Jamaica still losing fibre to vandalism as storm recovery bill tops $12bn US, speaker warns
Jamaica is still grappling with deliberate damage to essential telecoms links, a speaker says in a short online clip, warning that fresh cuts to fibre cables over the most recent weekend have again left neighbourhoods without service and slowed wider rebuilding efforts.
The remarks frame the outages as more than a technical nuisance, arguing that tearing down shared infrastructure undercuts national development at a moment when the island is still digging out from a punishing hurricane season described as including Hurricane Melissa and, shortly before that, Hurricane Barrel. The speaker estimates it has been almost four months since Melissa.
On the economics of recovery, the clip cites a reaction attributed to Dr Henry seen the same day, putting the price tag for repairs and related work at up to twelve billion United States dollars, or just above that figure, which the speaker equates to a little more than half of gross domestic product.
Against that backdrop, the message calls for a shift in how people treat roads, poles, ducts and other assets that carry power, phone and data traffic, asking ordinary citizens to treat tampering as everyone’s business. The appeal is blunt: notice suspicious activity around lines and cabinets, tell the police or the relevant authorities, and treat silence as complicity in losses that hit households, schools and businesses alike.
Without new social norms that treat grid and network hardware as off limits, the speaker argues, Jamaica will struggle to close the gap between storm damage and renewed growth, no matter how large the public spending envelope grows.
Syndicated from OUR Jamaica (Video) · originally published .
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