The Sydney Pagon STEM Academy in Elim, St Elizabeth, has become the target of a violent agricultural theft, compounding existing challenges from recent natural disasters. On Monday night, armed assailants executed a brazen raid on the school’s premises, making off with seven valuable goats estimated at $500,000 Jamaican dollars.
According to Principal Milbert Miller, the perpetrators discharged firearm rounds to intimidate security personnel during the operation. The stolen livestock included five bucks and two does, among which were breeding animals critically important to the academy’s agricultural program. Miller specifically noted that one buck and one doe had been recently donated by the Ministry of Agriculture to enhance the institution’s breeding stock.
This criminal incident represents a significant setback for the educational facility, which continues to recover from substantial damage inflicted by Hurricane Melissa just three months prior. The hurricane had previously devastated several campus structures, including poultry houses that were essential to the institution’s hands-on STEM curriculum.
The theft not only represents a financial loss but also undermines the academy’s educational mission, particularly affecting students engaged in agricultural science programs. Local authorities have launched an investigation into the incident, though no suspects have been apprehended at this time.
