In a powerful address at the ‘Heal the Family, Heal the Nation’ National Day of Prayer service, Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness delivered a direct message to criminals despite celebrating a historic milestone: the nation has recorded fewer than 700 murders in 2025 for the first time in 31 years.
Speaking at Power of Faith Ministries in Portmore, St Catherine on Wednesday, Holness made an emotional appeal to those engaged in criminal activities, urging them to abandon violence. “Today, I appeal to the criminals and the gunmen, and those who are involved in criminal activities, to save yourselves. Turn away from violence. Put away the gun. In fact, turn it in,” the prime minister charged.
The significant crime reduction represents a dramatic 42% decrease in murders from the previous year, building on a 19% reduction in 2024 and a 7% decrease in 2023. Holness noted that Jamaica is approaching the regional average of 15 murders per 100,000 population, currently standing between 20-25 per 100,000.
While acknowledging progress primarily driven by actions against organized crime—which accounts for over 70% of murders—Holness highlighted persistent challenges including domestic violence and juvenile delinquency. He emphasized that policing alone cannot solve these deeply embedded social issues.
The prime minister called on religious institutions to expand their role beyond prayer into active community intervention. “We’re going to need the army of the church to pull in those youngsters and divert them away from the gangs and criminal activities,” Holness stated, noting that many youth join gangs simply because criminal elements reach them before community organizations do.
Holness unveiled forthcoming government policies specifically targeting family strengthening as the next phase in crime reduction. “What is now needed is a more coordinated and concentrated policy that is instrumental and directly targeting and promoting and supporting the family in Jamaica,” he announced, emphasizing that both children and parents need educational support.
The prime minister concluded with a sobering statistic: 95% of both perpetrators and victims of killings are young men. “It pains my heart to see our young men being killed,” Holness expressed, reinforcing his appeal for Jamaicans to value every life and work collectively toward sustaining the nation’s progress toward peace.
