The reaction by Barbadians to two more murders on the weekend evoked a predictable response – the AG should resign, what has gone wrong with our young people blah blah blah. The confirmation from the Barbados Police Service one of the men murdered was out on bail for 3 separate murders and the other well known to the ‘system’ added to the tongue wagging. The defense lawyers will argue a key tenet of jurisprudence is the presumption of innocence.

Two important considerations that are always consumed by predictable narratives at this time are parental delinquency and rehabilitation of incarcerated citizens . From where the blogmaster is perched there are no adequate mechanisms to support the two concerns which are at the root of what is causing young men and an increasing number of girls to fall through the cracks. The result is an unacceptable rate of recidivism. If there is a breakdown in the home and family unit, and the problem is made more acute by a system that pays lip service to rehabilitation of victims then society must take blame. A disproportionate focus on enforcement – which is important – will not move the needle to prevent crime in Barbados. A dysfunctional society will always be the root of the problem.


Barbados Murder Statistics 2017 to 2022

Attorney General Dale Marshall (Image Source: nationnews.com)

The recent surge in gun play in Barbados has been featured prominently in the media over the last few days (see hereherehereherehereherehere and here). 

On July 8, the Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs, The Honourable Dale Marshall, addressed this, and related matters, during a press conference (see here). During the presser, the AG also shared some statistics relating to murders and firearms between 2017 and present day:

“In 2017, of those 30 murders, 16 have been solved so far. In 2018, of the 28 murders, 19 have been solved, that 19 amounts to 68 per cent. In 2019, 27 of the 48 murders reported were solved; that’s 56 per cent. Of the 41 murders committed in 2020, 26 or 63 per cent have been solved [and] in 2021, 23 or 72 per cent of the 32 murders were solved. And for this year, of the 17 murders thus far, 10 have been cleared up and some of those have only happened in the last few weeks,” the Attorney General disclosed. 

Source: Barbados Government Information Service

As a Barbadian citizen and resident, the topic of crime and violence (especially gun related) is of great importance and a worry to me. However, the majority – if not all of my posts – rarely deal with my personal views and opinions. As a data analyst on the other hand, I try to focus on what is being reported (in terms of facts, figures, et cetera), and collecting, compiling and analyzing said data and information. I was therefore excited when the AG shared some statistics which I will now look at below.

Read more @caribbeansignal.com

165 responses to “How Many More Must Die…We Are to Blame”


  1. Christopher Peter Sinckler, former Minister of Finance, who all but bankrupted the island, and for that stunning performance found employment as Alternate Executive Director at the World Bank Group since May 2, 2022.
    Remember him?😉😉


  2. This govt has taken it upon itself to belive that their have a bully pulpit to do and say whatever pleases them

    They don’t have to belive or believe, the voters, ALL voters, gave them the keys to each and every door. Maybe by the next election, they will develop your amnesia and forget who Sinckler was. They may even forget who Froon was. They may even forget the DLP once governed. The new party led Ronnie. Who Dem?


  3. Man that almost bankrupt a country found a highfaluent job
    Get out of here
    Seriously


  4. Symmonds rejects licence application claims
    Minister of Energy, Business Development and International Business Kerry Symmonds has refuted claims that Government is introducing legislation to deprive Barbadians of the right to object to licence applications by Barbados Light and Power Company.
    In piloting the Electric Light And Power (Amendment) Bill 2022 in the House of Assembly on Friday, the Minister said contrary to certain statements on the issue, Government was attempting “to ensure that a piece of legislation that was deficient and without the regulatory framework to facilitate the objection, could now be corrected to empower those people who want to object”.
    The amended piece of legislation replaces the 2013 Act which Symmonds said was “woefully inadequate for the purposes of treating to an application”.
    He pointed out that while the previous legislation invited people to apply to the Minister if they had reservations about a licence being granted to the BL& P, there was “no framework within which that application could be made, heard or managed”.
    The insertion into the amended Act under the heading Representations Or Objections Regarding Application For Licence says: “An interested party who desires to make a representation or an objection in relation to an application for a licence by an applicant to whom section 5(3) applies shall, within 28 days of the first publication of notice of the application, inform the Minister in writing of his representation or objection. The interested party shall state his interest in the application; shall, as far as practicable, state concisely, in numbered paragraphs, the precise nature and ground of his representation or objection; shall include any supporting
    evidence; and shall not make a representation or an objection in respect of anything that is not directly related to a matter set out in section.”
    Symmonds explained the legislation required that a public utility proposing to operate a generation system of a certain capacity, or seeking a storage or transmission and distribution licence must publish a notice of application in two daily newspapers. The Act also allows for interested parties to make representations of their views about the grant or issuance of a licence. ( GC)


    Source: Nation


  5. by Robert” Bobby” Downes
    May he rest in Peace

    We will bid farewell to the mortal remains of Ezra Alleyne on Monday, August 8, during an official funeral service. It is interesting that in death he is being given due honour that he did not get in life.

    It remains a puzzle why Ezra Alleyne was never given the title of Q.C. based on his outstanding legal service as a criminal defence counsel or even given some of the other legal cases he would have successfully argued during his long career.

    We must not forget that he also served in the Law faculty at the Cave Hill campus for many years tutoring some of the now prominent attorneys in Barbados and across the Caribbean. But, he did not make silk.

    To make matters worse, he never got a look in with the Barbados National Honours. He was not even recommended to be on the Queen’s New Year’s or Birthday Honours lists by any of our governments, even from the party he so loyally served.

    But, there will be a lot of fancy talk about his outstanding contribution now he is gone. May he Rest in Peace and Rise in Glory.


  6. A hit dog yelps

    DLP accused of inciting panic over Auditor General’s Report
    Minister of Energy and Business Development Kerrie Symmonds has taken President of the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) Dr Ronnie Yearwood to task for trying to “stir up a furor and incite panic and strife” over the latest Auditor General’s Report.
    Symmonds, who was leading the debate on the Electric Light and Power (Amendment) Bill in the Lower House on Friday, accused the DLP leader of trying to “clutch at every straw he can find in an effort to make himself relevant and hopefully for him to save what is a leaderless institution characterised only by infighting, from extinction”.
    “There is a context to the artificial political posturing that we have to look at. It begins, unfortunately, with the cathedral of lawlessness that the Democratic Labour Party has allowed itself to become. The renewable energy sector is not the only victim. As recently as this morning, some of my colleagues and I were commenting on this furor that is being whipped up,” said Symmonds.
    Suggesting that the DLP was lacking in policy, Symmonds said: “You can’t just feel that public life is only about stirring up furor and inciting panic and strife. That is how this country, unfortunately, was back in the 60s and 50s, but people now are a little bit more discerning and expect a little bit more”.
    “When I listen to that which they are stirring up with regard to, for example, the Auditor General’s Report, I ask if this is the same government that went where nobody else in the Eastern Caribbean went with respect to making sure that there is a Financial Management Act of the highest kind, protecting the interest of statutory entities in Barbados and ensuring accountability at levels that are not be found anywhere else in the Eastern Caribbean. Is this not the same Government?” said Symmonds.
    Since the publication of the latest Auditor General’s Report, which points to several anomalies in some state agencies, several pundits have raised concerns, including Yearwood.
    In his assessment of the report, Yearwood told Barbados TODAY late last month that the Mia Mottley-led administration should make legislative amendments to allow an independent senator to chair the Public Accounts Committee (PAC).
    He also recommended that the Office of the Auditor General be better staffed, and demanded certain constitutional protections for that office.
    “The same way that this Government can make an amendment for friends and appoint Senators who didn’t meet a particular threshold to become Senators, and for all kinds of other small purposes, you can change the Constitution to do something that actually is meaningful and that is there to protect the interest of Barbadians,” Yearwood said.
    The DLP leader has also insisted that the latest Auditor General’s Report has shown poor governance, as he called for greater transparency from the Barbados Labour Party administration and for Barbadians to demand better.
    However, Symmonds, who is the Senior Minister coordinating the productive sectors, threw out a challenge to Yearwood.
    “Where in the Auditor General’s Report is there a finger pointed at any member of the Cabinet of Barbados with respect to misappropriation of funds? But that has been the story over and over with respect to successive governments in history. Therefore, if there is a comment to be made, let us then again recognise that yes, the soft underbelly of the public administration of this system in this country has been laid bare by COVID.
    “I have no doubt that is true, I have no doubt the Auditor General is right when he points to getting information from government departments, but he is equally pointing to the fact that auditing firms, private sector auditing firms with big names, some of whom are ancillary to international companies with big names, couldn’t get the financial statements in on time. So how it is that COVID impacts them and they can’t get financial statements into the Auditor General on time, but if a statutory entity has a problem because 10 [or] 15 people in the department [are] out with COVID, and for six months that has been the case recurring . . . how then does this become something to hang a whole government on?” said Symmonds.
    He pointed to several anomalies across several government agencies under the last DLP administration, saying “those were the days when there was political accountability being called for by the Auditor General.”
    “I am yet to see a single page in this report that speaks to the necessity for there to be political accountability for wrongdoing,” said Symmonds.
    “I see a report that points us in the direction of a weakness and fragility in the public administration system. But the systemic failures have been pointed out by this government from day one and that is why this government has been deconstructing and reconstructing systems across every department of Barbados over the course of the last four years.”
    The Energy Minister singled out the Immigration Department, the Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation, and the Grantley Adams International Airport where such reconstruction was taking place, adding that there were others and it was still “a work in progress”. (MM)


  7. @ac
    Is “A hit dog yelps” your headline. Whosoever it belongs to, a brilliant description of the Minister’s response.

    And do you see how COVID gets the blame for missing/late reports. Seems, that in Barbados, COVID has been around even before the outbreak in Wuhan province.


  8. TheOGazertsAugust 7, 2022 8:07 AM

    @ac
    Is “A hit dog yelps” your headline. Whosoever it belongs to, a brilliant description of the Minister’s response

    Xxxxxx
    That was a nicely wrapped well delivered bouncer with proper timing tossed against the Minister heads


  9. A govt having 60-0 mandate having a minister yelping like a stray dog
    Yelling and barking at citizens who ask questions of govt
    Where is the change this givt promised for good goverance
    Tax payers money helps Symmonds to earn a living and his arrogance and ungrateful response would not be forgotten
    As it is present big business has been calling all the shots
    Shots which have been causing pain and suffering
    Therfore it is govt responsibility when called upon to be transparent and accountable to bow within the perimeters of humility and not respond like yelping dogs


  10. Arrogance or ignorance?

    Clueless comes to mind. Rather embarrassing that an alleged senior minister could make such a statement.

    But that statement is very informative however. Even if not for the reasons that he intended.


  11. A blog about crime was started this morning. It seems the height of insensitivity and blog etiquette sone of you would subvert this blog. Irrelevant comments will be deleted from this topic with abandon going forward.


  12. Allow the blogmaster to reiterate to those whose every minute is spent criticizing BU, leave the blog please.


  13. In full support of the blogmaster.
    All: please color within the lines.


  14. David,

    Apologies for following off topic.

  15. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    “And do you see how COVID gets the blame for missing/late reports. Seems, that in Barbados, COVID has been around even before the outbreak in Wuhan province”
    TheO, entirely predictable.
    You forget the prior administration blamed the ‘great recession’ long after most had recovered. So to expect Covid, and don’t forget climate change, to be the ongoing causal factors was a given.
    The Ukraine conflict doesn’t play as well in Bim as it does in elsewhere.

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