0

EDITORIAL: Are we doing enough to reduce crime?

IN what is surely the deadliest start to any year, another two murders yesterday brought the total – at the time of writing – to 14 murders for the year. All in just 17 days.

There is some mixed messaging from the government on the issue. Right after Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis holds a national address and calls for a national day of prayer – a request duly honoured – the Minister of National Security pipes up to say that crime was down at the end of the year by a fifth anyway.

The numbers, whatever they are, are the numbers. We cannot ignore the crime statistics for last year just as we cannot ignore the number of murders so far this year.

But it does beg the question of how focused this latest push against crime is and whether all parties are really on board with it.

Certainly, the criminals are not – little surprise, there. The Prime Minister’s speech has certainly been ignored by those who committed three murders in 24 hours starting with an incident in Abaco on Tuesday night.

Mr Davis himself started off his speech saying he had hoped to be talking about other things until the wave of murders took place.

So it is perhaps little surprise that the package of anti-crime measures revealed this week looks in large part like a bunch of things pulled together that were already happening.

Talk of care needing to be taken in drafting anti-gang legislation suggests that is not close to being brought to consultation, let alone Parliament.

Mention of more resources for Urban Renewal and school policing units would certainly be welcome, but is the kind of statement that we’ve heard before, and without a dollar amount attached, it is hard to gauge what impact any such proposal might have. Indeed, with the deficit soaring in the figures for the year so far to the extent that it is nearing the full-year target, how much room is there for investment in such endeavours anyway?

Until we hear how much is being put towards those initiatives – and also towards overtime for officers on the extra saturation patrols and roadblocks – we cannot say how much “extra” this really is.

In the middle of this, the FNM deciding to pick a fight over the words of the Police Commissioner relating to an incident outside their headquarters seems to be missing the larger picture.

The FNM might be best served offering its own concrete solutions for how to deal with crime rather than descending into partisan arguments.

We should all be trying to play a part in reducing crime. We should all be hoping for the authorities to be successful in addressing this deadly situation.

Hearing the words of the police officers on the scene of these repeated incidents is heartbreaking. You can hear in the voices of the officers the frustration and pain at having to deal with these situations over and over. You can hear the earnestness in the call for people to come forward with information over guns and possible shootings and drugs the desire to avoid these murders from happening in the first place.

The question is, is what we are doing enough? And can we do more? That is what we need to strive towards.

A curious situation has emerged over a recent incident.

A child was bitten by a shark during a shark tank experience on Paradise Island. However, it has not been revealed where the resort was where it took place.

Atlantis has such experiences, but has remained silent on the issue. Authorities have been coy in naming the resort where the boy was bitten.

If there is another resort on Paradise Island offering such experiences, we do not know which has such facilities. If it is Atlantis, we cannot change the fact of where it took place. If it is not Atlantis, then speculation internationally has named Atlantis as hosting such experiences and they should not be caught up in such if it is not them.

That said, this is not the first time The Tribune has made queries about incidents at Atlantis – such as one at a nightclub that left a man with an almost severed leg – and found difficulty in getting straight answers as to what happened and when.

Credit then to Deputy Prime Minister Chester Cooper, who said that an Atlantis guest was involved and that the resort would be making a statement - although a resort spokesman cast doubt on the prospect of such a comment.

This is not a matter of blame – that would be for any legal proceedings afterwards – but simply recording what took place. That should be a simple matter of the public record, nothing less.

Comments

birdiestrachan 3 months, 1 week ago

The Fnm can present their plan for crime instead of critizing. Mr Pintard is showing who he is when he said what he did about the commissioner of police that is who Pintard is

0

Sickened 3 months, 1 week ago

Birdie. Do you want to split a billboard with me about the number of murders so far under the current administration? I was thinking of putting it up as close to the cruise ship port as possible. If you think that an idea such as this is really stupid then please let me know.

0

ThisIsOurs 3 months, 1 week ago

Urban Renewal doesnt work because it isnt Urban Renewal. If Urban Renewal were Urban Renewal, Bain Town would look like Silicon Valley and its residents' lives would improve along with the transformation. Whats happened since this label was slapped on something for an election push? Bain Town has sunk deeper into ghetto abyss. We need to stop these meaningless initiatives, all they do is waste time and move us further away from the goal.

The crime plan greatest hits was another word exercise.

Again, do the things we can do. For the life of me I do not understand why drivers have felt comfortable for the last 7 years in blantantly running red lights 5 and 6 at a time. Is someone holding off on fixing it until they can get their ducks in a row to financially benefit? Nothing else makes cents so it must be about the dollars. Your love of money had led to this murder spree.

0

mandela 3 months, 1 week ago

If the Bahamas is waiting for the government or governments to stop crime, that will never happen because the only people to stop this crime wave is us mothers, fathars, aunts, uncles, family memders because some family members know whats going on but turn a blind eye to the fact until it's too late. Until this changes nothing will happen or change.

1

GodSpeed 3 months, 1 week ago

Until you need a license to reproduce there's nothing that you can really do with these people. Those that shouldn't be having or raising children are continuing to do so and society will suffer the consequences. There is no family planning, future criminals are being born everyday. To make it worse, Nassau is overcrowded with a high cost of living and little opportunity to make ends meet or get ahead, especially for the D or F average youth, combine that with poor family upbringing and cultural decline... it's no wonder they become criminals.

0

ScubaSteve 3 months, 1 week ago

Here's an easy and cheap solution... FREE contraception available for anyone that wants it. I'm talking about FREE condoms, FREE IUDs, FREE birth control pills, and FREE morning after pill. And why not also throw in FREE abortions. There you go... problem solved.

0

SP 3 months, 1 week ago

Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, all these reports and talk about escalating murders should compel everyone concerned to research the correlation between unemployment, lack of opportunity, hopelessness and serious crime.

Many people have strong opinions about what they "tink" is the root cause of crime. The answer is well documented and available for all to see on the net. The government dam well knows the root cause of our crime crises, but will not dare admit their failings and most people are too lazy to research the matter, so the government gets away again!

The government is 100% responsible for the crime wave and should be 100% responsible to reverse their failed policies to resolve situation!

0

Sign in to comment