Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Joined: Oct 1999
Posts: 84,397
Marty Offline OP
OP Offline
This evening in the Placencia peninsula, tourism stakeholders as well as residents are holding an emergency meeting in respect of a crime wave that is striking the village. The Village Council chairman, the acting police commissioner and representatives from the B.T.B. and B.T.I.A. are in attendance as well. Muggings, robberies and burglaries have become common place. While much of the violence has gone largely unreported, there have been two major cases in recent days that have sent stake holders in emergency mode and precipitated today's meeting. One week ago, Frank Da Silva the owner of Mangos Restaurant in Placencia ended up in at the K.H.M.H., when he was shot in a robbery at his business establishment. It was the third time he has been targeted. On Sunday night, two vacationing US couples were attacked in a catamaran, SK Abenga, as they passed Pelican Cayes. All four were hospitalized for varying degrees of injuries. One of the women in her sixties was brutally raped and according to one report, help from the police was too late. The four suspects have not been detained. It is felt that there is inadequate policing in the peninsula where tourism is the main income earner and that the violence, if left unchecked, will have a negative impact on tourism numbers. Only six police officers are in the peninsula and southern communities which have grown significantly to a population of thirty-two thousand. Word from Placencia is that the BTB has agreed to assist with patrol boats, as a first step in curbing crime. We'll have more on that emergency meeting in Friday's newscast.

Channel 5

Joined: Oct 1999
Posts: 84,397
Marty Offline OP
OP Offline

Stakeholders meet in Placencia to counter crime

There has been increasing violence in the Placencia peninsula where the beaches are among the most pristine and the area has become a hot diving destination. What was once a small sleepy village has boomed into a major adventure getaway. But the crime wave is threatening the security of residents and visitors and can potentially affect tourism. News Five's Isani Cayetano reports on emergency measures being taken to keep the peninsula safe.

 

Isani Cayetano, Reporting

Placencia has long been the seaside getaway of choice for locals and foreigners alike wanting to enjoy the sun and breeze of southern Belize. The village has quickly become the commercial hub for tourism in the Stann Creek District. But along with the rapid expansion of the community comes a growing concern for its many residents.

 

Charles Leslie Jr.

Charles Leslie Jr., Village Chairman, Placencia

"Placencia Village has over seventeen hundred people and the entire peninsula we have roughly five thousand people. We only have about nine officers on the Placencia peninsula and that's one of the problems. When I became chairman on April 18th, 2010 we had about fifteen officers and we have been reduced from fifteen officers now to about nine officers and the community is growing and the disparity and the gap between security from the police officers and business that is being established in the community on the peninsula is growing at a rapid pace and the officers in this area are being reduced and it's not making much sense."

 

David Henderson

The recent spike in crime, the latest incident being the assault of several tourists vacationing off the Pelican Cayes last weekend, has prompted residents to call an emergency meeting. At the heart of the problem is a dire need for increased police presence.

 

David Henderson, Commissioner of Police

"We will look at the restructuring of the department out here. We'll improve on the management level in order that we put a senior ranking [officer] out here in order that he can make proper decisions for deployment and really address whatever situation might arise."

 

Isani Cayetano

"What is being done at this present moment? I know suggestions were made earlier to have checkpoints and what have you. What can be done or what is being done to secure all the other communities leading up to Placencia?"

 

David Henderson

"First of all we will look at our intelligence in order that we must really operate based on intelligence. The intelligence personnel will be deployed in the area, gather whatsoever information we may need and we will ensure that we will really deploy operational people to address the situation."

 

Placencia Resident

The reduction of officers here has made Placencia an ideal target for criminals who purposely access this neck of land by boat. Majority of the crimes committed are believed to be perpetrated by outsiders.

 

Placencia Resident

"The police force here has the toughest job. They have a job of [patrolling the] sea. We are almost surrounded by sea. People can escape by the lagoon, by the ocean, by road so it's one of the toughest jobs. I feel like it's harder to man the Mango Creek. Mango Creek you could say a lot of things need to move through the road because nobody wants to come to Placencia. A lot of people there don't have access to boats. Here they steal your boat and they get away. They take a paddling canoe and they get away. So for me the combating of crime and the geography of how they escape and enter is far beyond what these police can do."

 

Raymond Mossiah

One of the many setbacks is the absence of a police patrol craft.

 

Raymond Mossiah, B.T.B. Representative

"I am pleased to inform you that we have already made the first down payment on purchasing a boat for the Tourism Police Unit so by the end, so by the end of next month that boat should be ready and it should be in operation."

 

Emilio Zabaneh

Another suggestion came from Emilio Zabaneh who proposed that checkpoints be established in all villages leading to Placencia.

 

Emilio Zabaneh, Placencia Resident

"We can put these police booths as gates to our communities, one for Placencia, one for Seine Bight, one for Maya Beach and we must be willing to pay twenty-five cent for that policeman or whoever is manning that thing. We need to get these things up and running and we need to figure out how we can make them work."

 

At the helm of the meeting is Village Chairman Charles Leslie Jr. At the head table with him are several government officials who made the journey south to address the problems at hand.

 

Charles Leslie Jr.

"We are going to try to establish a steering committee to address the actuation of the solution because many times as a villager, I was born here, raised here, I've been to many meetings [and] people talk, ideas are thrown around [and when] the meeting is over nothing happens. I do not want that to happen this time. We're going to set up this steering committee; we're going to work with the commissioner and Mr. Mossiah from B.T.B., Ms. Diana Hall. We're going to work with every single person, the area representative, the chairman of Seine Bight Village and we're going to implement these solutions to the crime problem and to basically every other problem that we are facing on this peninsula."

 

A follow up meeting has also been scheduled to look at the influx of visitors on Placencia during the Easter weekend in light of recent developments. Reporting for News Five, I am Isani Cayetano.

Channel 5


Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 6,267
Offline
Well if they get a police boat for Placencia I hope the results are better there than here.

IMHO you (we) need collaboration with the coast guard.

Joined: Oct 1999
Posts: 84,397
Marty Offline OP
OP Offline

Warning to thieves - keep away from Placencia!

Citizens of the Placencia Penninsula who organized a neighborhood watch network have zero tolerance for criminals and thieves, and to add to this, the Placencia police have been strengthened with the addition of crime investigators, Special Branch personnel and Tourism Police. This heightened security led to the arrest of three thieves by the citizens, who handed them over to police.

The thieves were quickly arrested and charged by police with burglary and possession of stolen goods, and an investigation began that led to the recovery of the stolen loot. The thieves are presently in lockdown at the Independence Police Station, waiting to be taken to the Dangriga Magistrate's Court to be arraigned on the charges.

On Monday, May 28, in the Maya Beach area of Placencia, the men allegedly went into a home and stole a laptop computer and other items, including a cell phone and an iPod, and tried to escape. But citizens of the area and members of the neighborhood who saw them running out of the house with the stolen computer, ran after and captured them.

The citizens held them until police arrived to take charge.

Police have charged Ambrose "Monkey Man" Joseph, 21; Lionel "Dallas" Vasquez, 22, and Kendale "Snaky" Ramirez, but so far, they have not yet been taken to court because there is no magistrate available in Dangriga or Punta Gorda at this time. The men will be taken to the Dangriga Magistrate's Court on Tuesday, June 4.

A couple who owns the house told Placencia police that while at home relaxing on the beach in the Maya Beach area, they saw a man jump off their veranda and run away with their laptop computer under his arm. The husband and a neighbor quickly ran after him into the bushes, and also saw two other men run out of the area, along the beach.

The husband quickly alerted the Crime Watch members, who immediately responded, and a half-mile from the house they captured Ambrose Joseph and Lionel Vasquez. The two were handed over to police who were on patrol in the area.

The citizens who were tracking the third man found him at his home in Seine Bight shortly after. Police were alerted and Kendale Ramirez was arrested. Placencia police said that the arrest of the three men went smoothly, and there was no resistance.

Police said that the men cooperated with the investigation and Ramirez led them to an area near the couple's home from where they stole the items. There police found the laptop, an iPod and a cell phone, all property of the couple.

Amandala



Link Copied to Clipboard
March
S M T W T F S
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31
Cayo Espanto
Click for Cayo Espanto, and have your own private island
More Links
Click for exciting and adventurous tours of Belize with Katie Valk!
Who's Online Now
0 members (), 308 guests, and 0 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Forum Statistics
Forums44
Topics79,199
Posts500,011
Members20,460
Most Online7,413
Nov 7th, 2021



AmbergrisCaye.com CayeCaulker.org HELP! Visitor Center Goods & Services San Pedro Town
BelizeSearch.com Message Board Lodging Diving Fishing Things to Do History
BelizeNews.com Maps Phonebook Belize Business Directory
BelizeCards.com Picture of the Day

The opinions and views expressed on this board are the subjective opinions of Ambergris Caye Message Board members
and not of the Ambergris Caye Message Board its affiliates, or its employees.

Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5