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The time to act is now

Jarion Richardson is the Leader of the Opposition, Shadow Minister of Economy and Labour, and the MP for Paget West (Constituency 23)

Bermuda is in mourning once again. In recent days, lives have been lost to violence — in our streets, in broad daylight, in front of the very communities we are supposed to protect. These tragedies do not only claim the lives of their victims; they leave children without parents, parents without children, families without answers and communities without peace.

The grief does not end when the headlines fade. It lingers. In the empty chairs at the dinner table, in the classrooms where friends notice a desk is vacant, in the hearts of neighbours who now walk their streets in fear.

Many of our charities, including our schools, have seen this pain up close. Their work with families affected by traumatic homicide shows the depth of the wound left by violence, and the urgent need for structured grief recovery to help victims’ loved ones cope and heal.

But this is not just about individual grief. These acts of violence are a symptom of a wider decline in our civil society — a fraying of the bonds of respect and trust that hold us together. We see it in the hostility that too often replaces healthy debate, in the disrespect shown in public spaces, and in the deepening divisions across our community. That same erosion of trust is one reason too many people remain silent when the police ask for help in solving crimes. Without witnesses, without community co-operation, justice is too often denied and the cycle of violence continues.

And yet, the police themselves are struggling. The Bermuda Police Service are still below their target staffing level. Internally, officers report low morale, lack of trust and a culture that must change. They are working under strain, with fewer resources than they need, and often without the co-operation of the public they serve. No strategy can succeed under those conditions.

The Government’s own National Violence Reduction Strategy admits that violence “threatens the very fabric of our island home” and that no one is immune. We know the causes. We have strategies on paper. We have community organisations already on the ground addressing the trauma. What we lack is national leadership to bring these efforts together, set measurable goals and deliver results that people can see and feel.

That is why I am calling for:

• Urgent integration of community-based trauma recovery into the violence reduction strategy — ensuring grief support is a core part of how we break the cycle

• Island-wide rebuilding of trust between police and communities — not as a slogan, but through consistent presence, genuine listening and visible service in every parish

• Transparent, measurable progress reporting — with clear timelines, public benchmarks, and independent oversight for both the NVRS and police cultural reform

• Support for police capacity and culture change — so that officers are equipped, resourced and trusted to do the job effectively and fairly.

We cannot meet this moment with more reassurances and the same old promises. We must meet it with action, urgency and accountability. Bermuda is hurting — but Bermuda can heal. That healing will take leadership that is willing to listen, to unite and to deliver.

Our people deserve to feel safe in their homes, in their neighbourhoods and in their hearts. The time to act is now.

• Jarion Richardson is the Leader of the Opposition, Shadow Minister of Economy and Labour, and the MP for Paget West (Constituency 23)

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Published August 14, 2025 at 12:25 pm (Updated August 14, 2025 at 12:26 pm)

The time to act is now

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