International Caribbean Murder Rates Are Spiraling As Illegal Guns Flood In

LeonardoBjj

Professional Wrestler
@Brown
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
4,522
Reaction score
5,488
BY KHALEA ROBERTSON AND BRIAN ELLSWORTH | OCTOBER 30, 2023
Will demands for U.S. action help slow gunrunning to a region where the homicide rate is triple the global average?

PORT OF SPAIN — The Peterkin family was asleep in their home in the Trinidad and Tobago village of Heights of Guanapo on September 21 when gunmen unloaded weapons—including an assault rifle—on the family of nine. The brazen crime, now known as the Guanapo murders, killed four of the Peterkins’ children, including a ten-year-old girl, and wounded the other five, shocking a nation already indignant about soaring gun violence. Less than a month later, the Trinidad police announced the country’s largest-ever seizure of weapons, including high-powered sub-machine guns, fueling concern about the growing prevalence of assault rifles in the Caribbean nation.

Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Keith Rowley mentioned the Guanapo murders in his speech to the United Nations General Assembly, in which he decried the “metastasizing scourge” of gun violence. “This situation has worsened largely because of the accelerated commercial availability (of firearms), coupled with the illegal trafficking from countries of manufacture into the almost defenseless territories of the Caribbean,” he told the United Nations. “This is a crisis shared by almost all the Caribbean territories.”
final-vendetta-review-2-4.jpg

Indeed, Caribbean countries are taking new steps to try to slow the traffic of illegal weapons, many of which come from the United States. The average rate of violent deaths in the Caribbean Community (Caricom) region is nearly triple the global average, according to a report this year by the bloc’s security agency IMPACS, and the Small Arms Survey. Gun violence is particularly acute in Haiti, Trinidad and Tobago, and Jamaica—the latter now has one of the highest murder rates in the world. Gang violence has led Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness to declare states of public emergency on several occasions, most recently in June, allowing for warrantless arrests. Some in Trinidad and Tobago are calling for similar measures.

AQChart_CaribHomicide_103023B-1024x761.jpg

Caricom leaders in April announced a “War on Guns” to combat the illegal weapons trade, which followed years of increasingly vocal complaints across the region. Five Caricom countries this year came out in support of a civil lawsuit filed by Mexico’s government in the United States that seeks to hold U.S. gun manufacturers accountable for the damage caused by weapons smuggled illegally out of America. Lax U.S. gun regulations have become such a point of frustration that The Bahamas Prime Minister Philip Davis this year lamented that “a person’s right to bear arms has unfairly been converted into a [de facto] right to traffic arms.”

Cracking down on trafficked guns

In response to the problem, Caricom’s Implementing Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS) launched the Crime Gun Intelligence Unit (CCGIU) in partnership with U.S. law enforcement agencies to boost cooperation. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced in July that the Department of Justice had named prosecutor Michael Ben’Ary as the first coordinator of Caribbean Firearms Prosecutions. Caribbean officials also insist that responses to violent crime must include reducing demand for guns through mediation programs that can prevent conflicts from spiraling out of control.

But the diffuse network of buyers and the relatively small quantities of arms in each shipment make it a maddeningly tricky problem to address. Trafficking typically involves straw buyers making legal gun and munitions purchases on behalf of smugglers and then concealing them in cargo vessels, postal shipments or on commercial airlines. One shipment of munitions reached Haiti in a container labeled as clothing donations for the country’s Episcopal Church. Gun manufacturers continue to supply retailers that are known to sell to straw purchasers and facilitate suspicious repeated and bulk sales, noted Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, The Bahamas, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago in their amicus curiae brief in support of Mexico’s lawsuit.

“There’s a reason why most gun crime in the world occurs in the U. S. and surrounding region,” said Jonathan Lowy, president of U.S.-based Global Action on Gun Violence and a lead lawyer in Mexico’s lawsuit against gun manufacturers, in an interview. “And that’s because of the easy availability of guns.”



Ellsworth is a Washington, DC-based freelance journalist with 20 years of experience covering Latin America and the Caribbean.

Robertson is a researcher and freelance journalist working primarily on topics of migration and diaspora within and from the Caribbean.

Trinidad police in August arrested a man for using 3D printing technology to make homemade weapons typically described as “ghost guns,” signaling the possibility of a domestic firearms pipeline. Ghost guns are essentially untraceable weapons. This development is less concerning than the growing import of low-cost “conversion devices” that can turn handguns into automatic weapons, said IMPACS Regional Crime and Security Coordinator Callixtus Joseph. These devices can vastly increase the lethality of weapons for about $15 and typically get through customs easily because officials are only now being trained to recognize them, said Joseph, who described the trend as “frightening.”

Two men have been indicted in the Guanapo murders, but no motive has been determined in the brutal crime that continues to haunt Trinidad and Tobago. Trinidadians are increasingly curbing their night-time outings or avoiding areas where they once traveled freely, as the country remains on track to surpass 2022’s record of 601 murders—the vast majority of which are linked to illegal firearms.


https://www.americasquarterly.org/a...rates-are-spiraling-as-illegal-guns-flood-in/
 
  • Like
Reactions: Zer
america won’t do anything to stop guys from buying guns and selling them to friends or people at gun shows in their own country. they damn sure aren’t going to do it for a majority-black population.
 
PORT OF SPAIN — The Peterkin family was asleep in their home in the Trinidad and Tobago village of Heights of Guanapo on September 21 when gunmen unloaded weapons—including an assault rifle—on the family of nine.

A disgusting crime, with innocent children as victims, being used as an excuse to...


Trinidad police announced the country’s largest-ever seizure of weapons, including high-powered sub-machine guns, fueling concern about the growing prevalence of assault rifles in the Caribbean nation.

...confiscate the firearms of all law-abiding citizen, when the child-murderers obviously weren't, but the family sure wished there were firearms within the house to defend themselves.

So now thousands of innocent citizens are now defenseless against the criminals the gun laws do not apply to.

Brilliant.
 
Operation Fast and the furious (Obama Era)
Gun running operations under Eric Holder as AG.


Operation Thor was supposed to investigate the illegal flood of arms being straw purchased leaving the country.
(Why did the Biden Administration pull funding form this program this year?)


They don’t care about safety or illegal gun sales. Only private citizens. Funny how all that multi billion dollar funding for Ukraine and Israel. Yet they both had to enact second amendments of their own as soon as shit went south. Small arms apparently more helpful than all the Nukes and F-15’s in their war surplus. Weird innit
 
You would think that the delicious taste of jerk chicken would be enough to allay their most violent impulses, but some things can not be cured by the perfect blend of herbs and spice.
 
america won’t do anything to stop guys from buying guns and selling them to friends or people at gun shows in their own country. they damn sure aren’t going to do it for a majority-black population.

Hmm... So gun availability is the issue? Not a culture, government or society issue? Why are murder rates in rural US a fraction of the big cities? When rural areas have free access to guns, including open carry in many places and several of the big cities have banned firearms?

So easy to make guns the issue and ignore the real problem. It also makes the problem impossible to fix since no one is willing to discuss it.

Shit Governments
Dead economies
Extremely poor families with little to no options

Is it coincidence that all the Island countries above are almost all dead last in GDP per Capita in the America's? Even Peru is kicking Haiti's ass ($8k vs $2k per capita)
 
It's an interesting parallel to our War on Drugs. We don't produce the drugs but because of the lax enforcement of other countries local laws, we end up dealing with a problem not of our making.

These countries don't produce the guns but because of our lax enforcement of purchasing rules, they end up dealing with a problem not of their making.

Before anyone loses their shit, these countries would still have violence. But their gun violence would be different. Just like we would still have drug related violence if Mexico and Colombia could contain their drug manufacturers -- we would just have less or a different type of drug related violence.

But we all know that the proper solution to these Caribbean complaints is that they should relax their local guns laws so that they can have more good guys with a gun to deal with this. Even as I type that, I can see the corporate boardrooms nodding their heads in agreement.
david-james-nodding.gif
 
Back
Top