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JCF — Jamaica Constabulary Force (Video)

Organised gangs drive Jamaica agricultural theft beyond petty crime, JCF branch warns

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Officers with the Jamaica Constabulary Force's Agricultural Protection Branch say agricultural theft across the island is organised, gang-linked crime that fuels murder and wider criminal activity—not the petty bread-snatching many Jamaicans imagine when they hear about farm protection.

Speaking on the Force for Good programme, representatives argued that rural theft is fully structured rather than opportunistic pilfering. Proceeds from these offences, they said, are channelled into gang operations that drive up murder figures and other violent activity. Officers stressed that this reality is often lost on a public that tends to picture minor incidents instead of large-scale economic loss.

The branch faces a further hurdle in how society values agriculture itself. The agriculture and fisheries sector contributes about 70 per cent of Jamaica's GDP and ranks among the nation's largest employers. Official records list roughly 280 registered farmers, underscoring how central farming is to the rural economy.

When theft hits that countryside economy, the fallout extends well beyond individual growers. Farming is big business in Jamaica, and organised agricultural crime disrupts communities that depend on it for livelihoods. Until more Jamaicans grasp both the dollar value and strategic weight of the sector, officers maintain, agricultural protection will keep being treated as a minor policing concern rather than a front line against organised crime.

Syndicated from JCF — Jamaica Constabulary Force (Video) · originally published .

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