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Babonneau Civil Society Groups Hold Peace March

Civil society groups in Babonneau held a peace march on Saturday in response to recent homicides in the community.

The community’s 23-year-old Dante St. Ange, 63-year-old Abraham Charles Rose, 38-year-old Devon Maximin, and 17-year-old Alva Cole, all violently lost their lives within the last nine months.

The Babonneau Youth Synergy was among the organisers of Saturday’s peace march.

Its President, Aldric Edward, told St. Lucia Times that residents are fearful due to the surge in crime and violence in Babonneau.

Edward disclosed that the situation is affecting livelihoods.

“Shops are closing. When you are supposed to be out making money as early as three, four in the afternoon, we have shops being closed,” the Babonneau Youth Synergy President noted.

He recalled that Saturday’s turnout could have been better but sent a powerful message.

Edward felt fear may have kept some people away.

“We sent invitation letters to a lot of the organisations and some of the feedback was that persons were afraid that something would have happened. But we made sure we told them that police officers were on board and would be present,” he told St. Lucia Times.

Edward said the peace march, which received support from Babonneau MP Dr. Virginia Albert-Poyotte, RISE Saint Lucia Inc. Chairman Dr. Venus Cherry and the church, among others, was part of a planned series of activities.

The activities will include self-development initiatives, job training, counseling and mentorship programmes for vulnerable individuals.

“The objective of the march was to bring some form of awareness to the perpetrators (of crime), to let them know that the community is not satisfied, not happy with what they are doing and they need to put a stop to it,” Edward explained.

 

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2 COMMENTS

  1. So happy to see y’all in a cohesive unit, matching and holding up signs, i i have seen this before many times, but with different faces. But the truth of the matter is, in realty you want justice…way too many holes in the Judicial system, eg. giving bail to criminals with an unlicensed firearm, fill to the gills with bullets to kill your family and love once if need be, signs of “corruption” to me. So stop matching and fight to change the unjust laws that affect you and your love ones. We need change, be the wolf not the sheep.

  2. Those marchers mean well. They are attempting to highlight a problem. Just like prayers for peace, these things are going nowhere. The reason, if the people who control the levers of power are inept, or disinterested, then nothing good is going to happen. It’s like getting ready for a difficult exam, without opening the textbook once. You believe that prayer alone will let you ace the exam. God will not help those who don’t help themselves.

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