Tuesday, December 15, 2015
By RASHAD ROLLE
Tribune Staff Reporter
rrolle@tribunemedia.net
IN the wake of the fatal stabbing of a 16-year-old Doris Johnson Senior High School student last week, Education Minister Jerome Fitzgerald told the House of Assembly that the incident exposed the need for more police presence on the streets of New Providence.
Adonai Wilson was killed after school last Wednesday. He was reportedly walking with friends to the recently opened Popeyes restaurant when he was attacked.
The Tribune understands that tension had been brewing for sometime at the school before the fatal incident occurred.
Calling last Wednesday a “tragic day in the Bahamas,” Mr Fitzgerald said most school fights don’t take place on campuses but happen before or after school away from school grounds.
He cited a study of College of the Bahamas (COB) Professor Dr William Fielding, which indicated that school policing in the country has been successful.
“As you can see, there needs to be a renewed focus and the same attention that was given to make our schools safer for our children needs to be given to ensure that they feel safe outside of school as well,” he said.
“Last week’s tragic incident has undoubtedly brought into focus the need to increase security and police presence on the streets between the hours of 2.30pm and 5pm on school days.”
Mr Fitzgerald also pledged to address concerns about verbal abuse and violence towards teachers, saying he will meet with the Bahamas Union of Teachers (BUT) and Police Commissioner Ellison Greenslade to address this and other school violence matters.
For his part, Fox Hill MP Fred Mitchell said he visited public schools in his constituency last week to deliver the message that their generation is not lost, despite the acts of a few.
“In our constituency, as I suspect throughout the country, there is a profound re-examination and soul searching of what we can do to avoid this kind of tragedy from happening again,” Mr Mitchell said.
“Urgent action of some kind is needed and one suspects that going forward, that society will respond to allocate the resources needed to tackle this problem.”
Comments
ThisIsOurs says...
Suggesting a solution of more police or more heavily armed police, "in isolation", is caveman thinking. The robber will sit and watch the police drive up and down, determine how much time they have before the next patrol passes, then they'll commit the crime, they probably have a lookout too.
And where exactly will the police line end? Will they follow the students on the bus and the walk through the track road?
The only solution to this problem involves addressing the only thing these children carry with them everywhere, their "hearts and minds". Add some CCTV too, that could literally follow them everywhere. I'm all for protecting civil liberties, Bahamians **are** too nosey, don't know how to handle private data, but CCTV has become a necessity.
Posted 15 December 2015, 3:55 p.m. Suggest removal
GrassRoot says...
yawn.how are the good people of Marathon doing? still hooked on Petrofumes?
Posted 15 December 2015, 3:56 p.m. Suggest removal
jimmyanderson says...
Shocking incident. Having police around students will negatively impact their minds. They are students and seeing things like weapon around them can disturb them psychologically, just like long and long thesis do.
Posted 18 December 2015, 2:53 a.m. Suggest removal
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