchange, they are afforded government contracts for various jobs and protection from the law.
Mr. Coke’s father was a gang leader with considerable influence in the Jamaican Labour Party. The son followed in his footsteps as leader of the so-called Shower Posse, law enforcement officials said. When Prime Minister Bruce Golding, who represents Tivoli Gardens in Parliament, was elected in 2007, Mr. Coke’s influence seemed to grow and his business interests, including an entertainment company and a construction company, received sizable government backing.
But the indictment from the United States interrupted the arrangement.
At first, Mr. Golding fought the extradition, arguing that it was based on flawed evidence. The United States responded furiously. “Jamaica’s delay in processing the U.S. extradition request for a major suspected drug and firearms trafficker with reported ties to the ruling party highlights the potential depth of corruption in the government,” said a State Department counternarcotics report released in March.
But when criticism grew to the point that Mr. Golding’s government hung in the balance, he backed down and agreed to send Mr. Coke to New York.
That is when Mr. Coke’s backers began barricading streets and wielding weapons to keep the police and soldiers at bay in Tivoli Gardens, leading to one of the most violent episodes in the country’s recent history. Jamaican security officials were accused of using excessive force in their search for Mr. Coke, resulting in dozens of deaths that have not been not fully explained.
Marc Lacey reported from Mexico City, and Kareem Fahim from New York. Ross Sheil contributed reporting from Kingston, Jamaica.
A version of this article appeared in print on June 23, 2010, on page A9 of the New York edition.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/23/world/americas/23jamaica.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rssDudus In Florida
Jamaican Drug Lord Christopher "Dudus" Coke Has Bloody South Florida Roots
published: Tue., May 25 2010 @ 8:30AM
The standoff over Jamaican drug lord Christopher "Dudus" Coke, who has turned a Kingston slum into his own personal bunker to avoid extradition to the U.S, has forced his country into a state of emergency.
To local law-enforcement officials, the situation is all too familiar. Coke's ultra-violent cartel, called "The Shower Posse" for its members tendency to indiscriminately shower enemies and bystanders with bullets, seized South Florida in the late-'80s.
The posse's penchant for bloodshed rivaled that of the era's notorious Colombian cocaine cowboys. "They operated without any kind of ethics or morals," says Joe Vince, a former Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agent. "When they suspected that one of their members was cooperating with the authorities, they killed that individual, cut him up with a chainsaw, put him in a 50-gallon drum, and sent it to his mother in Jamaica. They relied on intimidation."
The Shower Posse, helmed by Christopher Coke's father Lester Lloyd Coke -- nicknamed "Jim Brown" -- and Vivian "Jamaican Dave" Blake, first invaded Miami in the early '80s. Initially, they trafficked only in Jamaican marijuana.
Then they started working with Colombian cocaine wholesalers, making Jamaica a trans-Atlantic rest stop for smuggling to Miami, says Broward County Sheriff Al Lamberti, who was a police captain at the time: "If you were to draw a straight line between Colombia and Florida, it goes right through Cuba or Jamaica. The Jamaicans were in a perfect position to tap into the cocaine market."
With increased profits came intensified violence. The Shower Posse terrified South Florida's Jamaican community with its trademark bullet barrages. A few of the more brazen:
- In 1985, posse hitmen open fire on a packed Fireman's Benevolent Hall in Fort Lauderdale, wounding three and killing their target-- a reggae DJ.
- That same year, gang members shot up a Bunche Park soccer match, killing pro soccer star Colin Fowles.
- The Shower Posse apparently really hated mic controllers. In 1987, they riddled with bullets the Village Inn in unincorporated Broward, once again injuring bystanders and killing a DJ who was affiliated with a rival gang.
- In 1990, two gangmembers were killed when they opened fire on twenty cops in an industrial stash house. "It was just like a gun battle in the old canyon," says Vince, who was dispatched to the shootout's aftermath.
- In 1992, four posse shooters killed four and wounded 17 at Miami nightclub Taste of the Islands.
- And in 1998, posse capo Charles "Little Nut" Miller, hiding on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts after his role in a Miami crackhouse massacre that left five dead, threatened to start randomly killing American veterinary students at a university there.
By the time Little Nut took his last stand, a RICO case had crippled Shower Posse's South Florida operation, squeezing most of their smuggling west, through Mexico. Lloyd Lester Coke died in a mysterious Jamaican prison fire in 1992 as he awaited extradition to the United States. Vivian Blake served ten years in American prison and this March died of natural causes in Jamaica.
While Colombian cowboys like Pablo Escobar sought mainly to create anarchy in their home countries to evade extradition, the Shower Posse has always been political. It aligns itself with the Jamaica Labor Party, of which the country's Prime Minister Bruce Golding is a member -- which may explain Golding's apparent hesitancy to serve Christopher Coke to the United States.
The conspiracy theory has it that the jailhouse fire that killed the elder Coke was orchestrated by Jamaican politicians nervous that he might reveal corruption in an American courthouse.
Now the power struggle is repeating itself.
"A nation in upheaval over one person -- it shows you what kind of tentacles this guy has," Sheriff Lamberti says of the current stalemate. " It's like deja vu. This is something that I was doing with his father, and now it's happening again."
http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/riptide/2010/05/jamaican_drug_lord_christopher.php
A Cover Up Of Sorts
Manatt again - American law firm claims it got US$15,000 more
Phillips renews call for enquiry into Manatt issue
BY ALICIA DUNKLEY Senior staff reporter dunkleya@jamaicaobserver.com
Thursday, July 15, 2010
THE Government of Jamaica yesterday remained mum over the latest claims by American law firm Manatt, Phelps & Phillips that the State paid it US$15,000 more for lobbying work on its behalf than was previously disclosed.
Manatt, Phelps & Phillips is the same law firm that Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) affiliates reportedly hired, after being given approval by Prime Minister Bruce Golding, to lobby the United States government on the extradition request for former West Kingston 'don' Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, which was made last August.
Prior to an admission by Golding in May this year that he had sanctioned the initiative, the Government had insisted that no arrangement was reached between itself and the firm. It, however, said that solicitor general Douglas Leys met with representatives of Manatt, Phelps & Phillips at the invitation of attorney-at-law Harold Brady but merely for "exploratory discussions" contrary to the firm said. It also said that any money which had changed hands was through a link between Brady and the firm.
But in a new Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) filing with the Justice Department, Manatt said it had got $15,000 more than the US$49,892.62 that was originally disclosed.
According to the 24-page supplemental filing dated June 30, the activities done under the firm's agreement with Jamaica involved consultations with Molly Warlow, director of the Justice Department's Office of International Affairs, about extradition matters.
Particularly, the filing states that Manatt lawyers met with Warlow on December 17, 2009, to thrash out "extradition treaty process requirements". The filing made no mention of Coke.
Like in previous FARA filings, Manatt maintains that it "represented the Government of Jamaica in the US regarding existing political and economic matters, including existing treaty agreements between Jamaica and the US", until its engagement was terminated on February 8.
When contacted yesterday, JLP general secretary Karl Samuda said that he was unaware of the firm's latest claims.
"I can't help you at all, I am on my way to China, I am not in a position to comment. I don't know anything about what you're talking about. Call somebody in the JLP, call Mr Brady," Samuda said.
Information Minister Daryl Vaz, in the meanwhile, said that he was at a community meeting in his constituency but promised to 'investigate' the matter on his return to Kingston.
Repeated calls to Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Affairs Minister Dr Kenneth Baugh went unanswered as well as to the JLP's public relations chairman, Andrew Holness.
But the disclosure has forced People's National Party's Dr Peter Phillips, who was the first to bring the Government's involvement with the firm to the attention of the Parliament in March of this year, to reiterate his call for a commission of enquiry into the matter.
"With relation to Manatt, Phelps and Phillips and the other matters arising from the extradition of Mr Coke and the handling of that request, we need a properly appointed commission of enquiry. It is clear that the Government has not been telling the country all the facts. It is clear that we are still being treated to a cover-up of sorts," Dr Phillips told the Observer last night.
He said that the Opposition was not ruling out bringing a resolution to Parliament to cement this call.
"It is not going to be a matter that goes away. More facts and matters are going to come out. It is not a private matter that can just rest with Mr Golding in consideration of the fortunes of the JLP," he noted.
In addition he said that matters, such as whether "monies were still owed", the terms of reference given to Manatt, Phelps and Phillips and the involvement of Government officials were yet to be made clear.
"There is a lot to be answered and it can't be just treated with disdain by a contemptuous government," Dr Phillips said.
It is still unclear whether or not the additional US$15,000 had also been paid by contributors to the party as said by the prime minister in relation to the source of the payment of the previous US$49,000.
The matter of Manatt, Phelps & Phillips' involvement emerged, following attempts by the US government to have Coke extradited, and subsequent efforts by the Jamaican Government to delay the process, citing several reasons, among them the illegal gathering of information by US authorities in respect of the extradition request.
Coke was captured last month and flown to the US to face drug-trafficking and gun-related charges, after he waived his right to an extradition hearing in Jamaica. He is being kept in a New York detention centre, pending trial.
If he is convicted of the charges, Coke could spend the rest of his life in prison.
Polishing The Image Post Dudus
Post 'Dudus' tourism money awaiting approval
BY ERICA VIRTUE Observer writer virtuee@jamaicaobserver.com
Thursday, July 15, 2010
THE Government is yet to approve the US$10 million (J$890m), which tourism industry operatives are seeking to improve Jamaica's image in the post Christopher "Dudus" Coke disaster that resulted in a massive blow to the island's tourism product.
Tourism officials present at yesterday's meeting of the Public Administrations and Appropriations committee (PAAC) of Parliament, disclosed that the additional funds being sought had not yet been approved, six weeks after the submission was made.
As a result, the aggressive marketing campaign by the Jamaica Tourist Board (JTB) has been pushed back to the end of the month, pending Cabinet approval.
"Cabinet gave some approval subject to the Ministry of Finance concluding its review. I don't think the ministry is complete, however, we had indicated to Cabinet at the time that indications were that the additional expenditure could be accommodated from the Tourism Enhancement Fund (TEF) resources," Ann Marie Rhoden, who is in charge of public enterprises at the finance ministry, told the committee.
"One may ask the question then, wouldn't there be any implications for the TEF in respect of the targets under the (IMF) standby arrangement, and the answer to that is yes," she said.
The Government's reluctance is linked to International Monetary Fund (IMF) directives barring new spending.
PAAC chairman Dr Wykeham McNeil, who is also the Opposition spokesman on tourism, asked where the additional funds for the new campaign under way were sourced.
The ministry, Rhoden said, was closely studying income and expenditures of other public bodies that have surpluses which could accommodate the request. She said that on the basis of the June quarter statistics, the ministry was now in a better position to make a decision.
The PAAC heard that on the basis of the informal response, Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett and other officials were busy in the marketplace trying to woo visitors to the battered destination which has tourism as its main revenue earner.
"We had indicated informally, that it would and could be accommodated. However as I said the results for June have now just come in and I think we are going to be using that to better inform ourselves," Rhoden said.
The PAAC also heard that the requested sum may be less.
"Yes, there will be some accommodation. I am not sure it will be US$10 million or how much of it but I believe there will be some accommodation," she said.
Director General of the Jamaica Tourist Board Carole Guntley said that the lack of a formal approval had forced the agency to push back its new international marketing strategy.
"We would have wanted to start right after the July 4th weekend. We have been holding, in fact, chair (man) and members; they are in the field, as of July 12 doing normal field work. But the substantive programme which demands the US$10m, is awaiting the approval and the sign-off," Guntley told the committee.
She said that the new programme was a direct result of the "challenge" arising from the debacle in West Kingston.
Images of a city thrust into civil disobedience were flashed all over the world when the international press descended on Jamaica, after residents from Tivoli Gardens barricaded themselves in the community, in an attempt to prevent the police from serving an arrest warrant on Coke.
Coke had been indicted by a United States grand jury on drug-trafficking and gunrunning charges. A joint police/military operation in the community to arrest him, left more than 70 persons dead as well as police and military personnel.
The PAAC was told that increased activities were in anticipation that approval would be given. A stakeholders' meeting at the end of May heard of widespread cancellations and termination of forward booking, which necessitated an urgent programme to be put in place.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Post--Dudus--tourism-money-awaiting-approval_7800173
May 27 From The Battlefield - US Surveillance Drone Used In JA
Kingston's death toll hits 70 as bodies pile up in morgues
The death toll in the battle to capture the international drug baron Christopher 'Dudus' Coke was expected to climb last night as more bodies were delivered to mortuaries in the Jamaican capital, Kingston.
Neil Tweedie, in KingstonPublished: 10:00PM BST 27 May 2010
More than 70 deaths were confirmed by yesterday afternoon but the bodies of many people killed in fierce gun battles in the city's Tivoli Gardens quarter have yet to be recovered due to the siege of the area imposed by the Jamaican army and police force.
As operations continued for a fourth day, the government of prime minister Bruce Golding was unable to give any information on the whereabouts of Coke, who is being sought by the American authorities for drugs and weapons trafficking.
Hero Blair, a clergyman who serves as a government ombudsman, said he had seen a truck transporting decomposing bodies to a morgue.
"I know it (the number of dead) is going to be much higher," he said. "Where are these bodies taken from?"
Despite some 500 arrests, Daryl Vaz, the Jamaican information minister, was unable to confirm that Coke was still on Jamaica.
Rumours abound about the fate of Coke, who is alleged to have masterminded a criminal empire stretching from Tivoli to the streets of New York, where his lieutenants push cocaine and marijuana.
Many in the capital believe he left the island before this week's security operation, the result of the government's belated decision to accede to a US request for his extradition. Others imagine him to be in hiding in a remote area of Jamaica.
Jamaica's gangs have been an integral part of the country's political system, providing on-the-ground muscle for elements of the two main parties, the Jamaica Labour Party and the People's National Party. Coke, whose Tivoli fiefdom forms the heart of Mr Golding's constituency, is considered a major threat to the Jamaican establishment due to his knowledge of corrupt practices by senior politicians.
One unconfirmed report suggests Coke's lawyers may be trying to strike a deal with the United States government for his safe removal to the US to avoid his being silenced by former associates. Coke, Jamaica's most senior crime 'don', is thought to fear that he could share the fate of his father Lloyd, the previous don of Tivoli, who perished in a mysterious fire while in prison awaiting extradition to the US.
Although the government in Kingston has denied receiving foreign help in the hunt for Coke, a US Navy P-3 Orion surveillance aircraft has been seen circling the battleground in Tivoli. The aircraft is equipped with the same camera as the Predator drone used in Afghanistan.
Connected by downlink to laptops on the ground, it provides real-time video of an area. The laptops could be operated by Jamaican personnel but it is equally likely that US personnel are involved, possibly from the CIA.
The battle to find Coke has inflicted major disruption in Jamaica, resulting in the closure of shops, schools and bus services, as well as the cancellation of a series of cricket matches between the West Indies and South Africa. Kingston has been a virtual ghost town after dark, with businesses shutting early to allow employees to get home before nightfall.
That situation has now eased as the fighting is confined to an ever-smaller area in Tivoli. But the ordeal of residents in the slum area, which lies near to Kingston's waterfront, continues. Food and water are in short supply and sanitation has broken down. The government is appealing for donations of blood due to "critically low levels" in hospitals, which have dealt with scores of casualties, some of them children caught in the crossfire.
The intensity of the assault on Tivoli has been criticized by some politicians, who accuse the security for forces of indiscriminate attacks.
May 28 From The UK Telegraph
Jamaica queues to discover its dead
The queues outside Jamaica's national stadium grow longer. Not for tickets to an event but for news of the men being held inside.
By Neil Tweedie
Published: 10:00PM BST 28 May 2010
With some 600 prisoners to deal with – a result of the military assault on the stronghold of the drug baron Christopher 'Dudus' Coke – the authorities in Kingston have followed the lead of Augusto Pinochet, who used the football stadium in Santiago as a temporary prison during the bloody aftermath of the 1973 coup in Chile.
Ann-Marie Williams was one of those waiting for news. She last heard from her 18-year-old son Jeff on Monday, shortly before police and soldiers stormed the Tivoli Gardens quarter of the Jamaican capital in pursuance of a warrant granted for Coke's extradition to the United States on drugs and weapons trafficking charges.
"He could be here, he could be dead, I don't know," she said of her son. "You ask for information and get nothing."
Heavily armed police guarded the gate to the stadium, a short distance from the city centre. Its use as a prison is another manifestation of the state of emergency declared in west Kingston, which has resulted in Tivoli, a compact collection of slums, being sealed off from the outside world, together with another enclave, Denham Town. While Coke, alleged head of a criminal empire stretching from Kingston to New York, remains at large, the people of Tivoli, the vast majority of them innocent people, are imprisoned, short of food and water, and surrounded by the wreckage of a battle that has claimed the lives of more than 70 civilians, one soldier and two policemen.
Many Jamaicans, particularly the middle class, support the hardline stance adopted by the Labour administration of Bruce Golding during the last week, regarding it as a necessary evil in the fight against the criminal gangs whose tentacles stretch into all corners of Jamaican life, not least politics. But there is disquiet also at the scale of the carnage inflicted on Tivoli, with accusations that the security forces have used excessive force in clearing the area, including summary executions.
"People have told me that soldiers would tell a boy he was free and he could run away, and when he was running shoot him the back," said Mrs Williams.
Certainly, there are curious features to the four-day operation, which has seen Kingston's hospitals overwhelmed by an influx of wounded, including children caught in the crossfire. Tivoli was portrayed as a virtual fortress, populated by gunmen loyal to Coke, regarded as the most powerful of Jamaica's crime dons. But as of yesterday just six weapons had been recovered by officers conducting house-to-house searches. Six weapons and 73 dead.
"Why so many deaths for one man?" asked Joan, a 19-year-old resident of Tivoli whose brother was killed by security forces. "He (Coke) surely far away, outta Jamaica."
Calvin Higgins appears to have been another innocent victim of trigger-happy soldiers. The 52-year-old former security guard is believed to have been taking rubbish out of his yard when he was shot in the head by solders guarding Kingston's main hospital. Following the shooting, on Tuesday, Mr Higgins's body was left lying for hours in the street.
"It was just murder," said his son Marvin. "I do not know of my father ever having had trouble with the police. They were telling people to stay off the street but they were also allowing people to go to work."
Mr Golding's seeming determination to crack the power of the dons stems in part from persistent allegations regarding their influence over elected politicians. Gangs tend to divide their support between the ruling Jamaica Labour Party and the National People's Party, operating at the grassroots to ensure discipline among voters. In return they benefit from government contracts, taking turns to enjoy the favours of their adopted parties. Mr Golding, whose constituency includes Tivoli, has strongly denied an allegation made by the American television network ABC that he is a criminal associate of Coke.
Mr Golding has been strongly criticized by his predecessor as Labour prime minister, Edward Seaga, who claims that the real death toll from the fighting is more than 100, some victims being buried secretly by the security forces. Amnesty International has also called for an investigation into alleged "extra-judicial killings" by the police and military.
The United States has strongly supported the operation, however, providing flak jackets for troops and police, and surveillance assistance in the shape of P-3 Orion aircraft.
Tivoli Fortress
Dudus criminals in Kingston turned slum into 'fortress festooned with booby traps'
Criminals loyal to the fugitive international drug baron Christopher 'Dudus' Coke turned his stronghold in the Jamaican capital Kingston into a fortress, according to police.
From Neil Tweedie in KingstonPublished: 4:53PM BST 29 May 2010
Stung by allegations of summary executions and other abuses, the Jamaican authorities have published pictures of devices found in the Tivoli Gardens area of the city. Explosives jacketed with metal fragments were found attached to barricades and on approach routes into the waterfront slum district, some of them operated by control wires. They said the slum was festooned with explosive booby traps intended for soldiers and police sent in to arrest him.
Gunmen were also said to have disguised themselves as women.
"They were very well organized, they knew what they were doing," said Colonel Rocky Meade of the Jamaican Defence Force. "We encountered very sophisticated defensive layouts." Heavy fighting lasting some 12 hours followed the start of the operation to seize Coke, who is accused by the American authorities of masterminding a criminal empire stretching from Kingston to the streets of New York.
Washington has been demanding Coke's extradition on drugs and firearms trafficking offences for months, but the Labour government of prime minister Bruce Golding acted only on Monday.
The result was 73 civilian deaths in addition to one soldier and two policemen killed, as well as scores of injuries and some 500 arrests.
Detainees are being held in the national sports stadium in Kingston, while decomposing corpses have been left piled up in makeshift coffins. Critics of the government allege the death toll is actually in excess of a hundred and that bodies have been buried secretly to disguise the fact, but the police deny conducting any burials. Initially, only a handful of firearms were recovered. That number has increased to two dozen.
Rumours abound in Kingston concerning Coke's fate, with suggestions that he has fled abroad or is dead. But the Jamaican police believe he is alive and in hiding on the island.
"The best intelligence we have is that Coke is still within the jurisdiction," said police commissioner Owen Ellington.
Jamaica's gangs are intimately linked with the country's two main political parties, and Coke Tivoli stronghold lies within Mr Golding's constituency.
There have been suggestions that influential figures in Jamaican politics would prefer Coke dead to prevent him telling all to US prosecutors.
"We do not issue shoot-to-kill orders," said commissioner Ellington. "Our modus operandi is to arrest Mr Coke on the warrant and bring him before a court of justice." Concerns remain, however. Coke's father Lloyd, the previous 'don' of Tivoli, was killed in a mysterious fire while awaiting extradition to the US in a Jamaican prison in 1991. Earlier this week, troops searching for Coke stormed a house in the affluent Kirkland Heights area of Kingston. The occupant, Keith Clarke, the brother of a former MP, was killed, and four soldiers wounded.
Edward Seaga, the former Labour prime minister, considered by some to be responsible for the infiltration of gangs into Jamaican public life, has called for Mr Golding's resignation over the attack on Tivoli. Commenting on the continuing security operation in the area, which has resulted in residents being effectively imprisoned in their homes while short of food and water, he said: "I cannot think of any reason to cause the government to continue with this very, very wicked act."
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Tivoli residents want int’l enquiry
Allege abuses and extrajudicial killings by security forces
By PAUL HENRY, Observer staff reporter, henryp@jamaicaobserver.com
Thursday, July 08, 2010
TIVOLI Gardens residents, led by attorney Hannah Harris-Barrington, are seeking an international enquiry into May's security incursion into the West Kingston community.
The operation to apprehend former don and accused drug lord Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke left 73 people dead.
Some 58 civilians and security personnel were injured in the three-day clash that started on May 29.
Immediately after the fighting settled, reports started to surface of wide-scale police abuses and extrajudicial killings.
There were also reports of significant damage and theft of property, allegedly by members of the security forces. Outposts of the Office of the Public Defender set up in the community have recorded more than 700 complaints from residents.
Harris-Barrington told the Observer yesterday that more than 200 signatures have been secured from residents as they push to have the international community scrutinise the operation.
"A lot of people have suffered down there and we want an international enquiry into the matter," Harris-Barrington told the Observer. "Atrocities have been committed."
She said that the drive would be continued to collect more signatures and that representatives are now in England rallying Jamaicans living there to join the cause.
There have been numerous calls for the Golding-led administration to hold an enquiry into the matter.
This is now Harris-Barrington's second tussle with the State in relation to the West Kingston saga.
Just last month, the lawyer filed an action for Judicial Review of the Government's decision on May 23 to call a State of Public Emergency, limited to Kingston and St Andrew, in response to chaos caused by marauding gunmen loyal to Coke, who set fire to the Hannah Town and Darling Street police stations during the upheaval that crippled the business district of downtown Kingston and resulted in millions of dollars in damage and loss of sales.
The suit was filed on behalf of the Portland-based group Jamaican Forum for Human Rights, of which Harris-Barrington is president, and names Prime Minister Bruce Golding, Attorney General Dorothy Lightbourne, Director of Public Prosecutions Paula Llewellyn, Governor General Sir Patrick Allen and former Police Commissioner Rear Admiral Hardly Lewin as defendants.
The claimants are Dr Clarice Ledwidge, Bishop of the Ministries of Jessica Clarice Evangelist in Hector Rivers Portland; Tivoli Gardens resident Annett Marshall; and other concerned citizens.
The application for Judicial Review will not be heard before September.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Tivoli-residents-want-int-l-enquiry
One Bad Apple?
Sept 6 trial for cop on weapons charge
BY TANESHA MUNDLE Observer staff reporter mundlet@jamaicaobserver.com
Thursday, July 08, 2010
POLICE Sergeant Russell Robinson, who was implicated in February's gun and ammunition find at premises along Munster Road in Eastern St Andrew, is scheduled to go on trial in the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate's Court on September 6 for breaches of the Corruption Prevention Act.
The trial date was set Tuesday, when Robinson appeared before Resident Magistrate Georgianna Fraser, who remanded him into custody.
The prosecution is alleging that Robinson, who was assigned to the armoury at the Elletson Road Police Station, begged his colleagues to release him, when he was held on February 4 in the gun and ammunition find.
Another accused in the matter, Garnett Pellington, was also charged for the said charge, but pleaded guilty and was given a 12-month suspended sentence last Thursday.
Pellington was charged after he offered to pay $200,000 to one of the arresting officer to set him free.
Both accused along with two civilian workers of the police armoury, Charles Morris and David Blagrove, are also now before the High Court Division of the Gun Court on gun charges.
However, on Monday all three accused pleaded guilty to the charges. Pellington pleaded guilty to a count of illegal possession of firearm, while Morris and Blagrove both pleaded guilty to all 19 counts for which they were charged
Pellington is expected to give evidence against co-accused Robinson, who previously pleaded not guilty in connection with 18 counts of illegal possession of firearms.
The accused were arrested after a search of two premises in Eastern St Andrew found 19 firearms, 10,600 rounds of ammunition, police vests and $787,000 cash.
The weapons, which included M-16 rifles, shotguns, andUzi sub-machine guns, were stolen from the armoury.
All four accused persons were remanded into custody and are scheduled to appear in court on Friday.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Sept-6-trial-for-cop-on-weapons-charge_7778046May Pen Cemetery Ghosts
Bones rattle May Pen Cemetery workers
By KIMMO MATTHEWS, Observer staff reporter matthewsk@jamaicaobserver.com
Thursday, July 08, 2010
KINGSTON Mayor Desmond McKenzie is to this morning meet with Kingston and St Andrew Corporation (KSAC) officials to discuss reports that a number of bones were found by workers in the May Pen Cemetery.
Media reports have suggested that more than a dozen bones were found in the area by workers during several days of clean up.
Concerns have also been raised by the workers that the find could result in health problems.
“I cannot speak to those reports at this time but what I can say is that I will be meeting with KSAC officials about the reports this morning," the mayor told the Observer.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Bones-rattle-May-Pen-Cemetery-workers
Grave threat
Daraine Luton, Senior Staff Reporter
IF YOUR relatives were buried in the May Pen Cemetery in the last few decades, chances are their tombs have been disturbed. It is also possible that their remains may be among the morbid mosaic of bones which litter sections of the burial ground.
The Kingston and St Andrew Corporation (KSAC), which runs the age-old, 200-acre heavily vegetated property, said it is aware that more than two dozen human skulls lay bare in the cemetery.
"We are aware of it and we are aware that it poses a public-health risk," Town Clerk Errol Greene told The Gleaner yesterday.
The Gleaner yesterday observed countless pieces of ivory bones protruding from shallow graves in sections of the cemetery. Skulls and other bones lay scattered about the burial ground like toys abandoned by children.
Paupers' bones?
Cemetery workers told The Gleaner that many of the bones were from paupers' graves. They say these persons are very often not buried as deep as others and, in some instances, their remains were dragged from shallow or eroded tombs by scavenging animals.
By law, all coffins must be at last four feet below the level of the surface of the ground adjoining the grave. All graves for adults must be dug to a depth of at least five feet.
Cemetery workers say that in many instances, paupers are buried no deeper than three feet deep.
However, Greene has dismissed the suggestion that the bones belonged to paupers. He said the paupers' section of the cemetery is nowhere close to the bones our news team identified.
According to the town clerk, many of these bones appeared to have come from graves which have either collapsed or have been removed by humans.
"Whenever the cemetery is bushed, we have to put aside some money to replace those graves and vaults and to reinter remains," Greene said.
Funds sought for reburials
He told The Gleaner that it will cost "a lot of money" to reinter the exposed remains but steered clear of providing an estimate. The Gleaner was informed that both the Ministry of Health and United Nations Development Programme have been contacted for funds to help rebury the disturbed dead.
However, it is unlikely that the exposed bones will be reinterred any time soon, as Green said it is normally done after the landscaping is completed.
Approximately one-tenth of the 200-acre burial ground has been cleared since the military incursion into nearby Tivoli Gardens. The clean-up bill so far is $9 million.
When the machetes stop swinging and the chainsaws cease buzzing, the masons will be summoned. Perhaps then many souls in the May Pen Cemetery will do as relatives wished at their funerals - rest in peace.
daraine.luton@gleanerjm.comhttp://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner//20100708/lead/lead2.html
Same Knife Stick Sheep Stick Goat
'Prove it, Lewin'
Arthur Hall, Senior Staff Reporter
Prime Minister Bruce Golding has challenged Rear Admiral Hardley Lewin, the former police commissioner, to provide facts to back up his allegations that ousted west Kingston strongman Christopher 'Dudus' Coke was tipped off about the pending extradition request minutes after National Security Minister Dwight Nelson was briefed.
"All he has said is that in the 15 minutes he left Minister Nelson and came to me Coke was tipped off and bolted into Tivoli. Now, what I know of Tivoli is that Coke was there every day, so in a sense he bolts there every day," Golding told journalists in Montego Bay, St James, yesterday.
"But Mr Lewin cannot be allowed to stop there because even if each of us can make these unsubstantiated allegations and then people are demanding a commission of enquiry to determine the truth of those allegations, he must go further.
"He must say the basis on which I made that statement is as follows, so that we have something to respond to," added Golding.
The prime minister said when he was called by the security minister following the briefing by the then police commissioner, he had no idea what the matter was about, except that Lewin wanted to speak with him about a person in his constituency.
According to Golding, it was when Lewin arrived at Vale Royal, approximately 15 minutes after being initially telephoned, that he discovered the details of the matter.
Golding told journalists that he was unable to say if legal action will be taken against Lewin.
"I understand that Minister Nelson has raised that issue and it is something that I will have to discuss with him," Golding said.
But he was under no illusion that even a court victory would remove the stain caused by the allegations.
"The problem with these things is, with the kind of media that you have today, scurrilous, unsubstantiated allegations or innuendoes have a DNA effect. You can never remove it.
"Even if Mr Lewin is called upon, whether through a commission of enquiry or through a lawsuit, even if he is called upon to prove it and he can't, the damage has already been done," he added.
Just over a week ago, Lewin claimed that 15 minutes after he briefed the national security minister about the pending request for Coke, the alleged drug kingpin was tipped off and retreated into his Tivoli Gardens stronghold.
The allegation was immediately dismissed by Nelson, who threatened legal action, while poring over the Official Secrets Act to determine if the former police commissioner had broken confidentiality clauses.
Lewin said Monday that history would vindicate him for his controversial revelation.
arthur.hall@gleanerjm.comhttp://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20100708/lead/lead1.html
Lewin is not a 'yes man' — Simpson Miller
Garfield Myers
Wednesday, July 07, 2010
MANDEVILLE, Manchester — Opposition Leader Portia Simpson Miller has come out in strong defence of former police commissioner, Rear Admiral Hardley Lewin in his current quarrel with the Government, claiming the Bruce Golding administration is seeking to "victimise and embarrass everyone who refuse to be yes men and women".
Simpson Miller told a Central Manchester People's National Party (PNP) constituency conference in Mandeville on Sunday night that as prime minister and minister of defence three years ago, she had worked with Lewin — then head of Jamaica's military — and found him to be an admirable professional.
"I found him to be an honest, forthright person, respectful, but not a yes man. If he does not agree he is not afraid to say so. He will not simply tell you what you want to hear. He will tell you the facts, and his analysis of them. He is a dedicated soldier, a loyal servant of the people and a patriot of Jamaica," Simpson Miller, who is president of the PNP, said.
Lewin, who resigned as police commissioner in November last year, alleged on CVM-TV that the recently extradited alleged drug lord Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, was tipped off about the United States' extradition request after he (Lewin) told National Security Minister Dwight Nelson about the request.
Lewin's allegation has been rejected by Nelson, who claimed it reflects the "maliciousness of a bitter and revengeful man".
"I reject and repudiate Mr Lewin's insinuation that either the prime minister or I alerted Christopher Coke to the existence of an extradition request by the US authorities," Nelson said in a statement. The national security minister suggested that legal action was likely to be taken against Lewin whom he claimed had been a "failure" as commissioner of police.
But Simpson Miller said Nelson's "attack" on Lewin reflected an arrogant and disrespectful approach to governance that failed to recognise standards in public service.
"They have a difficulty working with good, competent and efficient people, they only feel good to work with people who will tell them what they want to hear," she charged.
Simpson Miller named a long list of high-profile "dismissals" by the Golding Government, including that of the Public Service Commission, a former deputy solicitor general, and a former Bank of Jamaica governor as evidence of the validity of her allegation.
The resignation of two commissioners of police since the JLP Government took power in late 2007 was further evidence, she said.
"Are these all bad people? These are people who have combined experience of scores, hundreds of years of service to the public service.
"We know them to be efficient people, hardworking people and they (Government) send them home and when... things start to slide they (Government) point fingers at everybody else apart from themselves," the PNP leader said.
Simpson Miller also rejected what she said were suggestions that Lewin was taking political sides. No one who chose to speak with "honesty" could make such an allegation, she said.
Simpson Miller said the recent approach by JLP Senators to a "no-confidence" motion brought by the Opposition against Attorney General and Minister of Justice Dorothy Lightbourne regarding her handling of the extradition affair, was further evidence of the ruling party's "arrogance" and "disrespect for the Jamaican people".
"I was appalled when I watched the debate on the motion against the attorney general... because at least Golding recognised that he did wrong and apologised (to the nation) but none of the speakers (JLP Senators) recognised that anything was wrong, everyone got up to say that everything is okay, 'a nuh nuttin'," she said.
Claiming the entire episode had stained the reputation of Jamaica, Simpson Miller reiterated calls for a commission of enquiry into the Government's entire approach to the US request for the extradition of Coke and related issues.
The June 24 extradition of Coke (eventually completed after he waived his right to be heard in Jamaican jurisdiction) followed a nine-month period in which the Government refused to authrorise the extradition request on the basis that the evidence submitted by the United States was gathered in breach of Jamaican law.
However, faced with mounting pressure at home and abroad and the repercussions of a scandal related to efforts to lobby the US government regarding the extradition process, Golding announced in May that the Government would sign the order.
The announcement led to criminal elements blocking the entrances to Tivoli Gardens in West Kingston, which was Coke's base.
Days later, following attacks on police stations and the declaration of a State of Emergency, the security forces entered Tivoli Gardens and during a fierce confrontation with gunmen more than 70 civilians and a soldier were killed.
After eluding the police for several weeks, Coke was held by the police on June 22 in the company of high-profile pastor Rev Al Miller, who said he had been taking the fugitive to the United States Embassy. Miller has since been charged with harbouring a fugitive and perverting the course of justice.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Lewin-is-not-a--yes-man-----Simpson-Miller_7777507
Bunting knocks Nelson's attack on Lewin
BY GARFIELD MYERS Editor-at-Large South Central Bureau
Thursday, July 08, 2010
MANDEVILLE, Manchester — Opposition Spokesman on National Security Peter Bunting has said that a reported bid by National Security Minister Dwight Nelson to silence former police commissioner Hardley Lewin using the Official Secrets Act, flies in the face of proposed whistle-blower legislation which the Government now has before Parliament.
"This is the same government that has a piece of legislation (in Parliament) called the Protected Disclosures Act or the Whistle-blower's Act (which provides) a framework for public interest disclosures regarding unlawful or irregular conduct by public or private sector employers," Bunting told a meeting of his Central Manchester Constituency in Mandeville last Sunday.
Bunting noted that the proposed legislation also "provides for the protection of persons making these disclosures".
Bunting said that recent "disclosures" made by Lewin regarding the government's alleged mishandling of the extradition process for accused drug and arms trafficker Christopher "Dudus" Coke were exactly the kind the proposed whistle-blower legislation was designed to facilitate.
"What do we have here? We have the former top cop making disclosures in the public interest and he is certainly speaking of irregular conduct if not unlawful conduct. And I want to ask the JLP administration to explain this inconsistency," said Bunting, who is the Member of Parliament for Central Manchester.
His audience included Opposition leader Portia Simpson Miller, leading politicians from the central region, former Mandeville Mayor Cecil Charlton, party workers, delegates and hard-core supporters.
Bunting charged that the government had been emboldened to bring the legislation to Parliament after an informant provided information leading to the so-called Trafigura scandal which rocked the PNP government in 2006.
But, said Bunting, the JLP was now finding that the "same knife stick sheep stick goat".
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Bunting-knocks-Nelson-s-attack-on-Lewin_7778076
Political Corruption Starts With Contributions
Bunting wants full disclosure
BY GARFIELD MYERS Editor-at-Large South Central Bureau
Thursday, July 08, 2010
MANDEVILLE, Manchester – General Secretary of the People's National Party (PNP) Peter Bunting has said that the "still unexplained" payment of $US49,000 to US law firm, Manatt, Phelps and Phillips to facilitate a controversial lobbying effort by the ruling Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) is further evidence of the need for "full disclosure" on financial contributions to political parties.
"Public disclosure of financing of political parties right now, is a matter of public interest," Bunting told his Central Manchester Constituency Conference at the Manchester High School last Sunday.
"We have been working for many years on campaign finance reform, public financing of political parties -- an issue the PNP has been advocating for the last seven years.
"We have been trying to work with the JLP at the level of the electoral commission. In the interest of consensus we have been willing to hold back from full public disclosure of every donor to a political party. But the time has come where we really need to put the spotlight on where the funding for political parties is coming from," he said.
Bunting noted that while the bungled effort purportedly by the JLP to lobby the US government "against the extradition of Christopher Coke" had caused great problems for the Government, the country had not been told "who that secret donor was (that was) willing to give US$49,000 as a down payment on a contract of US$400,000".
Fighting Water Pollution
Harbour View residents win long battle
NWC to fix age-old sewage plant
Thursday, July 08, 2010
RESIDENTS of Harbour View in eastern Kingston have won their decades-long fight to have the National Water Commission (NWC) fix a dilapidated sewage treatment plant that has for the past 20 years been dumping untreated waste into the community and the sea.
The victory in the Supreme Court comes in the form of a consent judgement on Tuesday, which compels the NWC to have a new treatment plant in place in 18 months' time and to "clean up and repair the damage to the environment" caused over the past 25 years.
The court also ruled that an interim solution for the plant be implemented within six months.
Following years of unsuccessfully lobbying for the problem to be fixed, the Jamaica Environmental Trust (JET) and a group of residents, led by Carol Lawton, applied for a Judicial Review in February seeking declarations from the court that the NWC, the Kingston and St Andrew Health Department, the National Environment and Planning Agency (NEPA) and the Natural Resources Conservation Authority (NRCA) had all failed to carry out their statutory duties.
But in an unexpected development Tuesday, the government agencies, advised by the Attorney General's Chambers, conceded almost all of the arguments, making a trial unnecessary.
"This has been a very long road. The Harbour View sewage treatment plant was one of the first places I was taken back in 1990 or so [that] sparked my interest in environmental issues. It was not working then; it is still not working, but we hope this consent judgment will result in finally getting the plant fixed," JET chief executive officer Diana McCaulay said in a release yesterday.
According to the judgement:
* The Kingston and St Andrew Health Department acted in excess of its powers under the Public Health Act when it gave the National Water Commission six months to abate the discharge of untreated or partially treated sewage on land and in the sea, and then further extended this period for another six months.
* The National Water Commission failed in its statutory duty to operate and maintain the sewage treatment plant at Harbour View. The NWC must clean up and repair the damage done to the environment over the more than 25 years of discharge of sewage on land and into the sea.
* The National Environment and Planning Agency and the Natural Resources Conservation Authority failed in their statutory duty to have served an Enforcement Notice on the NWC under the NRCA Act
* An interim solution for the plant will be implemented within six months, with the completed plant capable of meeting legal standards to be constructed within 18 months.
The judgement requires the NWC to keep JET and Harbour View residents informed of the progress, including scheduled visits to the work sites.
Lawton said in the release that residents have over the years paid both monetarily and with the quality of life as a result of the issue.
"After years of talking, this shows that when the citizens are committed they can change the non-responsive actions of government. The citizens' association is to be commended for finally taking the last resort of going to court. We have paid dearly in both dollars and quality of life in Harbour View because we paid for a service that was not delivered for 30 years, while being exposed to environmental risk of serious diseases with the regulatory authorities sitting by," she said.
The group was represented by attorney Clyde Williams.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Harbour-View-residents-win-long-battle_7780762
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Photographs: Shallow graves, torture chamber found in Tivoli
BY KIMMO MATTHEWS Observer staff reporter matthewsk@jamaicaobserver.com
Friday, June 04, 2010
THE security forces have found shallow graves and an alleged torture chamber in an area of Tivoli Gardens they believed was used by thugs to hold informal court sessions and inflict cruel punishment on dissidents.
During an informal tour of an area this morning Jamaica Defense Force soldiers showed the area located in a section of the community called Java.
They also showed another location behind McKenzie Drive where persons were buried in shallow graves.
“Civilians who did not fall in line with reputed don Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke would be tried and if found guilty would be severely punished some to the death,” said a policeman.
During the informal tour of the area several mass graves and an empty wooden coffin was found.
Soldiers also showed a shallow grave where maggot-infested human remains were found this morning. A human skull was also seen in the grave. It appeared the person was buried in a standing position.
"This is just one of the many areas where we believe shallow graves are located," one soldier said.
Residents however denied knowledge of the torture chamber or burial sites.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Shallow-graves--torture-chamber-found-in-Tivoli
I have said this many times before Tivoli Gardens need to be DEMOLISHED. Edward Seaga built this place and trained these people for his own selfish ideas and deeds.Seaga should be investigated and prosecuted for crimes against the people of Jamaica, building a terrorist training camp, sponsoring and supporting state terrorism
What a wicked group of people, but according to Seaga, Mutty Perkings, Desmond Mckenzie and Mark Wignall these people are nice peaceful law abiding citizens. Dem wicked
Excavation of suspected burial sites in Tivoli to begin Monday
Corey Robinson
Saturday, June 26, 2010
THE police will on Monday begin excavating several suspected burial sites in Tivoli Gardens that were detected by two sniffer dogs brought in from the United States on Wednesday.
Assistant Commissioner of Police Les Green declined to say how many sites were detected, but said the information would be made public as soon as the excavations began.
"Once we start digging and we confirm that bodies are indeed at these locations, then I can say. I don't want to set off any alarms until that process has started," Green told the Observer yesterday.
The dogs are a part of a search team brought to the island to assist investigators in their search following the discovery of a corpse in a shallow grave in a section of the community called 'Rasta City' three weeks ago.
That body was found kneeling with its hands and feet bound and mouth gagged. It had several gunshot wounds.
Police said they found two 9mm shell casings, and a round of ammunition used in a AK 47 assault rifle, at that scene.
They suspect more bodies could be buried in the area, and they have extended their search in that section of the community.
The discovery of the shallow grave followed the revelation by the security forces that they found buildings in the community which were believed to be used as torture chambers, and water tunnels, which they suspect may have been used as escape routes by criminals during the joint police/military incursion in the community a month ago.
The security forces stormed the community on May 24 after gunmen aligned with former community leader Christopher 'Dudus' Coke tried to prevent his arrest to face drug and gun-running charges in the United States.
The thugs, who had blocked the entrances to the West Kingston community, traded bullets with the cops. More than 70 civilians as well as a soldier were killed in the gunfights. Two policemen were also killed by thugs as violence broke out in other parts of the city, causing commercial and other activities to come to a standstill for two whole days.
Coke, who managed to sneak out of Tivoli Gardens during the incursion, was arrested on Tuesday and extradited to the United States on Thursday. The former area leader waived his right to an extradition trial in Jamaica.
The security forces are, however, still maintaining a heavy presence in his former stronghold.
Potential burial site identified in Tivoli
By KIMMO MATTHEWS, Observer staff reporter matthewsk@jamaicaobserver.com
Monday, June 28, 2010
ANOTHER potential burial site has been identified in Tivoli Gardens and the area is now being excavated.
The site, which sparked the interest of sniffer dogs in the community this morning, is very close to the first location behind Rasta City, where a body was found earlier this month.
The area has been cordoned off by the security forces.
Local police and a search team from the United States say the find is the second made by a search team and two sniffer dogs from the United States.
The team has been working in the area since last Thursday.
“Nothing has been confirmed or found so far, but the area is being excavated at this time and the work continues,” a cop on the scene told the Observer.
The US search team was called in to Tivoli Gardens following the discovery of human remains in the West Kingston community on June 9.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Potential-burial-site-identified-in-Tivoli
A Who A De Criminal?
Obama with the biggest Jamaican don at during a session with African Outreach Leaders during the 2010 G8 Summit at the Deerhurst Resort at Muskoka in Huntsville, Canada, June 25, 2010.
PM urges G8 to treat crime as a development issue
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
PRIME Minister Bruce Golding has appealed to G8 countries for greater assistance to countries like Jamaica in the fight against organised crime.
According to Golding, this assistance must be broad-based and must recognise that rooting out crime is not just a law enforcement exercise but a major development issue.
Golding was speaking in Muskoka, Canada at a special outreach session of the G8 Summit last Friday.
He called attention to the penetrative and corrosive effect of crime in struggling developing countries with weak institutional capacity and a scarcity of resources. He also outlined the measures being carried out by his administration in its renewed campaign to combat crime and declared that it was determined to use every tool in its toolbox in an all-out effort that must be sustained until the job is completed.
However, he said that countries like Jamaica cannot do it alone, given their lack of resources and the transnational nature of organised crime.
While acknowledging the assistance being provided by the US, UK, Canada and EU, he said that a more comprehensive strategy must be developed as a matter of urgency. This must include greater effort to disrupt the flow of drugs with equal emphasis being placed on both the supply and demand side of the drug trade.
He also called for more effective measures to stem the flow of illegal guns which were not only the symbol and tool of organised crime but filtered into the hands of itinerant criminals.
Golding also appealed for more technical assistance in criminal investigation, intelligence management and law enforcement techniques and cautioned that crime does not exist in a vacuum but thrives in an environment where poverty is prevalent and hope and opportunity are depressed.
Countries like Jamaica, he said, which have been battered by the global recession have had to contain expenditure on critical social programmes and find themselves fighting crime at a time when the material conditions are more favourable for crime to flourish.
He welcomed the additional resources provided by G20 countries through the International Monetary Fund and other multilateral agencies but pointed out that the conditions for accessing these funds require deflationary fiscal and monetary policies that left beneficiary countries with no room to effectively address the development dimension of the fight against crime.
He urged the international community to help countries like Jamaica to find more creative ways to deal with these challenges, even while undertaking the adjustments necessary to put their economies in good health.
"When we go into communities and dismantle the criminal organisations that are embedded there, we leave a huge space which, if not quickly filled by meaningful programmes that empower people, provide training and jobs, create opportunities and offer hope, will shortly thereafter be filled by a new, smarter generation of criminals," said Golding. "The kind of social intervention that is needed requires resources that we don't have. We need your help... lots of help", Golding said.
Police name six as 'persons of major interest'
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
THE police yesterday released the names of six men it named as major persons of interest.
They are:.
* Daniel Bartley, o/c Dan Dan;
* Shane Jackson, o/c Shane Taliban;
* Lamar Dean Thompson, o/c Lamar;
* Okido Roberts, o/c Ocki;
* Craig Dawson, o/c Shopkeeper; and
* Christopher Linton, o/c Dog Paw.
The men, the police said, should turn themselves in at any police station "as the police want to interview them for various crimes including murder and shooting".
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Police-name-six-as--persons--br--of-major-interest_7755165
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Jamaica: drug kingpin 'may have fled country'
Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke, the alleged drug kingpin at the centre of the Jamaican unrest, may have fled the country, according to the government.
Published: 11:30PM BST 26 May 2010
Coke had months to stockpile weapons in his slum stronghold while the premier wavered over US demands for his extradition.
“I could not say if he is in Jamaica,” Information Minister Daryl Vaz said of Coke, who is known as “Dudus.” “It’s very difficult to tell.”
Police and soldiers who fought their way into the barricaded Tivoli Gardens slum in gritty West Kingston were conducting a door-to-door search, and the government reported calm Wednesday. Coke’s lawyer has declined to confirm his whereabouts.
Gray smoke was rising from recently extinguished fires inside Tivoli Gardens. Sporadic gunfire rang out elsewhere in West Kingston and security forces barred journalists from entering the battle zones around the capital on Jamaica’s south coast, far from the tourist resorts on the north shore of the Caribbean island.
The violence did not surprise island police and community groups who warned that Coke had been stockpiling weapons and preparing to defend himself since the US demanded his extradition last August. According to the US indictment, he has built a private arsenal of firearms smuggled in by gang members in the United States, sharing guns with other criminals to solidify his power as a major underworld boss.
“The situation at Tivoli is dreadful, but it’s been something that’s been simmering for a long, long time. And everybody knew that if they made the move for Coke that there would be trouble,” said Susan Goffe, a spokesman for local human rights group Jamaicans for Justice.
Fighting between police, the military and drug gangs has left at least 50 dead in Jamaica as Bruce Golding, the prime minister, vowed to restore calm after three days of violent clashes in the capital Kingston.
Hospital sources said that the dead and injured were mainly civilians caught up in the violence as troops fanned out across the city hunting an alleged drug kingpin.
Mr Golding vowed the security forces would restore law and order - three days after his government declared a state of emergency amid the worst violence to hit the Caribbean nation in decades.
"The government deeply regrets the loss of lives of members of the security forces, and those of innocent law abiding citizens who were caught in the cross fire," he told the House of Representatives.