WATCH: Swaby urges united action to protect youth, prioritise children’s mental health

On a quiet, reflective Sunday in downtown Kingston, Jamaica, community members, grieving families, and civic leaders gathered at the Secret Garden for a special candlelight vigil, a core event marking the island’s annual Child’s Month. This year’s national observance carries a urgent, targeted theme: “Prioritising Our Children’s Mental Health: Strong Minds, Safer Future”, turning public attention to a crisis that has long flown under the radar. Opening the ceremony, Kingston Mayor Andrew Swaby issued a stirring call for cross-societal unity to confront the unseen suffering plaguing thousands of Jamaican young people.

Swaby drew sharp attention to the “silent battles” that many of the nation’s children wage every day away from public view: unaddressed trauma, persistent fear, systemic neglect, and crippling emotional pain. Too often, he emphasized, these hidden struggles do not remain hidden forever – they escalate and end in irreversible, devastating loss of young life, a cost that no community can afford to bear. For Swaby, the vigil was far more than a memorial to the children whose lives were cut short by tragic circumstances. He framed it as a “sacred pause” – a moment for the entire nation to stop, reflect, and remember that every child who died carried unique potential, unfulfilled promise, and inherent purpose that was lost to systemic inaction.

Attendees took part in solemn, intentional rituals to honor the fallen: lighting candles that cut through the dim garden air, laying wreaths to mark grief and remembrance, and observing a minute of complete silence to hold space for the pain of grieving families. When the moment ended, Swaby challenged every segment of Jamaican society to confront an uncomfotable question: Is the nation truly doing enough to lift up and support its young people?

Protecting children, he stressed, is not the responsibility of a single government agency or one group – it is a shared duty that binds together families, educators, community leaders, and every Jamaican citizen. The gathering’s glowing candles, he said, were not just symbols of remembrance; they represented a collective promise to the nation’s young: that the country will commit to protecting children, nurturing their mental well-being, and building a more secure future for coming generations.

Beyond a call for individual action, Swaby pushed for systemic change, demanding stronger, more robust institutional frameworks that address the root causes of harm to children. He named pervasive community violence and crippling social pressures as two of the most damaging underlying forces, and called for a collective reimagination of Jamaican communities – spaces where every child can grow feeling safe, seen, and valued. Extending sincere condolences to all families in attendance who had lost a child, Swaby urged continued targeted support for those affected by tragedy and a renewed commitment to cross-group collaboration that puts children’s safety and well-being at the center of national priorities. The ceremony closed with a quiet, peaceful procession through the Secret Garden, as attendees carried their candles through the green space, carrying the mayor’s call back to their homes and communities.