Barbados Announces Measures to Fight Crime

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BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, CMC – Prime Minister Mia Mottley has announced the establishment of a National Advisory Council on Citizen Security as her administration moves towards dealing with an upsurge in gun and gun-related violence.

“The government of Barbados has agreed that we will establish immediately a national advisory council on Citizen Security. And this council on citizen security is intended to be able to have the widest possible ownership of the things that we must consider and do in order to be able to ensure that Barbados does not fall down the rabbit hole that regrettably other countries have fallen down into as a result of the access in particular to assault weapons and automatic weapons.”

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Mottley told a news conference that the council will be headed by Professor Velma Newton with the President of the Senate, Reginald Farley being the deputy chairman. The council will also include security experts, business leaders, religious leaders, union officials and youth representatives.

Mottley said the council will not only respond to government directives but will also actively engage with community groups to gather insights and recommendations. She expressed hope that this initiative would stimulate widespread interest and participation among Barbadians.

Acknowledging that no single party or institution is solely responsible for the country’s social challenges, Mottley noted that the new council will complement ongoing efforts by various institutions, including the Law Reform Commission.

The prime minister indicated that difficult discussions would be necessary. She outlined several legislative matters for consideration by the council, including an anti-gang initiative requested by the Opposition and electronic intercept legislation sought by law enforcement agencies.

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“The National Council will have to advise as well as government will have to make a decision on whether this country wants, like Australia and others, to become a gun-free society; whether even with all of that, there should be a further gun amnesty,” she said.

Mottley also announced fines and new regulations targeting vehicle window tints, number plates, mask-wearing, and the use of 3D printers beginning October 14.

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“Persons who are not having tints that are compliant… will be fined. I’m not interested in prosecuting them…. I want money. If you are involved in behaviour that leads to those tints still being there, such that the police or anybody passing by can’t see you… start paying some fines.”

She said the new policies are part of the government’s broader strategy to enhance public safety, with an additional focus on regulating vehicle number plates. Mottley announced a crackdown on the manufacture of number plates by “anyone.

“The notion that any and everybody can make a number plate, those days are gone,” she said, warning “the fines will be high fines”.

Mottley told reporters the government’s approach is designed to target those who facilitate criminal activities, particularly for financial gain.

“The prison is for real criminals. The ones who want to claim that they’re helping criminals… If you’re doing it for money, give back all the money that you’re making from it and more,” she said.

Mottely said  the authorities are also moving to crackdown on the public use of masks, saying “we have gotten into this awful habit of having people walk around.

“It may seem cool, but it stops the police and other legitimate people in this society from seeing and knowing who is standing next to them.”

The prime minister is relying on a provision of the Highways Act that she said was passed in 1925 – when Barbados was a British colony – which originally prohibited mask-wearing in public.

The regulation was relaxed during the COVID-19 pandemic but Mottley made clear that masks are once again illegal unless authorised.

“The bottom line is, unless you have the permission of the Commissioner of Police, you cannot be wearing these masks on your face,” she said, warning car rental owners to be vigilant about the use of their vehicles in criminal activities.

Referencing the Proceeds and Instrumentality of Crime Act which was passed in 2019 and allows law enforcement to confiscate criminals’ property, Prime Minister Mottley said steps were being taken to engage with those in the car hire industry.

“I’ve asked the Attorney General and the Deputy Prime Minister to meet with the owners of the hired car industry, because if your car is used as an instrument of crime… it can be confiscated and forfeited.”

The measures also extend to 3D printers, which will now be subject to a regulatory framework, similar to that of firearms.

“In the same way that you must apply for a licence to import firearms, we will require that you have a licence to import 3D printers,” Mottley said, adding that law enforcement will have the right to periodically inspect the devices to ensure they are not being put to criminal uses.

“The regulatory framework for 3D printers will also include the right of law enforcement to periodically inspect those who have these printers to ensure that they are not being used for nefarious purposes.”

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