(Jamaica Gleaner) The head of the body representing rank-and-file police personnel across the island has accused the Government of “blatant corruption” and support of criminals at the expense of those tasked with enforcing the law.
Addressing the Police Federation’s 67th annual joint central conference at the Sunset Jamaica Grande in St Ann on Wednesday, Sergeant Raymond Wilson told delegates that the Bruce Golding administration had shown scant regard for the welfare of the organisation’s members and the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) on a whole.
“We are forced to contend with an employer, the Government of Jamaica, whose motive seems hell-bent on destroying the police force in an effort to steer away the nation’s attention from their blatant political corruption and clear support for (a) criminal terrorist under the cloak of party support rather than they being the Government,” Wilson, the chairman of the federation, declared yesterday to a supportive audience.
He was reacting to the ongoing controversy surrounding the extradition of ousted Tivoli Gardens strongman Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke and the accompanying revelations about the governing Jamaica Labour Party’s engagement of a US law firm to lobby on his behalf.
Not political
“This might sound like a political speech but I guarantee you that it is not,” Wilson declared. “We are police officers who are alerted one way or another to wrongdoing wherever it is and so, to hear the employer of the police through the voice of the prime minister of Jamaica declare that a certain support for fugitive ‘Dudus’ Coke was party support and not government support, it can only be concluded that the Government, or might I say, a political party, has openly declared that they offer support to the creation of mayhem and years of bloodshed; the snuffing out of over 1,000 lives each year over the last couple of years.”
The federation chairman, who was in a militant mood, questioned whether it was by chance that the police were underpaid, deprived of the most modern technologies, kept in pigsty facilities, and worked beyond normal working hours as stipulated by International Labour Organization conventions. He also argued that the Government had “blatantly refused to enact legislation that attack power and financial bases” that lend support to criminality in Jamaica.