St James residents urged to help fight crime

May 15, 2023
National Security Minister Dr Horace Chang (left), and Assistant Commissioner of Police Clifford Chambers (centre), listen keenly to Senior Superintendent of Police Vernon Ellis during a tour of Mount Salem in St James on Saturday.
National Security Minister Dr Horace Chang (left), and Assistant Commissioner of Police Clifford Chambers (centre), listen keenly to Senior Superintendent of Police Vernon Ellis during a tour of Mount Salem in St James on Saturday.

Residents of St James are being urged to unite in the fight against criminal activities and assist law-enforcement efforts in bringing the perpetrators to justice.

This call comes from Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National Security Dr Horace Chang. He was speaking on Saturday during a tour of Mount Salem, which has experienced a flare-up in murders and shootings in recent weeks, despite being a zone of special operations (ZOSO).

Chang said a greater level of community stakeholder collaboration will improve the police's intelligence-gathering capabilities, thereby enabling swifter arrests and prosecutions.

"I'll ask the community to cooperate with the police in all aspects, from information and intelligence to if the police advise you to take some precaution," he stated.

"Collaboration means not only providing information, but also cooperation, because sometimes the police, in identifying the problem, look at the source and see that retaliation is coming. When they advise citizens to take precautions, to protect themselves, I urge citizens to accept the advice of the police," the minister added.

Notwithstanding the current spate of murders and shootings, the ZOSO in Mount Salem remains largely effective in reducing crime and gangs in the community, according to Chang.

He pointed out that there have been less than 10 murders over the ZOSO's six-year duration.

The minister noted that the initiative's "clear, hold and build" strategy reflects the Government's commitment to root out dangerous gangs and high levels of violence.

"The policy of the Government is still to separate the violence producers and disrupt the gangs from the community," Chang stated, while assuring that the administration is "going to do everything to find the perpetrators, and to urge citizens to give cooperation in identifying them".

Meanwhile, Head of the Jamaica Constabulary Force's (JCF) Area One, Assistant Commissioner of Police Clifford Chambers, said that there are strong leads in relation to apprehending the alleged perpetrators involved in the recent crimes.

He said technology is being employed, in addition to intelligence gathering and residents' cooperation, to assist investigators in advancing the cases.

"We know who we're targeting, we know where they're likely to be, and we just want to tell the community to continue to support us," Chambers emphasised.

The day's tour also took Chang and members of the Area One personnel to sections of Hanover and Trelawny to assess the crime situation.

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