Friday, July 16, 2010
From Al Jazeera - Extraditing Coke
Thursday, July 15, 2010
JLP Elder Rethinking
Baugh laments government failure to boost development
Published: Thursday | July 15, 2010DEPUTY 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
Published: Thursday | July 15, 2010Nedburn 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=rssOn The Battlefront
In May, Jamaican soldiers patrolled the streets of Denham, a neighborhood in Kingston, where fighting took place over several days.
