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Friday, 13 June 2025

Stop Camouflaging Crime — Barbadians Deserve the Truth


Let’s not sugarcoat it, Gun violence in Barbados has spiraled out of control. 


Armed men are running wild, robbing Tom, Dick, Harry, and now Jane too. 


Businesses are on edge, parents fear for their children, people hesitate to go out at night. 


And what's the Prime Minister’s public diagnosis? 


Anger management, conflict resolution, and dishonesty. Really? What’s the takeaway?


No, this isn't just about unresolved personal beef or poor emotional regulation. 


It’s about guns in the hands of criminals, period, it's about organized crime. 


It’s about the systemic failure to confront root causes that go beyond vague behavioral terms. 


It’s about a crumbling sense of law and order in a country that once boasted of peace and safety.


Call It What It Is: Crime, Not Just Conflict


Let’s stop insulting the intelligence of Barbadians, the people are aware of what’s going on, you cannot use therapeutic language to explain away rampant gun crime. 


Conflict resolution didn’t fail when a man pulled out a gun and shot someone in broad daylight. 


That’s not a disagreement, that's a calculated, criminal act.


When the government chooses to downplay these acts as mere emotional or mental lapses, it sends a dangerous message, that crime is personal, not systemic. 


That the government is more interested in sounding politically correct than being brutally honest and solution-driven.


Guns Don’t Just Appear


Where are these guns coming from, who is supplying them, who is protecting the flow of illegal firearms into this country? 


Barbadians want answers, not lectures, it's not a public relations spin, not therapy sessions wrapped in political speeches.


Until we tackle the importation, distribution, and networks behind illegal firearms, we’re not getting anywhere. 


That takes enforcement, exposure, and political will, it takes policy, intelligence, and yes, some spine.


What If It Were a Tourist?


And here's the elephant in the room, what if a tourist gets shot, would the government still call it "anger management" would they preach "conflict resolution" to CNN and BBC? 


Or would they finally acknowledge that the issue is lawless gunmen empowered by weak enforcement and soft leadership?


It’s a fair question, because let’s be honest, Barbadians don’t feel safe. 


And right now, the government doesn’t sound like it’s fighting for us, just covering its tracks.


  • Gun crime is not a miscommunication. It’s a sign of emboldened criminals and weakened deterrents.
  • The justice system is too soft, bail is given too easily, cases take years, Witnesses are scared.
  • Corruption must be named, you cannot solve crime while keeping silent about the enablers in uniform, politics, and positions of influence.
  • Youth are not just angry, they are undereducated, unemployed, and underexposed to opportunity, but that’s not the same as saying they just need a talk.
  • Robberies in daylight mean criminals do not fear consequences. That is a failure of policing, presence, and policy.
  • Leadership must mean accountability, if the government can’t deliver safety, then what is it delivering?


Stop Hiding Behind Buzzwords, Barbadians are tired of buzzwords and half-truths. 


This country is bleeding, and the people deserve better than vague diagnoses that blamed emotional instability while sidestepping real accountability and structural reform.


Truth is, if a tourist were to get caught in this mess, it wouldn’t be called “anger management” it would be a national emergency, So why isn’t it already?


If Barbados is truly “ours,” then we need leadership that will speak with fire, act with courage, and stop playing camouflage with criminals.


No more pacifying words, no more dancing around the truth, Call it what it is, and do what must be done, Barbados deserves that much.

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