News

Major Crimes Drop in Jamaica

By: Caribbean Journal Staff - August 29, 2013

Above: Kingston (CJ Photo)

By the Caribbean Journal staff

The number of serious and violent crimes in Jamaica fell by 11 percent in the first six months of 2013, according to data released by the government.

The murder rate was 19.9 per 100,000 people, a 3.4 percent reduction from a 20.6 rate in the same period in 2012.

That is down significantly from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime’s data from 2012, which showed a murder rate of 40.9 per 100,000 in habitants in Jamaica.

Serious and violent crimes overall fell to 172 per 100,000 inhabitants in the period, a 10.6 percent drop over 2012.

“These figures continue the downward trend in crime rates that began in June of 2010, for a third consecutive year,” said Richard Lumsden, programme director for the Planning Institute of Jamaica’s Plan Development Unit.

Jamaica has been working to improve its security situation for years, although that has not traditionally translated into a drop in crimes like murder.

National Security Minister Peter Bunting said after taking office in 2012 that his Ministry would work toward a “major” crime reduction, including the ongoing problem of corruption.

In an interview with Caribbean Journal shortly after assuming his position, Bunting spoke of the need for more crime approaches at the community level — particularly among at-risk youths between the ages of 18 to 25.

A recent study by Vanderbilt University’s Latin American Public Opinion Project (LAPOP) found that Jamaicans were feeling “progressively less insecure” about crime, and about the role of the police. The latter has proved to be another significant issue, with a number of police-related shootings in the country.

“Police reform and related efforts in Jamaica have had significant positive effects,” the authors of the LAPOP’s recent topical brief on the subject, Elizabeth J Zechmeister and Mitchell A Seligson of Vanderbilt, and Anthony A Harriott and Balford A Lewis of the University of West Indies-Mona.

“Deepening the reforms in the police and judicial system in Jamaica would go a long way toward continuing to build bonds of trust between the community and thepolice, and, at the same time, help to decrease violence and increase citizen security,” the authors wrote.

 

Popular Posts snorkeling in the caribbean

The Best Caribbean Resorts for Snorkeling, From Bonaire to Belize to Andros

Sergeant majors and grouper and jellyfish and rays. Elkhorn and staghorn coral, reef sharks and organ pipes and barracuda and needlefish. Snorkeling is a pleasure in the Caribbean. But, let’s be honest, snorkeling isn’t often going to be the singular […]


The 15 Best Beaches in The Bahamas You’ve Never Heard Of 

deans blue hole

They’re far from major airports, set within destinations that are nowhere near the typical tourist map. And that’s what makes them so spectacular. These are the remote, hard-to-reach beaches you dream about. And they’re all in The Bahamas.  We’ve visited […]


United Airlines Is Planning a Big Expansion of Its Nonstop Cayman Islands Flights

people sitting on seven mile beach in grand cayman

Seven Mile Beach. The buzzing culinary scene. The shopping. The Sister Islands.  There’s a bit of everything in the Cayman Islands, whether you’re looking for a foodie retreat to one of the Caribbean’s culinary capitals or a castaway-fantasy beach stay […]


Related Posts jamaica falmouth riu resort with beach and blue water

Jamaica Tops 55,000 Visitors Since Reopening 

Jamaica has topped 55,000 visitors since reopening tourism in the wake of the hurricane, officials said this week.  On July 2 and July 3, no tourists arrived in Jamaica, with the storm largely shutting down the island.  In the first […]


Jamaica Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett Talks Tourism, Post-Hurricane Beryl

jamaica edmund barttlett

The aftermath of Hurricane Beryl has included the predictable amount of exaggeration and misinformation about the extent of damage in impacted Caribbean destinations. Phrases like “completely destroyed” were thrown about with abandon. Jamaica was one of the islands that many […]


This Negril, Jamaica All-Inclusive Resort Is Reopening 

jamaica sunset

Negril, Jamaica’s famous treehouse hotel is back open again after the passage of Hurricane Beryl through the island.  Sunset at the Palms, the 85-room, adults-only, all-inclusive resort located in Negril, Jamaica, is reopening to guests on Saturday, July 20, after embarking […]