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A supporter of Christopher 'Dudus' Coke holds a placard high as hundreds of demonstrators march along Spanish Town Road yesterday to demand that his extradition hearing be scrapped. – Jamaica Gleaner

The developing issue concerning Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke in Jamaica makes for interesting discussion. Those following the story since it broke would be aware that the political career of Prime Minister Bruce Golding is seriously under threat over the matter. So far Prime Minister Bruce Golding has been forced to address the nation to explain his actions in the matter which was triggered by a US government request for the extradition of Christopher Coke; the other with the engagement of the US law firm of Manatt, Phelps & Phillips.

Some would say, to his credit, that Prime Minister Bruce Golding has not been afraid to confront the controversial issues. His earlier position on NOT appointing gays in his cabinet continues to reverberate in the global news space.  Not to forget his  perspective on the death penalty has also raised eyebrows. A pity more of our current crop of regional leaders have not demonstrated the gumption when confronted with the hard issues.

Several issues appear to be at play in the current issue involving Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke and the embattled Jamaica Prime Minister Bruce Golding. The earlier link details Golding’s position on the matter. Golding’s willingness to challenge the validity of the US extradition order is worthy of note. Whether his latest position on the ‘Coke’ matter is based on a noble principle, time will tell.

Of interest to BU has been the reaction by the people from the village where Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke is reported to reside. The decision by the Jamaican government to finally execute the US extradition order has provoked an interesting reaction by his neighbours which can be gleaned from the picture above. The rise of the ‘don culture’ in Jamaica is a matter of record. The fear of a similar culture taking root in Barbados would have informed the recent decision to ban Mavado and Vibes Kartel from performing in Barbados.   The ability to influence poor people by those in the drugs and gangster business in Jamaica provides terrific insight. When people feel marginalized by the legitimate institutions in a country, it will create a void for other elements to fill; in this case rogue elements.

The dent in its global image, Jamaica a tourist destination is taking over this incident, reinforces the critical importance of maintaining law and order to support a stable society. The resistance by those in the Barbados society who have become intoxicated by cultural relativism sweeping the world needs to be confronted by the might of home-grown value-based opinion. The Jamaican situation is a clear example of the social fallout which can occur when our legitimate institutions continue to fail the people. For too long Barbadians have been ignoring the weeds which have started to take root in our lawns.

Given all we have read and heard on the matter, the people from Coke’s village who have gone to the streets in protest have been scathing in their condemnation of both the government and opposition. Surely there are lessons to be learned for Barbados!


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301 responses to “Looking Behind The Christopher Dudus Coke Matter”


  1. @Adrian

    There has been an improvement in the media presentation of this issue today. We must commend David Ellis who seems to have got a second wind in his career and is showing the others what journalism is all about.


  2. @ac

    I am with you too. My only problem is the hypocrisy and double standards that exist in our society. There is no rule of law. What there is, is a state force that keeps you in line; sometimes brutally like I’Akobi, so that the big wigs can do as they please with us. We are mere cattle and chattel.

  3. Call a spade... Avatar
    Call a spade…

    @ROK
    My brother, we are lucky to have you to sound the alarm about these White “food supremacists”. Imagine, they are flooding the world with toxic white flour designed to make Black people sick with diabetes and other illnesses. White F—–s. “They” are so devious that they are encouraging millions upon millions of their own White brethren to eat the same flour so that the Black man won’t catch on! Frenchman eating croissant; Italian eating pasta and bruschetta; White Bajan eating salt bread and hot cross bun; and none of them know of the conspiracy behind it! But you are the one man in this country who is brilliant enough — insightful enough –to recognize it. By the way, do you think Oliver Headley might have died from a packet of eclipse biscuits that “they” might have doctored? No more Shirleys for me.
    Regards


  4. ROK wrote “I ask, what really happened to Professor Oliver Headley who was making great ground on alternative energy in Barbados. ”

    Dear ROK: Maybe Professor Headley was depressed and committed suicide?

    Depression happens (a lot)

    Suicide happens too.


  5. You really think they care who eat the white flour, Black or white? Furthermore it is not I who is saying that alloxan is the culprit, the scientists saying so. I have been on the campaign to learn the truth about this matter. I have raised the question with Government, but you know what, they have not come back to me to say yeah or nay and in following it up all I get is a hush. Until that time comes when I get a clear answer, I will assume that the scientists are correct and I will keep at it.

    Two things. First we know that diabetes is not a hereditary disease. Second is that we have too many families with first time incidences of diabetes in this island; even children. If the scientist telling me about alloxan, I would be foolish to ignore them… but one thing I can say is that since macaroni pie became the national dish of Barbados, replacing coucou, the diabetes soared. Maybe that is a coincidence.

    Wonder where you now come from with this black and white? Ready to stir up the pot again? Sorry, but you won’t find any dumplings in this stew. You can eat the shirley biscuits. I suppose you are a scientist and you know the truth about white flour. I am sure you know that it does not contain alloxan because you tested it.


  6. I see that some people are taking this whole escapade as a joke!

    People love to blame their own for the bullshit that persons claim is just!

    Silly lot!!!!!


  7. @J

    I believe you. There is or could be no other explanation. Was there any evidence that he was depressed?


  8. Dear ROK:

    You never cease to amaze me. For you everything is a white man’s conspiricy and you the perpetual victim.

    Trust me ROK white men are not that powerful, and we are not that weak.

    If you don’t like white flour, or any kind of wheat flour it is quite easy to live without it.

    Do like me, grow your own breadfruits, cassava, green bananas, eddoes, sweet potatoes, yams etc. The tropical world is BLESSED with an abundance of delicious starchy food. Nobody in the tropics has to eat wheat flour unless they choose to do so (or unless they spend all day blogging instead of growing thier own food)


  9. Negroman I often disagree with you but today I agree with you that illegal drugs, are causing a lot of deaths and disabilities in our communities and that yes we must get tough with the drug dealers who are only interested in disabling (with addictions) our children as fastas we can raise them.

    And ROK: No I don’t know of anybody who has died of white flour.


  10. ROK wrote “but one thing I can say is that since macaroni pie became the national dish of Barbados, replacing coucou, the diabetes soared. ”

    Maybe you are onto somethiong here but has it occured to you that macoroni pie is full of high fat chedder cheese, whereas coo-coo is made of whole grain corn and okras and water and just a pinch of salt and is traditonally served with steamed fish which are also low in fat.

    We and our children are getting diabetes because we are eating too much, high calorie, low fibre foods, in quantities that are way too large and we are not getting enough exercise because unlike our grandmothers who would walk from Bawdens to Bridgetown, nowadays we mount our big rides to go to the shop on the corner, buy a big sweet drink and drink the 4 serving size all by ourselves.

    We need to return to eating a coo-coo indeed, and serving flying fish with it, 2 steamed fish for a man or woman and one for a child, and water to wash it down. See no diabetes.

    Mother Nature (not white men) is ruthless and she weeds out ill disciplined lickerish people who like to live large.


  11. Now that I am thinking about it let me go and get a little breadfruit for a snack


  12. Anyone else feels that the Jamaican authorities and the US authorities are playing games in this matter? Here is a “script” for a Bollywood movie on the true story of Dudas Coke.

    Various releases and other snippets of information suggest that;
    Dudus Coke is leader of the shower gang and is listed as one of the most wanted criminals in the world. He therefore has to be rich, very intelligent and ruthless.

    The US Justice department, according to ABC, have recent surveillance tapes of Jamaican leaders conversing with Dudus Coke. Bruce Golding, who was explicitly mentioned in the ABC story, and any other leader implicated in the tapes therefore can’t travel to any US terrirory without the fear of being arrested as an accessory to “the most dangerous criminal in the world” according to Hopi above.
    The Jamaican authorities acknowledge the existence of the tapes but claim that they were obtained by tapping which is illegal under Jamaican law and the evidence is therefore not germaine to an extradition request and I suppose also not of interest to anyone in Jamaica.

    We are told by the Jamaican authorities that Dudas Coke was holed up in Tivoli gardens, at least over the past week or so.

    Something is wrong here. Why would a man who must be rich and has risen to head up an international Criminal organization with tentacles all over the developed and developing world; and who has the Jamaican Government on a leash; and whose father presumably died under strange circumstances awaiting extradition; be still in Jamaica when a dragnet was being closed around him and he had the means and connections to get out?

    Knowing of the example of his father would’nt he have made contingency plans for what has now seemingly happened? He must have lots of compromising information on a number of politicians in Jamaica and perhaps elsewhere. Would he really be so dumb as to fall into the same trap as his father?

    Let me outline what seems to me to be a more feasible scenario.

    Coke has lots of damaging information on very big-up Government figures in Jamaica. If that information is released it could spell the end of the political careers and perhaps freedom of a number of people. Hence the early fighting of the extradition order. However within the last fortnight or so it became clear from leaks out of the US Justice department that the Jamaican Government would have to give in to the extradition order or there would be serious consequences for the governing party and the Country itself.

    Coke is informed of this.

    He makes arrangements to leave Tivoli gardens letting the relevant big-ups know that if anything happens to him the compromising information will be released from various sources, not under the control or influence of the Jamaican Government.

    The big-up Government people realises that it would be inimical to their own survival if Dudas Coke is arrested and extradited to the US or if he is arrested and an accident happens to him (as supposedly happened to his father some years ago). They therefore will have to facilitate his escape from Tivoli gardens and Jamaica and perhaps relocation to some far off African country.

    The Extradition papers are signed with a lot of fanfare therefore Dudas Coke had to know exactly what was happening even outside of the fact that he was probably told beforehand by his lawyers what was in the offing.

    The operation to extract Dudas Coke from Tivoli gardens was put in place.

    The Operation results in many deaths but the Government puts out a leak that he has escaped the dragnet surrounding his compound. An impossibility if there were as many heavily armed security officers surrounding the compounds as reported unless he was escorted out by high up officers.

    Stay tuned for the sequel. It involves a shootout or some other high drama accident in which it is claimed that Dudas Coke is killed and the body mutilated beyond recognition. Just like his father was burned beyond recognition. In the sequel it will be revealed that Dudas, a few of his Shower gang lieutenants and some Government Operatives put together the plan that would allow Dudas to escape from Jamaica and not have to expose dealings with big-ups and live happily ever after in exile.

    However, some of the big-ups had to have several excuses for not travelling to US and other territories on important Government Business for several years as not all members of the gang knew that their dear leader was not really dead in addition to a fear of being arrested by US authorities at their customs.


  13. Not true about the wire tapping. THe wire tappings were done in accordance with Jamaican law, however the US obtain their copy from an unname member of the Jamaica police force, and there in lies the core to the Jamaica government’s objection to the extradition request.


  14. @Adrian Hinds // May 25, 2010 at 11:01 PM

    I don’t get your point about the Jamaican authorities objection to the tapes.

    Are you saying that the Jamaica Govt’s objection is that the tapes were clandestinely obtained from an unnamed Jamaican Policeman and therefore could not legally be used to justify the extradition? Would the naming of the policeman from whom the US obtained the tapes testify to their validity? If the information on the tapes is damaging to say, Bruce Golding, would it be prudent for the US Justice department to divulge the name of the source? What would have changed to allow Golding to OK the signing of the extradition order? Why would Golding think, given what was probably on the tapes was damaging to Dudus as well as to the other persons involved in the conversations, that lobbying US Government officials would have some chance of success (unless Dudas’ tentacles had spread to someone influential in the US)?

    I still think this whole story has the makings of a blockbuster movie.


  15. BU found this analysis of the Dudus Coke Affair to an interesting view. The point about how the USA has used a different strategy of trying to conquer the drug trade in Jamaica compared with other places e.g. Mexico is interesting.

    Jamaica: Different Drug War, Different Strategy

     

    Jamaica: Different Drug War, Different Strategy

    by COHA Research Associate Katherine Haas

    A state of emergency was declared in certain areas of Kingston, Jamaica on Sunday, as violence broke out over the extradition of accused drug lord and local hero Christopher “Dudus” Coke. Coke is the alleged head of the “Shower Posse,” a gang that has committed scores of drug-related murders in both Jamaica and the United States since the 1980s.Washington is seeking the extradition of Coke based on charges lodged in the U.S. for trafficking in drugs and weapons.
    The original request for extradition was made more than nine months ago, but until very recently Prime Minister Bruce Golding and his party, the Jamaican Labour Party (JLP), had dragged their feet when it came to handing Coke over to U.S. authorities. When Golding, pressured by Washington, reluctantly changed his mind and agreed to Coke’s extradition; residents of the JLP-controlled Kingston neighborhood Tivoli Gardens, Coke’s power base, exploded in protest.

    Popular support: strong, but not always armed

    Tivoli Gardens is now surrounded by barricades, constructed by local residents who aim to keep authorities out and prevent the extradition of Coke. Made out of derelict vehicles and other debris, these barricades and the armed partisans crouched behind them demonstrate the intense house-to-house level of gang and popular support that Coke wields. Recipients of Coke’s hand-outs, which range from help with medical bills to free school uniforms, even go so far in showing their gratitude as to call him “President.” One newspaper quoted several Tivoli Gardens residents as saying they were willing to die for him.
    Armed members of Coke’s gang ran through the streets of Tivoli Gardens on Monday, and exchanged fire with police forces, killing several officers. Others turned their guns on two police stations, while a third station was set on fire. A total of eighteen police stations have now been attacked. In response, police and military forces have assaulted the barricades, charging into the Tivoli Gardens area. At least twenty-seven have been killed in the fighting, among which at least three are members of the country’s security forces. Homes have been burned, and Kingston’s Coronation Market was set on fire.

    Many have characterized the actions of Coke and his gang as nothing less than holding the country of Jamaica hostage. This is barely an exaggeration, as Coke has managed to subvert the will of the Prime Minister, the authorities, and a large segment of Jamaican society. It is a civic eruption and a menace to the state.

    Not all of Coke’s supporters, though, are armed thugs. Popular protests against Golding’s decision to extradite Coke began peacefully. On May 21st, a group of mostly women converged outside a Kingston police station. Wearing white and carrying signs with statements like “Leave Dudus Alone,” they sought to make one main point: since Coke had arrived in West Kingston, their lives had improved. Safety and stability came with Coke, they said, responding to police claims that Coke’s thugs were holding residents hostage, and seizing their phones to prevent communication with outsiders. The protest went on for several hours, and was described by reporters as nonviolent and highly organized. When police had had enough, they fired a single shot into the air, and the crowd quickly dispersed.

    Police maintained that their reports of residents being held as hostages within Tivoli Gardens were completely true, despite protester denials. Some implied that Coke’s local popularity is not a result of genuine happiness with the situation in Tivoli Gardens, but rather of manipulation by Coke, or residents’ fears of what would happen to them if they failed to show support. Others believe that Coke’s popularity among West Kingston residents is based on his ability to fulfill a role that the government has not. Coke has been known to give small chunks of his vast horde of funds to his poor community. As was the case with the late Colombian drug trafficker Pablo Escobar, paying for living expenses such as food, children’s schools, and community centers has earned Coke a reputation among some as a protector and caretaker, rather than a drug lord, criminal, and murderer.

    More than likely, it is not one but both of these explanations for Coke’s popularity that are correct. While some who show support for him may be doing so out of fear, others certainly feel a genuine, intense loyalty toward the man.

    Government Transparency (or lack thereof)

    The situation surrounding Coke’s proposed extradition was further complicated by a scandal involving the ruling JLP and the U.S. law firm Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, which is well connected to the Obama administration. Prime Minister Golding was accused of paying the firm almost $50,000 in order to lobby the United States government, with the objective of convincing it to drop the extradition request. Golding flatly denied this allegation until May 11th, when he admitted not to hiring Manatt, but to sanctioning his party’s decision to do so.
    However, questions still linger over the Prime Minister’s honesty regarding the Manatt hiring. The People’s National Party (PNP), JLP’s main opposition, does not seem to buy Golding’s distinction between the JLP having hired Manatt, and the government having done so. The PNP has also accused Golding of a secret political alliance with Coke himself, which motivated his original reluctance to agree to the extradition. This is far from impossible. Reports of Jamaican government officials granting political favors to people like Coke in exchange for votes have been rampant for some time, and a vague tie between Coke and the JLP has always been loosely acknowledged. However, such ties are hardly exclusive to the JLP. Other drug lords have similar arrangements with other parties, including, reputedly, the PNP.

    Despite his initial denial of the extradition request and the fact that Coke’s supporters make up one of his party’s main constituencies, Golding now shows no goodwill whatsoever toward Coke’s followers. Yesterday, he called the violent actions of Coke’s supporters a “calculated assault on the authority of the state.”

    What this will mean for Golding’s political future, or the worthiness of his good faith, remains uncertain. Golding represents West Kingston, the area which contains Tivoli Gardens, in the Jamaican Parliament. As of now, he surely has lost the support of Coke and his followers there. While his decision to approve the extradition may have won him some favor among the many Jamaicans who want Coke out, it is yet to be seen how much his initial reluctance will damper that reaction.

    The Jamaican Drug Trade and the United States

    The Jamaican drug trade does not exist in isolation, as is demonstrated by the fact that Coke has been charged with multiple crimes in the U.S. Actions taken by the United States have important effects on the Jamaican drug trade and that of the Caribbean in general. Aside from generating the demand that creates a market for marijuana and cocaine coming out of places like Jamaica, the United States has inadvertently channeled the drug trade toward the Caribbean through its actions along the U.S.-Mexico border. As the border has become more militarized and smuggling illegal products through it has become increasingly difficult, drug lords have been forced to use an alternate route to transport their products: through the Caribbean, into the U.S.
    Furthermore, there is a notable difference between U.S. involvement in drug-related issues in Jamaica, and its usual format in other Latin American nations, such as Mexico and Colombia. In Jamaica, the United States has avoided any large scale, high profile initiatives to fight drug-related power and violence. Reasons for this include the nature of the almost non-existent Jamaican economy, and Washington’s fear of a surge in illegal migrants escaping from an island that has the potential to be transformed into a narco-state.

    About 20% of Jamaica’s GDP presently comes from tourism revenues, and an open drug war is sure to damage those revenues. Jamaica’s economy is already ailing, with an unemployment rate of 14.5% in 2009. Further unemployment would undoubtedly lead more desperate Jamaicans to seek illicit employment in the drug trade, or at the very least leave them more willing to accept the favors of drug lords like Coke, who gain loyal followers by helping the poor when the government cannot. The vast amounts of money available to powerful drug lords also mean plenty of funds for bribes and corruption of police and state officials, making an obvious clampdown even less likely to be effective, or even attempted.

    For these reasons, an intervention by the United States meant to advance the fight against the drug trade in Jamaica would be counter-productive, and highly damaging to Washington’s standing in the rest of the hemisphere. Assistance in efforts to retake Kingston from Coke’s gang would be one thing, but an extended stay with the intention of fixing broader problems would be quite another, and might even risk civil conflict . Thus far the U.S. has steered clear of such measures, and it should continue to do so. The violence in Kingston must be brought under control, and a more general solution to Jamaica’s drug problems must be sought. But, this time, the usual methods of the United States are not the answer.

    The key seems to be the Jamaican economy. With less unemployment would come less poverty, and with less poverty there would be fewer brought under the sway of drug lords by economic assistance. Without their cadres of loyal followers, men like Coke would lose community protection, and thus, much power. Although repairing the Jamaican economy will certainly be no easy task for Golding’s administration, it may be the only viable solution to a problem that extends far beyond this week’s violence, and which has seen the present Jamaican prime minister’s bona fides diminished to the point that they hardly exist.

    The current situation in Jamaica began long before the Obama administration took office, and in no way can be blamed on it. However, the administration has not been a source of inspiration for Kingston, either. Essentially, U.S. policy has been a source of benign neglect, with the continuation of a drug policy that does not emphasize the demand factor, despite words to the contrary. Certainly, the White House has no intention of taking on any new, big ticket programs. There is no evidence that the Department of State possesses the means or the vision for a new policy toward Latin America and the Caribbean that will dare to think the unthinkable. This might include a public debate over the decriminalization of some categories of drug usage, and greater patience in dealing with other nations that are following through on their own conceptions of economic and social outreach.

    For after-hour information on developments in Jamaica, call COHA at (202)215-3473.

    This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Katherine Haas

    Posted 25 May 2010

    Word Count: 1800


  16. @BT

    Sorry to be off topic here but there are some detractors who I need not answer like J, who is accusing me of bring Black & white into the argument. However, she obviously missed the post of the person that made the remarks. Also she failed to understand from my post that I told the commenter that I will not be entertaining him/her and their racism chat.

    My comments were in response to Negroman wishing to kill all drug dealers, that is the relevance of my post. I was merely pointing out that the drugs which these dealers are pushing are not as harmful as the daily processed foods handed to us on a platter which destroy our lives more than the drugs. I pointed to the fact that we now have so many incidences of chronic diseases in our society as an indication that the food is a greater culprit. When I say this, I am thinking of the children with Diabetes and several life threatening diseases which have been inflicted on them at such a tender age.

    The problem here is therefore not the drugs, but an attempt to ensure that no single person can attain such power as to undermine the establishment. That is how so-called criminality is viewed. So, just as there are legal and illegal drugs, there are legal and illegal criminals.


  17. Dear ROK:

    I’ll repeat “We and our children are getting diabetes because we are eating too much, high calorie, low fibre foods, in quantities that are way too large and we are not getting enough exercise”

    Every single one of those diabetic children (and women and men) is heavier than they should be.

    They need to eat less and run ’bout more

    And you should encourage them to do so instead of pretending that they are the hapless and helpless victims of some white conspiricy.


  18. @JC……………Don’t bother with these jokers here…..these are hybrid species.Once whitelandia starts to demonise anyone and these are usually non-whites, blacklandia is more than happy to join the choir.

    Barat Obama and most of those Congressional whores got their financial funding from the likes of Big Oil, Wall Street, Big Pharma & the Military Arms Dealers just to name a few….but I don’t see anyone calling these filthy high-paid US prostitutes, corrupt or dishonest like they are demonising Golding.

    What is the difference between Goldman Sucks, Big oil, Big Pharma, Arms dealers and DUDUS….At least Dudus is taking care of his people.

    Today imperialism traverses the world with a BLACK FACE, and just watch how easy it will become for Negroes to hand over their sovereignty.

    What a bunch of hypocrites!


  19. ROK my brother
    I have not listened to the video on Hemp because I do not partake in putting unnecessarily substances into my body.I do not smoke,neither do I drink alcohol excessively.

    I am interested in the preservation of precious Black people life.I am not that interested in the politics of the situations that you Rok,my sisters Hopi & JC is expressing.I know America is devious,wicked,conniving sets double standards when dealing with non-white countries.I know all of that too well.

    It is very painful that nearly fifty (50) Black Jamaicans have died unnecessarily because of a criminal.

    In the 1960’s illegal drugs such as marijuana were pumped into Black communities in America to destabilize the great work the Black Panther Movement led by Bobby Seale,Hughie P Newton & Elridge Cleaver was doing.illegal drugs inevitably destroyed many Black communities in America and as a consequence hampered the progress Black Americans were making at that time.

    Presently in Barbados,we have many of our young children lives practically destroyed because of the misuse of drugs.When I visit the so-called blocks in my old neighbourhood and see the state many of the young & not so young people in the community is in,it is painful..Barbados is losing a lot of it’s young people that our leaders have invested so much in.Many of our young men & boys and I must add girls are practically living a useless life because of the effects of drugs. We the Black people of Barbados are losing our grip on this society because our young people who are the future of this country are under siege and useless because of the abuse of drugs.Rok you are a man from the ghetto and from around the people and I know that you have observed and know the crisis our young people are in as a result of drugs.

    Christopher “Dudus” Coke lives in a mansion and poor,struggling Jamaicans some who unfortunately live in galvanise huts,with dirt floors and are very impoverished are fighting on behalf of that criminal.

    Are we as a people so desperate for role models that criminals like Christopeher “Dudus”Coke are going to be held up as role models to our children


  20. Kurt Nimmo
    Infowars.com
    May 25, 2010

    “Jamaican Security forces searched a volatile Kingston slum for an alleged drug lord on Tuesday after at least seven people died in violence triggered by government orders to extradite him to the United States,” reports Reuters. “Heavily armed soldiers and police conducted went door-to-door in the hunt for Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke in the Tivoli Gardens neighborhood of West Kingston.”

    The United States says Coke is one of the world’s most dangerous criminals, responsible for trafficking cannabis and crack cocaine around the Caribbean, North America and the UK in exchange for guns and money, according to The Guardian. Prior to the Obama administration leaning on Jamaica’s PM Bruce Golding and his Labor Party, Coke enjoyed substantial protection from the government.

    Feds in the U.S. unveiled charges against Coke last August and accused him of selling marijuana and cocaine in New York and elsewhere and arming his associates with illegally trafficked weapons. The Justice Department lists Coke among the “world’s most dangerous narcotics kingpins.”

    It turns out arresting Coke will be no easy matter. Gang members attacked police stations in and around Kingston as it became clear Coke was a wanted man. “In response, the prime minister put troops on the streets and declared a state of emergency in Tivoli Gardens, the west Kingston neighborhood, or ‘garrison,’ loyal to Mr. Coke, who is commonly known as Dudus, and his Shower Posse gang,” reports the New York Times.

    It is the sort of one dimensional story the corporate media loves — a drug-dealing bad guy and his armed supporters fighting against a noble government determined to bring him to justice.

    As usual, the corporate media only tells one side of the story.

    “For many in Kingston’s slums, Dudas is a much better provider of political goods (education, security, and food) than the state, which translates into the popular support he gets locally,” writes John Robb for Global Guerillas.

    “To the poor residents of west Kingston, Coke is a benefactor who distributes cash, food and scholarships. They call him ‘Dudus’ and vow to die for him,” adds The New York Daily News.

    “Dudus is benefactor to many persons who depend on him to send their children to school, buy food and, most important, settle disputes beyond Jamaican borders,” notes The Jamaica Gleaner.

    Nearly 20 percent of the Jamaican population live in abject poverty while close to 6 percent live on less than two dollars a day. The working poor earn an average of $50 a week if they are lucky.

    “The government, which spends 48 per cent of the country’s GNP to pay Jamaica’s external debt, doesn’t really make a difference in the lives of the poor, who have to depend on charity to survive,” writes the Western Catholic Reporter.

    Former Prime Minister Michael Manley was elected on a non-IMF platform in 1976, but was subsequently forced into Jamaica’s first loan shark agreement with the IMF in 1977. In 2001, Jamaica owed over $4.5 billion to the IMF, the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank among other “international lending agencies,” i.e., the international banksters.

    “We are seeking to get US$1.2 billion [from the IMF], and it is not a panacea. That US$1.2 billion is going to stop at the Bank of Jamaica, not one penny of that is going to go to the Ministry of Finance, that’s the nature of IMF arrangements,” PM Bruce Golding declared last December. In other words, poverty will continue in Jamaica and will likely get worse.

    “The country is paying out increasingly more than it receives in total financial resources, and if benchmark conditionalities are not met, the structural adjustment program is made more stringent with each re negotiation,” explains Stephanie Black and “Life and Debt,” a documentary about IMF-imposed poverty in Jamaica (see a clip from the film below).

    * A d v e r t i s e m e n t
    *

    “To improve balance of payments, devaluation (which raises the cost of foreign exchange), high interest rates (which raise the cost of credit), and wage guidelines (which effectively reduce the price of local labor) are prescribed. The IMF assumes that the combination of increased interest rates and cutbacks in government spending will shift resources from domestic consumption to private investment…. Increased unemployment, sweeping corruption, higher illiteracy, increased violence, prohibitive food costs, dilapidated hospitals, increased disparity between rich and poor characterize only part of the present day economic crisis.”

    In other words, a perfect “investment” climate for the banksters and ideal conditions for transnational corporations as they scour the globe in search of slave labor gulags. Jamaica sports “free trade zones” where workers toil five to six days a week for corporations and earn the legal minimum wage of $30 a week.

    Considering the criminal practices of the IMF, World Bank, and the international bankers, it is quite natural and understandable that the Jamaicans have turned to a drug lord in order to have basic necessities met.

    Only drug kingpins not working for Wall Street and the bankers are considered international criminals. As the UN’s crime chief Antonio Maria Costa pointed out in January of 2009, the illicit drug trade has been used to keep banks afloat during the manufactured global financial crisis. Billions of misery-soaked dollars keep the Wall Street ship afloat.

    The bankers work closely with the government and the CIA in order to make sure millions of Americans get their daily fix. John Gotti, Jr, not a reliable source, when asked by a reporter whether or not the New York Gotti family was dealing in narcotics said, “No, who can compete with the government?” notes Catherine Austin Fitts, who has documented the massive infusion of illegal drug money on Wall Street.

    Finally, it is less than certain the Jamaican government can arrest Mr. Coke and deliver him to the hypocrisy that is U.S. justice.

    “As long as the conflict is mainly fought via barricades, the government has a chance of winning. If it expands to include disruption of energy, water, and food to the wider population of Jamaica (inflicting costs on those outside the slums) via blockades of intersections by protesters and the intentional breaking of Kingston’s infrastructure networks, the government is likely to lose,” writes John Robb.

    If Obama and the Justice Department want to showboat Coke, they may have to send in the Marines.

    Shades of Grenada and Reagan’s Operation Urgent Fury quite naturally come to mind. It should be noted that the invasion of the tiny Caribbean nation enjoyed the enthusiastic support of most Americans who are fond of watching their wars unfold on television. The talking heads on TV reading Pentagon scripts, of course, didn’t bother to mention that the CIA had worked to destabilize Grenada years before the primetime invasion.

    ———————————————————-

    So continue to listen to the drivel that proceeds from the lips of the white lying Medea, and allow them to control your thinking and should BaRat come calling, let’s see if Barbados PM will be as treacherous as his predecessor and allow them access to further decimate Jamaica, like they did Grenada.


  21. Numer dead risen form 27 yesterday to 44 today. I spoke with a jamaican firned in Kingston and reports ar ethat eople are battened down in their homes avoiding going out as much as possible. Flights out of jamaica have been heavily booked since last week and seats are not available until next week. Tourists and Jamaican nationals leaving or preparing to leave Jamaica. More brain drain. Part of the problem is that this is a no win situation, as pointed out by other bloggers, the politicians need Dudas dead or slient. The greater fear of Jamaicans however has been that the death, removal, escape or extradition of Duddas will mean fights between the rival gangs for dominance in the national gang hierarchy. Inter-gang warfare is their greater dread. Some Jamaicans I spoke to last week said that they are insuring their homes and contents, preparing to leave and abandon if necessary on a moment’s notice, Others said they have put aside cash to make a run for the airport if necessary. The fear and tension at this moment is very strong. The last contact I had moments ago, after discussing what was currently happening in Jamaica, a Barbadian living in Jamaica said to me that we need to nip our gang activity in the bud now, before it becomes a major problem. I assured them that it is currently under discussion and I am sure that the police and other agencies will put a plan in place. She warned of these Jamaica artistes peddling their warfare across the C’bbean in their music and concerts. Apparently there is something on a blog showing a sign in Barbados saying “We love duddas”.

    The concerns about CSME however are over the top and not really lodged in real thinking. Before CSME jamaican artises were performing here, it only means that they do not need a work permit to come. But they can be refused entry based on corruption of public morals, regardless, so CSME does not mean free movement of criminals. Our greater danger is the deported criminals, who were criminalised in U.S. have little ties to B’dos dumped in our society without even the courtesy of being informed that they could be jailed or monitored. Hence the security talks that took place this week in Washington. That callous attitude by U.S. is destructive to our societies that do not have all the means to handle these criminals. Wicked. In some cases these people are citizens of U.S. but of Bajan roots


  22. @Checkitout sad as it is you are probably right it that someone will probably make this into a blockbuster movie, maybe with some added twists.

    This whole thing is so sad and the opposite of what Jamaica or the Caribbean need right now, particularly as so many islands are reliant on tourism. Its years and years of hard work just wiped away, let alone the millions of dollars used to promote tourism. Potential visitors/tourist will believe the trouble is in the whole of Jamaica not just a few areas. The positives for the US and UK and alike is that people may stay at home and the money remains in their countries.

    For Jamaica and the rest of the Caribbean this could lead to more job losses and potential increases in crime………all in all bad news.

    I agree with David we all need to pray that this whole thing is resolved quickly and that no more lives will be lost.


  23. These are interesting times in the Caribbean. In light of all that is happening, CSME arrangements and treaties, should be revised.


  24. Today on a callin programme a listener was singing the praisesof Dudus. He said he lived in Tivoli and he witnessed the many good things that Dudus has done for many poor families. He also said that Dudus once said “that any friends of his father were not friends of his(Dudus)
    The government and prevous governments all have blood on their hands because they all knew what was going on.THe government should also be brought to trial for attempting to block the extradition procedure by playing political games for the past 9months .


  25. This situation is affecting the economy of Jamaica the longer it persist. What the Jamaican Government needs to do is put up a ransom for Coke, and make it almost irresistible.

    This ransom might help in finding the man, even if he had escaped the Tivoli area.


  26. Here is a 40 minute video which tells the sordid story of the Jamaica Shower Possee which has a rich history in Jamaica.


  27. The Question of Balance:

    While the events in Jamaica unfold and we all wish for some good to come out of this and a bright future for Jamaica, one must also consider the events in broader terms and the implications.

    Mexico, as everyone knows, is a constant bloodbath, practically ruled by drug lords.

    The Mexican Govenrment clearly has little control over the cartels, two of which are acknowledged as THE most dangerous in the world.

    Allegedly, over 90% of cocaine and cannabis entering the USA is via Mexico.

    Last year, the just appointed head of the anti-narcotics squad in Mexico, on arrival in that country, was promptly kidnapped, presumed murdered.

    Allegedly, there are over 7000 gun shops along the Mexico/ USA border.

    The current Mexican President has just made a speech to Congress, basically blaming American drug demand, for the fact that his Government is battling suppliers i.e. cartels.

    Lovely twist of the argument, he must be a lawyer, I will have to check.

    Compared to Jamaica, where it is accepted that the ‘trouble’ is confined to gang ‘garrisons’, in Mexico the violence etc are widespread, allegedly with no safe harbour.

    That said, where is the impetus to ‘get’ the drug lords in Mexico?

    Admittedly, Mexican Police are under constant barrage from the criminals, but the question remains, why has the effort to address the Mexican situation not been ramped up, rather than allowed to fester?

    Now, the Mexican President has come, not apologetically, but with a game-players face, to Congress, looking for allies within the USA.

    Interesting indeed.

    Ironically, despite the difference in approach, I actually think that Jamaica is getting the better deal, because here is a chance to clean up Jamaica and move forward, while the Mexican poor will remain suckered into a horrid lifestyle for years to come.

    But, one must nevertheless ask the question, what gives? Is someone speaking out of one side of their mouth, but using their other to grin and smile to ‘significant others’?

    Is it that Mexico is now such a hellhole that no one really knows what to do?

    A big question, some answers in the background.

    That said, how about our own situation here? It is well known who and where a couple of the major ‘Lieutenant’s’ live and operate from. I use the word Lieutenant’s, as I am convinced that they are mere front men for bigger-ups, as they could not have survived this long unless protected.

    But, the status quo remains? Interesting, no?

    Ultimately, as Jamaica has proven, chickens come home to roost.

    Just stay far from Church Village.


  28. Interesting, that against a backdrop of many ‘average’ Jamaicans calling for the ‘retake’ of Tivoli Gardens AND other gang communities even, former PM Edward Seaga is coming out against the Tivoli move.

    Politics or vested interest? Either way, inappropriate.

    One other question.

    Why in Iraq / Afghanistan etc, are fighters against the Government security forces called ‘insurgents’, but in Jamaica called ‘civilians’?

    Do not back down.


  29. Latest news out of Jamaica dated 2 hours ago.

    On the Ground News Reports. BREAKING NEWS: Bullets are being traded between lawmen and armed thugs in a section of Red Hills just above Kirkland Heights as helicopters hover over the area. Reports are that the gunfire and siren can be heard from as far as Meadowbrook. #Kingston #Jamaica

    There is also a suggestion Dudus has flown the coop long time.


  30. There is nobody to blame for the corruption that plagues Jamaica but the politicians themselves.
    I’ve been spending my winters on that Island since 1991 and I’ve seen nothing but a declining social structure due to an apathetic bunch of greedy imbiciles ostensibly concerned for the welfare of the people and the U.N. is the biggest joke as well as they have done nothing to better the problem. The best thing the world can do is cut off the foreign aid and form a rotating government comprised of Western Industrial leaders…and not some dumb-ass socialists either.
    I have so much to say about the state of this country but can’t do it here. I have made documentary type films of the drug and arms trade and there is way too much for the average minded person to absorb. There are bigger problems there than Dudus “Coke” and believe me these problems will manifest into a security issue for the West. Regardless of the problems I love the people of Jamaica and they are truly survivors.


  31. @dave

    Why do yo think you can’t share some of what you know here?

    Would be interesting to discuss the role of Dudus’ lawyer in the exercise. We are all entitled to justice but…


  32. Thank God that Dave has addressed what I have been saying all along!

    Greedy bastards, that’s what they are…


  33. Well it seems like Dudus is in NY and will give himself up to US authorities. He was adamant that he would not be caught by Jamaican officials on account of what happened to his father.

    My Interest is Barbados. I am dead set against any form of Caribbean integration with Guyana, Trinidad, and Jamaica. I have in the past stated many reasons for my position on Guyana and Trinidad.

    How on earth can our elected officials primarily the Barbados Labour party continue to see value only and not the many negatives of free movement of people with Jamaica? How can they in the light of the Drugs, and gangs, and violence? How can they when the Jamaica police force is so corrupt with charges of extra judicial killings, with their top cops agreeing that the only solution to correcting these issue in the force is to disband it entirely and start anew. How can our elected officials continue to entertain thoughts of caribbean Unity with Jamaican Leaders that are thought by everyone in Jamaica to be at the heart of the violence there? How can they? Will the people of Barbados allow them to so do?


  34. @Adrian Hinds // May 28, 2010 at 9:42 AM; Where did you get that information? Yesterday there was a news item in one of the US papers that seemed to hint that he was in the US and that DEA and other agents and lots of resources were being massed to apprehend him. But it seemed to have been discounted as just another rumour. I’ve seen no updates so far.

    If that is true we will probably see a number of Jamaican politicians looking for holes as Dudas might be expected to spill everything, given the severity of the operation at Tivoli gardens and elsewhere in Jamaica this week (six guns and 8000 rounds of ammunition recovered and perhaps over 50 “civilians” dead).

    However, this story seems to be just unfolding. Except that it is passing strange that he should go to the Tiger’s den, the US, rather than somewhere else further afield. But then he would have rabid protectors there as well. perhaps that is what the “report” on all those planes and agents being assembled was all about.

    Anyhow, hope that your info turns out to be true and he can be caught alive in the US rather than being probably executed in Jamaica.


  35. @Negroman
    “I have not listened to the video on Hemp because I do not partake in putting unnecessarily substances into my body.I do not smoke,neither do I drink alcohol excessively.”

    My dear brother Negroman. I did not send you a link on smoking ganga or any such. I suggest that before you react any further, you look at the video because it is not what you are thinking here at all. I am speaking about the medicinal benefit of Hemp and there is no smoking of it involved.

    For example there is a man who makes oil out of it and he has witnesses who have used it to cure their cancer; skin cancer rubbed with the oil was cured. The gentleman himself had cancer and tried it because he was hearing so much about it. In his testimony, he spoke of have these cracks and sore on his skin which the oil cured.

    As a matter of fact, there is no smoking in the video or mention of smoking. The products this hemp makes include soaps, hand lotions, roasted hemp seeds, etc. Not to mention the clothes and building materials.

    I fail to believe that your mind is so stuck that you would not even take a peep at the video because you stereotyping the thing as a drug. Negroman, I want you to know that the Wets boasted that they won WW1 on Hemp. It provided fuel, gasoline and oil for the vehicles. Also Henry Ford, whose first car was made of and ran off hemp testified at the time that plastic made from hemp was stronger than steel and yet biodegradable.

    Negroman, open you mind, man. This world ran on hemp before it was oil, but the oil manifested greed to the point where lies and all types of propaganda was used to scare people away from the thing so that they can have a monopoly on oil; yes, Negroman, the same oil that killing we now.

    I am going to ask you one question. Well you mentioned me but even if you take me out of the equation, I see you as outspoken as JC and Hopi, yet you see them as different to you. Therefore, my question is, how could you who are on the same page see yourself so different? If there was a witch hunt on for people like you, I am sure you would find yourself in the same prison as Hopi and JC. Why you think that you so different?


  36. @Anon
    “This ransom might help in finding the man, even if he had escaped the Tivoli area.”

    You need to wake up.


  37. @ Crusoe
    Man your comments disappoint me. Jamaica is better off because they have a chance to clean up? Man you simplifying this thing, because in that case we have a better chance than Jamaica, why are we not cleaning up?

    You see, when you push people against the wall, nothing will stop them from being like cats against the wall. You aggravate it any more and you will get all the gangs coming together because, when you threaten the existence of one gang, you threaten the existence of all. You surprised that Seaga and the rest against it? Come on man, those who rule Jamaica are Jamaicans not foreigners.


  38. @Dave,

    What is it that you are advocating? The dictatorship by the West? Can we take anymore of it? Aren’t we already dead? What you want to do now? Kill us some more?


  39. the word on the street is that Coke is in Cuba. He got some real good friends who are willing to die for him!


  40. A good article on the situation in Jamaica

    http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/05/27-2


  41. It’s me again, Dave from Canada, look at the wealth that was accumulated by Papa and Baby Doc Duvalier after they pilfered Haiti, the same goes for PJ Patterson. How do leaders get this rich and then end up in F R A N C E.???!!! Foreign Aid by, again ostensibly concerned countries such as Canada, goes for personal gain and probably kick backs to the Western politicians who authorized the foreign aid in the name of compassion for the poor.
    There has been a lot of money dumped in the hands of these “thieving bumboclots” and none of it goes to enhancing the living standards of the poor.
    The biggest irony here was the war on drugs…don’t get me wrong I’m not condoning drug use but I know many people on that Island of all ages and the “ganja” trade had kept them alive and living well with out a handout. The West implemented the “War on Drugs”, killed the harmless and inocuous ganja trade and now it’s AK47’s, piracy (yes piracy) and C O C A I N E. You want to see the world’s supply of cocaine go to the Pedro Keys off shore of Jamaica.
    Ganja never killed anybody but look at the damage coke has done. We are speaking of an island 75miles wide by 140 miles long whose inhabitants are not native but ancestors to slaves and brought over by PIRATES. Pirates and Slaves is the culture. The true natives, the Arawak Indians, were killed off by enslavement.
    The expansion of these super clubs especially RIU is killing the natural beauty of the island also. It is over developed and over run by a few conglomerates who don’t give a shit about anybody there.
    Oh yeh then there is the dynamiting of the coral reef by lobster harvesters.
    Oh there is plenty more…has anyone ever heard of the “Gaza Strip”…not the one in the Middle East but the one on the South Shore of Westmoreland Jamaica?
    Just an interesting bit here, I asked this 6year old what he was drawing and he showed me…it was a picture of a 9mm semi-auto…looked like it was traced it was so good. This is the future of Jamaica.

    Dave…again


  42. Now we got an argument going here. Hey ROK I luv and RESPECT Jamaicans. I am not suggesting any form of dictatorship as the one that has plagued Jamaica since Bustamante is harmful enough I only want to see things change for the better. I am sick and #$%&ing tired of my hard earned income being confiscated just to end up in the pockets of your corrupt politicians. The gov’t maleficeance here in Canada, wrought about by socialist liberals and communist NDP, is hard enough to correct, I don’t want to be supporting the DESPOTIC Carribs.
    Or maybe the West should just pull out all together and let everybody fend for themselves and eventually we’ll go in when there is nothing left but uncultivated cane fields.
    I’ve been there 20 damn years and things have only gotten worse…oh I know blame it on GEORGE BUSH just like the rest of the pin heads world wide have done.
    Is Africa any better? The White man is forced to relinquish what he has been asked to develop and now look…the warring tribes can’t even grow a garden but they sure know how to pull a trigger. Hey ROK have you ever heard the term, “the trigga has no Heart”? It originated on the peaceful island of Jamaica. One last thing, Bob Marley, Jimmy Cliffe and the entire “original” Reggae Superstars would have a fit if they ever saw what the island’s music has evolved into..
    .”G A N G S T A R A P . No good for the soul ROK.
    Oh yea I’m a West Ender from the Cliffs of Negril and will be til the day I die. I have a following their ROK, they refer to me as “the lion of Juda”. I’ve fed your poor, I’ve comforted the needy, I’ve helped your churches and still do, I have better freinds in Jamaica than I do in the country of my birth, Canada. Oh and one more thing I’ve been turned on by your people also but I won’t let that diminish the love for “MY” people.
    I will eventually turn things around on that Island…it is my mission. And it’s not about bibles it’s about brains. Just to let you in on something I am one of the few foreigners that enjoys military protection when I request it…particularly when I travel to Kingston or into Cock Pit country.


  43. I sick of people who come as wolves in sheep’s clothing… Dave who are you to judge

    To me alllllllll of yaou all dong an injustice to those poor people ALLLLLLLLLL Silly lot ………….


  44. The White man is forced to relinquish what he has been asked to develop and now look…the warring tribes can’t even grow a garden but they sure know how to pull a trigger.

    ————————————————————————————-

    you just write that fah trute? We or the native inhabitants ever ask you all for syphillis or a cold. You know how much damage you all have done and have continued to do?

    You got some nerve man!


  45. @JC
    You falling into the trap too. The detractors are at large. Imagine somebody would write that in this day and age?


  46. Yah it’s Dave again… Agwon…I just reviewed “Tivoli Speakes” and then took note of some comments from “JC”.

    First of all let be perfectly clear with respect to my postion. JC did poverty create this environment or did this environment create the poverty?
    And no you didn’t ask for syphilis or the cold just as I did not ask to be burdened with having to fund your corruption with my TAX DOLLARS in the guise of Foreign Aid nor did I ask to burdened with the stigma
    of being the blame for slavery just because I’m WHITE. I am the world’s minority and I am blamed for every damn thing that goes wrong in society today.
    Watching “Tivoli speaks” put a knot in my stomach. I’ve seen the mess in “Flankers” and “Spanish Town” and it’s been like that for the past 20years. I know it’s common for innocent people to be shot. I know there are major cover ups in many shootings but I also know that the only way this mess will get corrected is if the Island is governed by people who have no other vested interest’s other than to see PEACE and a FUTURE for the island inhabitant’s.
    If you do not wish to see it from my perspective then I WILL NOT continue to support the economy any further as I have spent over a quarter million of my personal dollars there trying to help. YOUR F**KING GOVERNMNENT MUST GO. Your future lies in the educating of the young and right now they can’t even go to school because of the violence. Hey JC wasn’t it a 14 year old who took a machette to Trevor Berbic, the Heavy Weight boxer, and killed him three yeas ago.
    The children of Jamaica know how to kill…what a future.
    I will say it again, if my tax dollars are going to foreign aid then I want to see MY form of government. The only way things will get better is to kick the bums out and install a Conservative minded government, have the RCMP, FBI and the British Constabulary reconstruct the police force and have NATO supply forces to train the island’s military.
    On the business end of things the economy must be revamped by business people who understand the importance of a solid INFRASTRUCTURE and it’s contribution to a sound economy. Jamaica’s roads are a mess, the sewage system is lagging and the utilities are archaic…and why…because nobody gives a shit.
    Hey ROC and JC what do you propose? If you want the White Man gone just give the word, hey you never know things just may get better.

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