NICHOLAS’ DEATH MUST NOT GO IN VAIN

Declaring that Nicholas Francis’s death must not go in vain, Jamaica College (JC) Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) President Errol Holmes yesterday appealed to the authorities to urgently address the issue of violent attacks on schoolchildren.

Holmes made the appeal during a silent protest outside JC, on Old Hope Road in St Andrew, attended by parents, students, teachers and principals from other schools, as well as politicians from both major political parties.

Fourteen-year-old Francis, who was in third form at JC, was brutally stabbed to death by a thief after he refused to hand over his watch and other valuables during a robbery on a public bus last Wednesday.
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Yesterday, his mother, Petrona Hamilton, too overcome with grief to speak, sat on a chair clutching a photo of her son and wept uncontrollably during the addresses.

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“On Friday, October 28, six other Jamaican children almost suffered the same fate. Two other boys right here from Jamaica College, a boy in second form, and a boy in third form,” Holmes told the large crowd.

“The boy in third form, all of his bus fare was stolen; he had to call his parents to come and get him. The second form boy’s phone was stolen, but that’s not all,” he added.

Holmes said three female students from Ardenne High School were also robbed by a masked man on Friday.

“All of this happened between 4:00 pm and 7:00 pm, but if you think that’s bad, a KC (Kingston College) fourth former was stabbed on his way home in Portmore, and but for the excellence of the medical team at the Spanish Town Hospital Friday night, we would have another death in this country. It is too much. It is too long,” he said passionately.

“Nicholas must not die in vain,” Holmes said repeatedly. “His death is representative of every other child who has lost their lives to violence in our country.”

Kingston College head boy Andre Clarke said that everyone should join in solidarity and demonstrate that the attacks on children must stop.

“The children of Jamaica have a cry and we will be heard. This is not a cry just for the politicians, the police force, or even just the church to stand up. For we are children and we have a voice, we should be heard, not just play the blame game, but we will all take a stand for something,” Clarke said.

Education Minister Senator Ruel Reid, who was principal of JC until his secondment to the Government, implored Jamaicans to use Francis’s death as a tipping point to act against violence affecting children.

“…For too long we have sat idly by and allowed criminals to hold us hostage and we need to draw a line in the sand and say, as Jamaicans, we are no longer going to be passive; we are no longer going to be uncaring; we are no longer going to see our children and our other friends and family members be brutally killed and maimed without us taking any action,” Reid told the

Jamaica Observer.

Reid’s call was echoed by other politicians who, like the majority of protesters, heeded the call to wear black.

The protest was planned by the Jamaica College PTA under the theme ‘We are against violence towards all children’.

3 thoughts on “NICHOLAS’ DEATH MUST NOT GO IN VAIN

  1. All I want to know is, when are they going to put this man in HWT and let the people them stab him up and break his arm? Why is he even still breathing in a Jail cell?

    RIP Nicholas

  2. A few police sorry dem neva get to him bout walk in wid lawyer,to Nicholas parents nothing we say will bring your son back but do know our hearts ar with you and we are just as upset as you all are we need him head not no sentence to life but to death,him wicked and before he did what he did I was told in was in Papine Square a act the fool

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