CARICOM Media Release
The connection of crime and violence to drugs, legal and illegal; the need for “restorative justice” and understanding the dynamics at the community level to ensure targeted interventions, formed part of the discussions at the Regional Forum on Youth Crime and Violence now underway in Georgetown, Guyana.
The discussions were held during the Session on Youth Gangs and Violence which was co-moderated by St. Kitts and Nevis Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Education and Youth, Hon Shawn Richards, and CARICOM Youth Ambassador and Vice Dean for Regional Initiatives, Tarun Butcher.
Among the take-home messages were that new methods and strategies were needed for youth programmes, and that faith-based organisations should play a more active role in the Community.
The family plays the greatest role in keeping youth from gangs….[but] faith-based organisations must play a big part in helping young people who are `messed up’, said Ewort Williams of the Church on the Bridge Ministry; a faith-based programme which has as its primary objective helping to prevent youth crime, particularly those related to gangs.
The need for restorative justice was a major message of the Session, in which by Guyana’s Acting Chief Justice, Justice Yonette Cummings, and Guyana’s Commissioner of Police, Mr. Seelall Persaud, participated.
Not everyone on a drug-related offence needs to be incarcerated,” said Esther Best of the National Drug Council of Trinidad and Tobago.
If we continue to arrest our young people for what is a development issue, we would have a cohort of young people who would not have jobs,” among other social ills, she added.
The two-day Forum at the Arthur Chung Conference Centre is an outcome of the CARICOM/Spain Reducing Youth on Youth Violence programme, now being piloted in five Member States. The Forum wraps up this evening and its recommendations will be considered at the Twenty-ninth meeting of the Council for Human and Social Development on Youth and Culture which takes place on 3-4 March 2016, in Georgetown, Guyana.