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Jamaica Gleaner Lead Stories
published: Sunday | October 23, 2005

HANG THEM? - IS IT REALLY THE ANSWER TO THE CRIME ? YES TO HANGING
P.J. Patterson, in a national broadcast on Wednesday, announced that the Government would be initiating further discussions with the Opposition with a view to achieving bi-partisan consensus on resuming hanging.

Savagery untold!
IT HAS been described by veteran policemen as one of the most vicious crimes committed in Jamaica in years. Three women, abducted, beaten, gang-raped, shot and then thrown into a sewage main.


Assault on crime - How to tame the beast
PUT SECURITY force buffer zones in the 14 or 15 violence-hit communities in the Kingston Metropolitan Area and Spanish Town for four to six months. This is what, for half that time, sobered the situation in August Town.


Homes, schools, work, court, traffic disrupted
AND THE floods came. Heavy brown waters rushing down streets, into houses, submerging cars and everything in its path. Filling gullies, dislodging rocks, breaking river banks and pushing land away from houses, 'Wilma' had released her deluge on the...


Agri industry taken by storm
ALREADY SUFFERING from the effects of three hurricanes, several floods and a long drought, the country's agricultural sector is again suffering damage from almost a week of heavy rains which lashed the island, triggering floods and...


Back to school tomorrow - No reports of serious damage to classrooms
STUDENTS AT all levels of the education system will have to play 'catch up' as a result of days missed from school last week, when heavy rains associated with Hurricane Wilma pounded the island for several days.


'Nothing to be ashamed of'
AFTER A five-month sabbatical, Alston Stewart, former head of the National Solid Waste Management Authority (NSWMA), has returned to his post as head of the Omar Davies campaign for leadership.



















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