Friday, September 19, 2008

How much longer for Trelawny's Divisional Headquarters?

ASKS THE QUESTIONS
Mark Cummings
Thursday, September 18, 2008



A section of the Falmouth Police Station.

Security is a high priority in many countries and quite rightly so.
In Jamaica, our security forces have long complained about the lack of resources to fight crime and violence, and the generally poor conditions under which they carry out their job.

And while efforts have been made by successive political administrations over the years to better equip our security forces, much more still needs to be done.

In many instances, the lawmen have been working under inhumane conditions.

It hard to fathom how they get the job done under such less-than-desirable conditions.

The members of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) who are assigned to the Trelawny Divisional Headquarters, at Rodney Street, in Falmouth represent a case in point.


The new Falmouth police station under construction.

For almost a decade, several civic groups as well as the parish's health department have complained about the poor state of the facility.

The existing unsightly buildings are falling apart and have become a health hazard.

The matter of the dilapidated building was also raised by Police Commissioner Rear Admiral Hardley Lewin in May, when he addressed the 65th annual conference of the Police Federation, at the Starfish Resort in Trelawny.

Describing the facility as "little more than a fowl roost", the commissioner told the conference that some $250-million has been allocated in this year's budget to recommence work on the building for the new station, which began more than two years ago.

In the meantime, he said, the police high command was working feverishly to have police personnel occupying the existing station relocated.

But four months later the police are yet to be relocated, and neither has work recommenced on the building to house the new station.

This is despite an assurance in June from the permanent secretary in the ministry of National Security, Gilbert Scott, who said then that work would have started within another two to three weeks.

At that time, Scott said the work stoppage was due mainly to contractual disagreements between his ministry and the contractors, Astrom Building Systems.

He noted, however, that the disagreements have been resolved and the contractors are mobilising.

But in spite of the existing deplorable state of the station, the lawmen assigned there continue to give of their best.

In fact, indications are that there is a general trending down of reported criminal activities in the parish.

It is about time that the plight of the police, as well as the general public who use the facility, be addressed.
They deserve much better.

'I knew something was wrong' - Body of man found stuffed in car hours after he went missing

COREY ROBINSON, Observer staff reporter robinsonc@jamaicaobserver.com
Friday, September 19, 2008



A despondent Keisha Walker (left) is consoled by a female friend outside Madden's Funeral Home in Kingston after seeing the lifeless body of her son's father sprawled on a table inside the morgue. (Photo: Michael Gordon)

KEISHA Walker's ear-splitting cries for 'Jiggy' outside Madden's Funeral Home in Kingston Tuesday was testimony to her overwhelming grief.

The woman's night-long wait for Devon Dacres, 29 - also called 'Jiggy', the father of her two-year-old son - ended shortly before 7:00 am when his bullet-riddled body was found in the trunk of a grey Honda motor car near the Horizon Remand Centre on Spanish Town Road.

Dacres, a resident of nearby Wellington Road in Whitfield Town, had been missing since 10:00 pm on Monday, when he left home after receiving a telephone call, Walker said.

"I knew something was wrong, I just knew it. Devon don't sleep out and from I don't see him come in I just knew that something happened to him," Walker cried as she buried her face on the shoulder of a female friend.

"From him carry some food for me last night, him leave out and I don't hear from him again. Is this morning I come see him in here," added the woman, who sneaked glances at the building where Dacres' corpse lay openly on a table.

Walker said that Dacres had rented the motor car on Sunday and that according to a male friend, he left home after receiving a telephone call from the owner that he should return it. That was the last time anyone saw him alive.

Tuesday afternoon, Deputy Superintendent Hugh Bish said that the police had not yet established a motive for the killing as, "the investigation into the incident was still in its early stages".

"We have no leads nor motive as it relates to that murder. At the moment, it appears that he might have been killed and then placed in the trunk of the car and then dumped on Spanish Town Road, that is all that I can say right now," said Bish, adding that the motor car which was seized by the police will be examined for clues.

Meanwhile, homicide detectives in the St Andrew South Police Division were also probing a murder of an unidentified man on East Guango Crescent in Olympic Gardens Tuesday.
According to the cops, shortly after 6:00 am, residents found the body in a pool of blood after they heard explosions.

Inspection of the body, believed to be about 50-years-old, and which was clad in a pair of blue jeans pants and a multi-coloured shirt, revealed multiple gunshot wounds.

Golden fever/yellow fever outbreak in Jamaica!!!

It has been reported that there has been a terrible outbreak of Yellow Fever (disambiguation). This particular strain is sometimes known as the American Plague. The outbreak started in Beijing , the Bird's Nest Olympic stadium to be exact, however sources have linked its origin to the tiny island of Jamaica in the Caribbean Sea .

The virus seems to have been transmitted by a set of Jamaican athletes participating in the Beijing Olympics in particular one by the name of Usain Bolt. At first the virus infected 91,000 people a few days ago but it is a quickly spread to millions of persons worldwide. The symptoms include:
· Spontaneous & uncontrollable dancing fits especially Nuh Linga & Gully Creeper
· The need to wear yellow clothing & wave Jamaican flags
· Screaming uncontrollably at your TV
· Shock, awe & speechlessness

Many victims have become crazed and can be seen running on the streets all over Jamaica acting like they have just won a 100m race at the Olympics in 9.69 seconds.
Although most victims suffer from these symptoms it does seem to have different effects on some persons in particular Americans, these include:
· Badmind
· Grudgefulness
· Envy
· A general uncontrollable hating of all things Jamaican

Additionally, American victims seem to be unable to grasp many things such as batons and the fact that people can actually run fast without performance enhancing drugs.
So far scientists have been unable to find a cure and it is feared that the entire world will be infected in a matter of days. The long term prognosis is not good either, as it is feared that there is another generation of Jamaican athletes that have this deadly virus in their system and will be unleashing it on the world in even more record doses.

The only hope anybody has, to remain immune, is to stop watching television (except for NBC), stay off the internet and move as far away from civilized, rational humans as they can, in some remote underdeveloped, mentally retarded place such as the USA.