“A So it Go” Justice must stop in Vybz Kartel’s case and Jamaica.
As a child growing up in Jamaica who saw many of his friends dragged to the police station or roughed up for simply being at a neighborhood dance wearing a pair of shoes with suede, I felt that abuse by the police and injustice on a whole inJamaica fell in the “so it go” category.
I remember hearing Peter Tosh’s interview about his negative experience with police giving a blow by blow account (pun intended,) I read about Agana Barret suffocating in a police lock-up; from the scrimmage field where I played football during lunch at school, I witnessed many beatings and the constant refrain when I inquired why was simply “A so it go.”
However, in recent years, one notices a surge of “Justice Watchdogs” and individuals that are quick on the scene of any incident that is suspected to be unjust – they usually make it in time to have a sound bite on the evening news.
If they miss the cameras, they then call a Press Conference and bang on the desk promising to get to the bottom of the situation.
Whilst I accept that for many this is a case of something better than nothing, I ask who is going to get to the bottom of the Vybz Kartel situation?
Who is going to bang on the desk for him? I tried a few times; visiting Indecom, writing Open letters to the powers that be and tried to reach out to Amnesty International as I felt that the litany of oddities in his cases are quite astonishing.
In the summer of 2011, a Senior Police officer came on National TV and insinuated that a very popular St. Catherine Dancehall DJ is tied to 5 murders which he would soon be apprehended for.
On several occasions, they have been reports of an overwhelming amount of evidence that would make conviction on these murders rather easy for the Prosecution.
LISTEN TO VYBZ KARTEL ‘ADDI TRUTH’ SHORT BOSS MUSIK 2013
With Adidja Palmer’s arrest, the speculation by many that he was indeed the referenced popular DJ from St. Catherine was confirmed.
On the day of this man’s arrest he was paraded in handcuffs on National TV going from house to house, something that I never saw before and have never seen again on National TV with any other individual other than Adidja Palmer from the days of JBC until today.
Since his arrest, there have been accusations of witness tampering, contraband using, phone hoarding and illicit note writing – none of which has even been proven in a Court of law as far as the public has been told, so why are unproven accusations left in the public domain to prejudice a case or is it a case of “so it go?”
According to his attorneys, several of these accusations have been used as evidence to prevent bail and at a minimum prejudice the minds of potential jurors.