A growing wave of youth and gang-related violence across schools and public spaces in St. Vincent and the Grenadines has pushed national security and law enforcement officials to outline a graduated response, with community and family-focused soft power interventions as the first step, while explicitly leaving the door open for stricter hard power measures if the crisis escalates.
Recent high-profile incidents have underscored the urgency of the problem. On March 1, 2026, 17-year-old student athlete Alia McDowall died 16 months after she was stabbed in the throat outside her Peters Hope school. Just weeks later, a brutal chopping death of a man known as Munt-I in Barrouallie on March 23 was filmed and widely shared across social media platforms, drawing public outrage over the glorification of violence. Multiple violent altercations have also been recorded at secondary schools across the country, including a widely circulated video of a brawl between two students at Barrouallie Secondary School that came after McDowall’s death. Police have even documented one case of a parent being arrested for fighting with students at that same institution.
West St. George Secondary School (WSGSS), a 21-year-old secondary campus, has emerged as a key focal point of the crisis. During a March 10 consultation on school violence hosted by the Ministry of National Security and the national police force, WSGSS principal Afi Marti detailed a litany of persistent issues plaguing the school: open gang affiliation among students, ongoing violence, bullying, illegal marijuana trade and consumption on campus, widespread disregard for institutional authority, and the circulation of explicit sex tapes involving students. Police confirmed that students at WSGSS have openly aligned themselves with two competing criminal factions, the Sixx and 7even gangs.
Speaking at an official press conference in Kingstown on April 1, 2026, Commissioner of Police Enville Williams shared updates on law enforcement’s actions at WSGSS following the principal’s disclosure. Authorities conducted targeted searches of the campus, and seized a large cache of scissors and other prohibited items, similar to contraband confiscated from students at a recent inter-secondary school sports competition. Williams emphasized that the problem of students bringing weapons and edged tools to school is not isolated to WSGSS, noting that most of the seized scissors are intended for cutting marijuana, a reality officials can no longer afford to ignore.
Williams outlined law enforcement’s preferred approach, stressing that he and national security leaders prioritize soft power interventions over aggressive, intrusive measures. He said officials want to avoid the step of stationing permanent police officers in schools, a model already implemented in neighboring Trinidad and Tobago that Williams argued would be counterproductive for St. Vincent and the Grenadines’ small, close-knit society. Instead, he made a public appeal to parents to take a proactive role by checking their children’s bags, ensuring no weapons or prohibited items are brought to campus. He also called on parents to act as peacemakers, urging them to pursue official legal and school channels to resolve conflicts rather than encouraging retaliation and providing children with weapons to carry to school, which only perpetuates the cycle of violence.
The police commissioner also called out the role of social media and bystanders in fueling violence, noting that onlookers often film fights and other violent altercations for likes and shares instead of intervening to stop the conflict. He warned that sharing graphic violent content violates the country’s Cybercrime Act, and explained that widespread circulation of these videos encourages copycat violence, as perpetrators seek the same social media attention. Williams urged a return to St. Vincent and the Grenadines’ traditional community values, where adults teach children to reject criminal behavior and uphold shared standards of right and wrong.
National Security Minister and Chairman of the Regional Security System (RSS) Leacock echoed the commitment to soft power first during the press briefing, confirming that the regional security bloc stands ready to provide additional assistance if the situation spirals beyond local control. Leacock noted that a top priority for RSS member states is harmonizing cross-border legislation to crack down on gangs, illegal firearms, and criminal activity in schools, echoing the ongoing national debate in Trinidad and Tobago over whether permanent police presence in schools is the right solution.
Leacock pointed to existing soft power initiatives already underway, including a public outreach campaign run by the National Broadcasting Corporation designed to steer young people away from violence. He also noted that family breakdown is a root cause of much of the rising youth violence, emphasizing that the family remains the foundational unit of society. Leacock stressed that while RSS backup is available if needed, national leaders hope and pray that escalating to more extreme hard power measures will not be necessary.
