Pubdate: Thu, 29 Mar 2001 Source: Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 2001 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Jim Loney, Reuters GROWING CRIME SHADOWS CARIBBEAN'S TOURIST PLAYGROUND KINGSTON, Jamaica -- Gangs fight violent turf wars in Jamaica's tough inner cities. Members of an anti-Roman Catholic cult hack and torch worshipers in a St. Lucia church with machetes, killing a nun. A 17-year-old girl who breaks into a neighbor's home in Trinidad and Tobago has her hand chopped off. In Tortola, four Americans are accused of murdering a visiting American artist. Off the coasts of Haiti, Jamaica and other islands, South American drug cartels salt the warm waters of the Caribbean Sea with packets of cocaine and marijuana to lure villagers to the lucrative spoils of the drug trade. With spotty government reporting, no one seems certain if crime rates in the idyllic Caribbean islands are on the rise, but the fear of crime appears at a record high. "Only take a few gunmen to make us afraid," said Robert Morgan, 46, a Kingston, Jamaica, taxi driver. "People in some neighborhoods not leave their homes." A tourism mecca blessed by tropical sun and spectacular beaches -- it took in $18.7 billion from visitors in 1999 -- the Caribbean is a lightning rod for lurid headlines and is plagued by geography that makes it a haven for drug runners. South American cocaine cartels use remote islands and thousands of miles of deserted coastline to move their products to rich U.S. and European markets. U.S. lawmakers call impoverished Haiti a narco-state swamped by cocaine traffickers, and an annual State Department report recently listed Jamaica as the new main hub of transshipment through the Caribbean. It also said trafficking and derivative crimes -- money laundering, drug use, political corruption and violent street crime -- "threaten the stability of the small, independent countries of the eastern Caribbean." Drug violence, combined with dramatic increases in domestic murder and abuse, have Caribbean residents fearful of crime. 'High Fear Of Crime' "Over 40 percent of the Trinidad population experienced a high fear of crime in both 1999 and 2000 with certain districts having almost 70 percent of residents with a high fear of crime," said professor Ramesh Deosaran, head of the Center for Criminology at the University of the West Indies in Trinidad. "This level of fear is rather high for a democratic society as ours," he added. When the Trinidad teenager broke into the home of a neighbor who had complained to police about break-ins, she fell victim to a homemade guillotine trap -- a cutlass attached to springs -- and her left hand was severed at the wrist. Although she said she was only trying to find something to eat, Trinidadians were not sympathetic. Their outpouring of support was for the homeowner, and police and prosecutors have been urged not to bring charges against him. In Jamaica, the disappearance of American travel writer Claudia Kirschhoch from Negril last year brought unwanted international attention. Brutal street shootouts in some of Kingston's worst neighborhoods sparked outraged headlines. "Maverley residents living in fear," The Star tabloid in Kingston shouted in a story about "runaway gunmen" in a turf feud with a community gang. Recently, seven men were killed in a shootout with police in Portmore, west of Kingston. Jamaican police say a shift to community policing and concentration on the worst neighborhoods has actually reduced crime in major categories such as shootings, rapes, robberies and break-ins. From a high of more than 15,000 reported major crimes in 1996, police logged only 8,234 last year. Crime Hits 'Small Segment Of Society' "The fact that we still have plenty of tourists indicates people do realize that the heavy concentration of crime is locked into a small section of society," police spokesman James Forbes said, noting that 80 percent of Jamaica's crime happens in the capital. "The vast majority of the country is a beautiful, peaceful place." But Jamaica's murder rate is stubbornly high and police concede it is one of the worst, per capita, in the world. In a country of 2.6 million, 887 people were murdered last year: 33 percent domestic killings, 14 percent gang-related. The annual count has ranged between 780 and 1,038 since 1995. Due to the pervasive fear of crime, polls show Caribbean residents overwhelming favor capital punishment as a deterrent. Trinidad hanged nine killers in a span of four days in 1999 and other nations are pressing on with execution plans. "The government should resume hanging of condemned murderers after all available options to appeal are closed," Donetta Garcia-Henry, a resident of Aenon Town, wrote to the Jamaica Gleaner recently. Caribbean police say their anti-crime efforts are hampered by an influx of criminals deported by the United States and other countries to their Caribbean homelands. Last year, the United States sent 4,402 criminals to 20 Caribbean countries and territories, the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service said. The vast majority went to the Dominican Republic (2,170) and Jamaica (1,339). Forbes called the deportees a "monumental problem" for Jamaica, where many revert to crime and clog local jails. "These people, some of them, have had no connection with Jamaica other than that they were born here. They have lived their full lives in the United States," he said. "They are asked to start over in a country where they know nobody." The image of crime is a huge risk for Caribbean countries. In 1998, tourism accounted for more than 40 percent of annual gross domestic product in Antigua and Barbuda, St. Lucia and Aruba and more than 30 percent in Barbados and the Bahamas. Criminal attacks on locals and visitors are noticed -- witness letters like that of tourist Bill Towner published in a recent edition of Barbados' Daily Nation. "I do not feel that the Barbados authorities are taking this matter seriously," he wrote. "I've come to love Barbados ... but wanting to return and possibly putting my family at risk by returning are two very different matters." Deosaran, who has studied Caribbean crime extensively, said many crimes are not reported, making official statistics unreliable. "The dark figure of crime in the Caribbean is very huge," he said. "The official statistics are the tip of the iceberg to a much more horrible story." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake