Monday, 14 October 2013


WILL CRIME EVER STOP?
Who or what determines a crime to be a crime? According to Oxford Dictionary ‘crime is an illegal act that can be punished by law.’ Many would claim that society or the government or by not upholding the law determines a crime. It can also be noted that in the days of Moses, there were the Ten Commandments; the two that almost always come to mind are “Thou shalt not kill” and “Thou shalt not steal”; which all had to abide by. Once these laws are not followed there were consequences for our actions. In the days of Moses the ultimate punishment was death. In modern society however there is the concept of   “you do the crime, you do the time”. Punishments range from community service, hard labour, arrests with or without bail, life imprisonment and even the death penalty.
Despite the society being publicly aware of this, crime continues to be a sore point in Trinidad and Tobago and to a wider extent the Caribbean.(MURDERS | Trinidad Express Newspaper | Videos. )Yearly the crime rates continue to grow and thousands of people live in fear for their lives and those of their family members.

MEAN STREETS: Crime scene investigators gather evidence around the body of the 300th murder victim for the year to date on Nelson Street, Port of Spain, yesterday morning. The deceased has been identified as Winston “Buju” Callender. –Photo: MICHEAL BRUCE

Apart from the many shootings and killings that plague our society, another grave crime issue in our country is child abuse and abandonment. Many would recall the article in both the Trinidad Express and The Guardian newspaper of the twenty- one year old mother from Manzanilla who reportedly placed her three day old baby in a garbage bag and placed it by the roadside when she discovered that after feeding and putting him to rest, he never awoke. The Express headline wrote “Cops find body of newborn baby in garbage bag” and gave a brief account of what happened and what supposedly lead the young mother to do what she did. From the account given it could be presumed that her act was done not deliberately but out of panic. (Cops find body of newborn in garbage bag | Trinidad Express Newspaper | News )
In contrast, the headline in the Guardian Newspaper wrote “Mom dumps baby’s body near river”. This article was very brief and from the headline one would automatically think that she killed her baby and deliberately discarded of the body. It also gives the impression of child abandonment especially in the line which states “The woman said she fed the child and placed him on a couch while she went to do other chores” (Mom dumps baby’s body near river | The Trinidad Guardian Newspaper)

So the question that now follows is what then triggers an individual to commit a crime and how can this be resolved? No one really has the answer to why a person would commit a crime. However, there lies a wide range of possible issues that could be some of the main reasons for high crime rates in Trinidad and in the Caribbean region. Some of these include drug trafficking, gang wars, hardened criminals being let out on bail, unemployment and the high cost of living expenses, the disappearance of family values and proper upbringing and technological advances that make it easy for fraud and identity theft.
The drug trade though very illegal is a quick and easy fix for many youngsters who without proper guidance, little or no education and no jobs choose to get involved in,  in an effort  to make money. Likewise unemployment and exorbitant food prices continue to be major issues in several countries and this also indirectly promotes petty crimes such as theft and robbery. In this regard it can be said that it is only until these issues are nonexistent and every individual makes a conceited effort to do what is right by law, that crime would become redundant in any given society.

References: