Trinibrehs What's Going On (Violence Against Women in Caribbean)

BigMan

Veteran
Joined
Dec 5, 2012
Messages
32,549
Reputation
5,719
Daps
90,330
I've been seeing a lot of this stuff on social media

:gucci:




Why T&T so violent? I know it has a high murder rate but is it worse than DR and Jamaica ? Is it the drug trade fueling the violence?

And Caribrehs in general, what are we doing about the violence/sexual abuse against women and children in the islands
shyts brazy
 
  • Dap
Reactions: Meh

BigMan

Veteran
Joined
Dec 5, 2012
Messages
32,549
Reputation
5,719
Daps
90,330
Trinidad & Tobago's Prime Minister Says Women Should Choose Their Men More Wisely to Avoid Violence

Screenshot of a public Facebook status update summarising the message of Trinidad and Tobago's prime minister as he addressed the issue of gender-based violence in the country.

On the heels of Trinidad and Tobago's latest murder, Prime Minister Dr. Keith Rowley has made a statement on the country's crime situation that is being chewed out on social media for being tone-deaf and appearing to victim-blame.

Although Rowley noted that the detection rate of the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS) is low, he seemed a tad reticent to strongly state his disapproval with its performance, explaining that he didn't want to further demoralise the officers: “As Prime Minister, I cannot dictate to the police how to treat with citizens. Like you, I too am watching with anger at some of the things I am seeing. I have not opened my mouth”.

Rowley did manage to put some of the responsibility on the police by making the point that “in the absence of detection, those who would ordinarily be law-abiding have an incentive to become law breakers”, but he also said that women needed to take responsibility for avoiding domestic and gender-based violence by choosing their partners wisely:

You called on the Prime Minister to do something about crime. I am not in your bedroom, I am not in your choice of men.

Social media exploded. On Facebook, Keegan Fanovich said:

As per our usual culture. Let's victim blame right?
She should've chose better?
How about he should've been brought up better?
I find it hard to believe this man is actually that stupid. […] I can't see another politician cept Trump maybe making a public statement like this.
And please eh Rowley… You might as well be in my bedroom. Cuz you done f@#king we all over.

Entertainer Wendell Manwarren was disappointed in the prime minister:

What a totally uninspired response from our PM. Nah man yuh could do better than that.

Facebook user Roanne John sardonically asked:

So apparently ALL the women of this country that have been BRUTALLY murdered, raped and whatnot KNEW their assailants?

Journalist Laura Dowrich-Phillips questioned whether Rowley was qualified to speak on the issue of domestic violence, retorting:

If all these killings happening after the woman leaves the relationship clearly they made the right choices, so who really need talking to?

Twitter users also responded by sharing the story (accompanied by unflattering hashtags):

Defend the Women, #LeaveMeAlone and Carnival
In the apparent absence of willingness to get to the root of the problem, some celebrities are trying to do their part. Soca star Bunji Garlin has started a “Defend the Women” challenge, in which he calls on men to step up and call out acts of aggression against women, saying, “Every time these kinds of characters escape, they're coming one step closer to your household. Let's not wait until it hits home […] to react and then it's too late.”

In the same vein, Joanne Gail Johnson shared an infographic to the Facebook group Womantra, advising men on what they can do to stop gender-based violence:


Screenshot of an infographic that is being widely shared on Facebook.

Activist Attillah Springer also asked for public support regarding “a Carnival based conversation about street harassment and intimate partner violence”, explaining that she had secured permission from Calypso Rose to use her popular song “Leave Me Alone” to bring attention to gender-based violence within the Carnival space.

Out of this, two new hashtags have emerged — #leavemealone and #leaveshealone — to share stories and just as importantly, “to encourage men to hold their friends, brothers and colleagues more accountable”. As part of the initiative, Springer will be meeting with police about their response to victims of gender-based violence during the upcoming Carnival season.

Last year's Carnival festivities were marred by the murder of a Japanese steel plan player; the then mayor of Port of Spain was forced to resign over his victim-blaming statements in that case. Almost a year later, no-one has been arrested for the murder.

A complex issue
Sociologist Nazma Muller spoke to Global Voices about the complexities of the issue, which she experienced first-hand, since her mother — who divorced her father when Muller was six years old — was a victim of domestic violence. She says that alcohol, the pressures of her parents’ interracial marriage and their economic situation could have put strain on anyone. “But in Trinidad,” she says, “he easily became a monster.”

She noted that the region's collective history of abuse and trauma is a key contributing factor:

No one wants to acknowledge the fact that the physical, psychological and structural abuse of Africans and Indians during slavery and indentureship has continued throughout the centuries by parents abusing their own children and passing on the learned self-hatred and self-destruction. After Emancipation, colonialism continued. The denigration of the African and Indian continued until independence. The belief that white was […] the most desirable colour to have was absorbed by our ancestors, our parents and now us.

According to Muller, racial stereotypes also factor in:

The criminalization of our boys and men for ganja is just one example of how we as a society view African masculinity — as deviant and unproductive. These same men enter relationships — because again, the stereotype of the African man is one with a big penis who loves to have sex, and this concept is portrayed through the music (be it hip hop, soca or dancehall) — and if they are not working, how can they boost their egos? Not by screwing as many women as possible?

The relationship with their mothers are also fraught with tension and resentment since the African woman has her own identity and self-esteem issues to deal with in this colour-conscious society, plus the stresses of raising the children, holding down a job and trying to keep her man from straying.

The Indian woman has a different set of issues to deal with. The legacy of the barrack yard is a memory of a shortage of women, early marriage and sexual initiation, a controlling jealousy and possessiveness on the part of the man, and the conflict that creates when the Indian woman becomes financially independent.

Muller is convinced that “until we begin to discuss sexuality and relationships in school, or create safe spaces where our boys and men can talk about their sexuality and feelings of inadequacy, we will continue to see domestic violence”.
 

BigMan

Veteran
Joined
Dec 5, 2012
Messages
32,549
Reputation
5,719
Daps
90,330
Artwork used for a report prepared for the 2009 ‘Women for Peace’ conference, hosted by the Alola Foundation. Photo: AusAID, from flickr user Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, CC BY 2.0.

The murder of a young woman on February 7 at MovieTowne, a popular entertainment destination in Trinidad's capital city, has rattled netizens and further eroded trust in the ability of the authorities to curb rising violent crime in the country.

Jamilia Derevenax was apparently lured away from her place of work — a restaurant in MovieTowne — by a phone call from someone she knew. Security guards in the area were alerted by the woman's screams. By the time they arrived at the underground parking area, however, the attacker (although some reports say there was more than oneperpetrator involved) had already slit her throat and was trying to flee the scene by car. A man was intercepted by compound security and handed over to police, who now say that the killer escaped and the person held by plaza security is not a suspect.

To many social media users, the fact that the murderer has not yet been apprehended speaks to the poor detection record of the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS). There have been spiralling levels of violence — particularly towards women and girls — in the country. Just as disturbingly, graphic images of the victims are often circulated via social media sites messaging apps.

One female Twitter user was concerned that people were becoming desensitised to the violence (Soca Monarch refers to the international soca music competition held during Carnival):

On Facebook, discussion was rife about the country's crime situation.

Facebook user Gilberte O'Sullivan was heartbroken. Saying that the society is “beyond broken”, she changed her profile picture to “a symbolic black and white ‘scarf'” from the Trinidad and Tobago flag, superimposed over the face of a crying woman “to symbolize the women and young girls silenced by murders, as the toll continues to rise”. Many other Facebook users did the same, to let the government — and opposition — know it must “stand against the scourge of violent crime” in the country.

FLAG.jpg

Image of a woman's face superimposed with the colours of the Trinidad and Tobago flag; widely shared on Facebook.

One Facebook user, Lemorev Khaleem, was so infuriated at the impotence of the authorities that he exclaimed, “Look allyuh better legalize crime!!! Do as yuh plz!!!”

There were several Facebook threads which spoke about the pressing need to change the way in which Caribbean men are socialised. Sharon N Boodoosingh, like many other female Facebook users, was concerned about the message that was being sent:

When did we stop teaching our sons that:
— it is the most cowardly act to lift their hands against a woman, be it a wife, sister, aunt, daughter or friend
— differences cannot be resolved through acts of physical, emotional or psychological violence
– children, both boys and girls, are all equal and males are not superior
– they need to show due respect to every woman in their lives
Our homes, schools and society (including the so-called role models) have failed our sons so that they wrongly believe it is no big deal to abuse a woman or to stab and kill her.
#wearejameliatoo

Several women's organisations have been observing the disturbing trend. Powerful Ladies of Trinidad and Tobago (PLOTT), a business organisation that also focuses on social development projects, repostedits crime analysis for 2016, saying:

Tired counting bodies, tired looking at bloodied corpses. What will be the response to a young women found, throat slit at Movietowne Port of Spain? If this shocks you then you have not been paying attention.

As part of its ongoing effort to “raise awareness and understanding of the contributors and repercussions of the spate of aggression and violence across Trinidad and Tobago”, PLOTT publishes a geographic, demographic and temporal analysis of the murder rate on a monthly basis. January's report was unsettling:

January 2017 saw the most murders in our nation's history for the comparative period, however the increase was marginal. The total number of murders committed in January 2017 was approximately 52, this represents a 6% increase in the January murder toll from the highest toll recorded over the last decade. […]

There was also a small increase in the frequency of women murdered.


Screenshot of a PLOTT report graph comparing the frequency of murder victims by gender — January 2017 vs. January 2016.

Meanwhile, the Acting Chief of Police has stated that violent crime is down. The PLOTT report discovered an interesting link between economics, politics and violence:

Research conducted by Gould & Agnich in 2016, found a clear relationship between violence against women and failing states, pointing out that although ‘the likelihood of violence is increased for the entire populace in fragile and failing states, women are especially at risk due to patriarchal constraints at the state level, as well as in the private sphere’.

Facebook user Marlon J Jeffers suggested that other factors — such as “when authorities neglected to forcefully do their duties with a purpose throughout the years” — might also be at play. Indeed, many social media users were dissatisfied at the performance of those in charge. Ian Michado Royer's public Facebook status summed up the overriding attitude:

COP [Chief of Police]: Don't be Alarmed by Crime. Kamla [Opposition Leader]: We need more guns. Keith [Prime Minister]: Let's have talks. Yet a young woman is brutally murdered, throat slit, in Movietowne POS Car Park less than an hour ago. We are in a state of emergency and our women and girls seem to be the major target of crime and assault. We must do something now!

Many women, frightened at the trend, agreed. Teocah Arieal Ainka Dove saidher spirit was “exhausted […] paralyzed in fear on an island that was once a paradise”. Leanne Audain thought that it was up to women to be one another's keeper, since “no one else is standing and fighting for us”.

One Twitter user defended the authorities, however:

Other netizens were not prepared to accept the status quo; Rhoda Bharathwas all for holding the police service accountable:

So we discussing crime.
We have an Acting Police Commissioner who is inept.
1. Where is the Police Service Commission that keeps hiring him in all this?
Can we start asking them some questions?
2. Where is the head of Forensics?
3. Where are the Divisional heads at the TTPS?
Can we make them accountable?
Is incompetence grounds for losing your job?
#DeViceCyahDone (Translation: Corruption can’t come to an end)

According to a recent Inter-American Development Bank study undertaken throughout Latin America and the Caribbean, Trinidad and Tobago spends the most money on crime and private security services (more than US $1,000 per capita), with little to show for it in terms of crime reduction. The country's Ministry of National Security received the most funding of any government department in the 2015-2016 Budget — a whopping TT $10.81 billion (about US $1.6 billion).

While the blogosphere was busy discussing the merits of punishment versus empowerment, and prayer versus action, Wired868 published a letter to the editor which cut to the chase:

If 63-plus murders, combined with a number of persons missing, in a population of 1.4M does not constitute a crisis […] what does? […]

The conversations across this landscape has long been dominated by the atrociousness and brazenness where a handful of individuals engaged in criminal activities manage to hold an entire nation hostage. And where many of us are no longer living in fear, but more like surviving—sitting ducks; awaiting our number.

In an effort to help protect women, PLOTT launched a free anti-crime applate last year. The app allows users to disseminate emergency alerts, post news about missing or wanted persons, issue public safety notifications, and view weekly crime reports. In emergencies, app users can receive instant alerts. It also allows citizens to send anonymous crime tips, call a 24-hour hotline, and notify police about suspicious activity just by uploading images. Anyone concerned about their safety can download the app by searching for “community defence” in their app store.

Another article about a recent murder in Trinidad
 

newarkhiphop

Moderator
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
38,807
Reputation
10,562
Daps
128,197
Random but how does the 2016 data not equal 100%?

Anyways a lot of these Caribbean countries are stuck in some pretty old school ways when it comes to women, religion, sexuality, etc. I think that is partially to blame/explain the situations that we see.

Alot of it is outdated / non existent domestic abuse laws, in
in Dominican Republic up until 5 - 10 years ago it was almost legal to kill your spouse
 
Top