Updated Feb 7, 2012 - 7:01 pm
Jamaica government destroys 2,000 guns in furnace
Originally published: Feb 7, 2012 - 7:01 pm
KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) - Roughly 2,000 firearms were melted down in a blazing furnace Tuesday as part of an effort designed to combat gun trafficking and corruption in Jamaica while reducing violent crime.
Police, government and U.N. officials destroyed pistols and revolvers by pitching them into a kiln glowing bright orange at a cement factory in the capital of Kingston. Most of the guns were decommissioned or seized in police operations over the years.
National Security Minister Peter Bunting, who has been in office for just over a month, said the destruction of the weapons is an important first step toward managing the sizable stockpiles of guns in Jamaica and reducing the risk of theft.
"The removal will help to reduce the risks of these weapons being possibly diverted back into the illicit trade," Bunting said at the Jamaica Constabulary Force armory.
William Godnick, a coordinator with the U.N. Regional Center for Peace Disarmament and Development in Latin America and the Caribbean, said the destruction of the guns "is the beginning of a long process in which we hope to destroy a much larger quantity."
The primary goal is "to prevent theft and loss," Godnick said.
Last year, a Jamaican police sergeant was sentenced to 15 years in prison for stealing guns and bullets from the Kingston armory. He was arrested after agents seized 18 high-powered weapons and 11,000 rounds of ammunition that were stolen for sale to criminals.
Bunting, who recently announced that he hopes to develop new policies encouraging police use of non-lethal weapons such as Tasers to stem a high rate of police killings, told reporters that reducing stockpiles can also "remove temptation" from rogue officers who may plant weapons.
He said a crime spike so far in 2012 shows that advances the Caribbean country has made combating gangs and crime since 2010 are fragile.
"We can't let up in our efforts to combat crime," Bunting said.
In a report last year, the World Bank estimated that violence and crime cost this Caribbean country roughly $400 million a year.
With arsenals to rival police firepower, gangs whose turf wars have long plagued gritty parts of the island are blamed for the majority of Jamaica's homicides. The large majority of the gangs' weapons are smuggled from the United States.
Illegal guns come in on freighters and in "guns-for-ganja" deals by fishermen, who carry homegrown marijuana to nearby Haiti and return with pistols, revolvers and submachine guns _ many of them believed to be from the U.S. as well.
On Wednesday, officials will destroy roughly a half ton of ammunition at the cement factory.
___
David McFadden on Twitter: https://twitter.com/dmcfadd
(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
Proposal to rename Soap Lake is deferred
There won't be a quick decision on a strongly debated proposal to change the name of central Washington's Soap Lake to Lake Smokiam.- Alaska restaurant battles Seattle for first fish
- Rockies managed 2 hits in 4-0 loss to Mariners.
- Mariners 4, Rockies 0
- New police chief for Sunriver, Ore.
- Man dead after small boat overturns in WA waters
- Soldier faces murder charges in Iraq base deaths
- GOP's top budget writer in state Senate to retire
- More Local News »
What rhymes with marijuana?
Bill Radke rhymes the news... from Monday to Friday it's the week in a nutshell. - Ross & Burbank: Video: Who can eat the most cheeseburgers in 3 minutes?
- Ross & Burbank: Video: Who can eat the most cheeseburgers in 3 minutes?
- Monson: Dori gets his own hot dog, the Dori Dog
- TBTL: So This Also Happened...
- mynw: John Curley auctions off in-studio KIRO experiences
- Radke: What rhymes with marijuana?
-

The official Dori Monson PoDog
Dori Monson unveils his very own PoDog for "Experience:... -
Rachel Belle's Dick's cheeseburger eating challenge
Rachel Belle, Sean De Tore, Luke Burbank, and Libby... -

Inside Seattle Center's new Chihuly museum
The new, permanent 1.5 acre exhibit is located near... -

Week in photos
Stars at Cannes, poodle in sunglasses, Michael Phelps...
Debating the merits of the Seahawks' QB approach
Mike Salk explains why he disagrees with a national writer's contention that Pete Carroll and the Seahawks have gone about their search for a quarterback the wrong way. - Drayer: Is it time for the gloves to come off?
- Blue 42: Huskies have work to do up front
- Sounders renew rivalry with Whitecaps
- Audio: Baldwin impressed by Russell Wilson
- Audio: Sark on O-line, backup QB options
- Vilma sues Goodell for defamation
- More proof Marshawn Lynch is one of a kind
- More Sports »
Feds say Colorado wildfire started on camp stove
Hundreds of firefighters are battling a blaze fueled by warm, dry weather in northern Colorado that federal officials say started with a camp stove. - 3 charged with terror conspiracy ahead of NATO
- LA police arrest 2 in killings of Chinese students
- 3 NATO protesters face terror conspiracy charges
- Jurors in Edwards trial will resume talks Monday
- Amid apparent rift, kin mourn Mary Kennedy
- Jokes and sympathy _ Obama greets his G-8 guests
- Pilot dies in military trainer jet crash in Calif.
- More National News »
Probation for builder of Calif.'s Phonehenge West
The man who built an eccentric Mojave Desert compound known as Phonehenge West was placed on five years' probation on Friday and ordered to serve 63 days community service, five of them at the county morgue. - Man wears briefs on head during Idaho burglary
- Moose on the loose triggers police chase in Utah
- Police on swallowed diamond: This, too, shall pass
- Authorities: Trooper gets text seeking illegal buy
- Arizona man suing Flagstaff is now its mayor
- Horse runs into sea, rescued a mile offshore
- Workers go trash-picking for Mass. woman's rings
- More Odd News »



