The National Peace Program (NPP) is rolling out more initiatives to engage young people in a meaningful way.
Minister of State in the Office of the Attorney General with responsibility for Crime Prevention, Corey Lane, today launched the LIVEWISE Campaign during a media briefing at Starcom Network.
“The LIVEWISE Campaign has 14 different programmes…. I believe about four or five of those are ready, … and members of the public will be able to see these exciting, quality programmes….
“One of the highly anticipated programmes for me is Turnaround, where you will see how a number of very serious characters in Barbados, who would have been known for some of the most serious crimes, have been able to turn their life around,” Mr. Lane stated.
He encouraged the public to also look out for the Consequences and Positive Profiles programmes, describing them as excellent.
He believes the campaign will assist in bringing about meaningful behavioural change and an awareness of NPP’s work. The LIVEWISE Campaign will commence soon, and the programmes will be available on radio, television, and various social media platforms.
Minister Lane stated that NPP partnered with the Great Hope Foundation and Minors Club to launch the National Extreme Games Platform, where young people will be exposed to riding bikes, ATVs, go-carts, bicycles, and mountain bikes off-road, in a safe way.
He noted that the National Extreme Games initiative was an opportunity to positively impact the lives of talented young people, while giving them an opportunity to receive personal and professional development, among other things.
Great Hope Foundation donated four bikes to the programme.
Meanwhile, Mr. Lane disclosed that NPP would be seeking to implement its 215 initiatives over the next three years.
Director of the Criminal Justice Research and Planning Unit, Cheryl Willoughby, stressed the importance of the initiatives. She agreed with Minister Lane that it was important that interventions conducted by NPP were data-driven.
“If they’re not, it means that you are putting resources where they are not needed,” Mrs. Willoughby surmised.
She disclosed that some of her staff would be going to Dodds Prison in January to interview young people who were on remand for murder.
She explained that they would be looking at the socio and economic backgrounds of these young people, among other things, and the information would be shared with the crime prevention officials, so the NPP’s programmes would continue to be relevant to its stakeholders.
The Director further disclosed that her Unit would be embarking on a National Victimisation Survey in the upcoming months.
“What is important about victimisation surveys is that these surveys unearth the hidden figures of crime…. Victimisation surveys…enable us to see the true extent of crime, because what we will do is compare official crime statistics with the data coming out of the victimisation survey,” Mrs. Willoughby indicated.
Those addressing the media briefing included CEO of Great Hope Foundation, Ward Trotman, and Tomar Haynes of Minors Club and the Extreme Games Platform. (PR/GIS)