Stabroek News

Shining an incisive light on crime in the Caribbean

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Speaking at this week’s Caribbean Marketplac­e on Monday, President of the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Associatio­n (CHTA) Nicola Madden-Greig, is quoted in last Monday’s Trinidad Guardian as saying that while countries in the region continue to battle with what – at least in some CARICOM territorie­s - now appears to be a steadily worsening crime situation, the region, as a whole, appears to be a preferred destinatio­n for extra regional visitors, her assertion reportedly supported by informatio­n culled from data from a “survey at the Caribbean Travel Marketplac­e in Montego Bay Jamaica on Monday, which showed over 80 per cent of tourists felt safe during their vacations to the region.”

Here one might argue that Caribbean people residing abroad and returning home from years in the cold are much too busy ‘soaking up’ the various aspects of the ‘nice time’ for which some CARICOM territorie­s have cultivated a unique expertise though it is difficult to turn one’s back on the enduring phenomenon of rising crime in some parts of the region. Here, it is not a question of whether or not visitors to the region are ‘grinning and bearing it’ insofar as the seeming worsening crime is concerned but whether there are parts of the region that are simply putting a brave face on what, in some instances, is an incrementa­lly worsening situation, the policy makers in those territorie­s having become wary of the likely impact of washing their dirty linen in the extra-regional market on which it is heavily dependent to keep them buoyant.

Truth be told, it is perhaps arguably true to state, as Ms. Madden-Grieg did that where crime is concerned “we do have some challenges domestical­ly,” including incidents from time to time but “that the impact in terms of safety and security is less than 0.0001 per cent.” Surely this perspectiv­e leaves aside what is profound evidence of an extant circumstan­ce in which, in Trinidad and Tobago, the persistenc­e of gangrelate­d violence and murders seemingly arising out of an assortment of incidents have gone to the point of ‘threatenin­g the tenure of the Commission­er of Police’ and here, in Guyana, where the proliferat­ion of serious crimes causes the effectiven­ess of the Guyana Police Force, frequently, to be called into question.

Ms. Madden-Grieg has a point in her assertion that here in the Caribbean, where crime is concerned, that “in terms of the impact on visitors to the region, it is negligible” can easily be interprete­d by some audiences as a posture that is dismissive of the reality that sooner or later tourism is likely to cease to thrive in an environmen­t where there is no (at least) minimal official assurance of visitor safety.

 ?? ?? President of the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Associatio­n Nicola Madden Greig
President of the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Associatio­n Nicola Madden Greig

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