Enough is enough: The blood of our daughters cries out

On the night of February 6, 2026, a senseless act of brutal violence cut short the life of 22-year-old Aleandra Lett–Hypolite, a promising nursing student at St George’s University who had dedicated her life’s ambition to caring for others. Aleandra was raped and murdered in the quiet Grenadian parish of St Andrew, her body discarded in bushes in the remote community of Café, Crochu. The man charged with her murder and rape is a convicted sexual predator who was granted early bail despite a documented history of violent sexual offenses. Just days after Aleandra’s killing, a second young life was lost: 18-year-old Terrecheal Sebastian was shot dead in Tivoli, also in St Andrew.\n\nThese two tragedies are not isolated incidents. They are the most recent high-profile examples of a growing, horrifying pattern of femicide that has shaken Grenada and spread across the broader Caribbean region, where young women are being killed by men of all ages in streets, homes, and public spaces that should be safe.\n\nPublic outrage over the killings has been widespread and deeply felt, with community vigils, candlelight memorials, and an outpouring of condolences for the victims’ families. But the author of this commentary, Francis Amèdé, MD, argues that gestures of sympathy are not enough. For years, Grenada has fallen into a repeating cycle: communities mourn after a brutal killing, express frustration, and then nothing changes. Dangerous offenders remain free on bail, court cases drag on for years, and the death penalty — which Amèdé calls the ultimate deterrent for violent crime — has been sidelined by international pressure from human rights groups like Amnesty International, while the Grenadian government has moved toward full abolition on human rights grounds.\n\nFor Amèdé, the blood of Aleandra, Terrecheal, and dozens of other women killed before them demands swift, decisive justice. He cites the Bible’s Ecclesiastes 8:11, which warns: “Because the sentence against an evil deed is not executed speedily, the heart of the children of man is fully set to do evil.” This is not a call for vengeance, he emphasizes, but a demand for biblical justice, improved public safety, and the long-term survival of Grenada as a safe nation. He argues that Grenada and other Caribbean nations must immediately reinstate and enforce the death penalty for deliberate, premeditated murder — particularly in aggravated cases involving rape, repeat offending, or attacks on vulnerable people. Beyond capital punishment, he calls for sweeping reform: police must aggressively investigate violent gender-based crimes and deny bail to dangerous repeat offenders; courts must deliver timely verdicts, ending the decades-long delays caused by extended appeal processes; and governments must reject pressure from foreign non-governmental organizations to abolish the death penalty, instead leading with courage to protect their citizens. While prevention programs are an important part of addressing violence against women, Amèdé argues they are useless without harsh, certain consequences for offenders — “Band-Aids on a haemorrhage.”\n\n## The Scale of the Crisis: Data on Femicide and Violence Across the Region\n\nGrenada is a small island nation with a total population of just 125,000 to 130,000, meaning every homicide has an outsize impact on the tight-knit community. 2023 data from Macrotrends (2025) puts the country’s homicide rate at 13.67 per 100,000 people — a relatively high rate for a nation of its size, translating to roughly 16 to 17 murders per year. While 2025 saw a welcome drop to around 10 total homicides (all of which were reportedly solved), the early 2026 spike in brutal killings of young women has reversed that progress. Grenada’s femicide rate currently stands at approximately 1.714 per 100,000 women, placing it among the highest rankings for gender-based killing regionally and globally.\n\nThe picture is even grimmer across the rest of the Caribbean. Saint Vincent and the Grenadines has recorded homicide rates as high as 40 to 54 per 100,000 in recent years, driven by gang activity and the illegal drug trade. Neighboring nations including Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica consistently rank among the most violent countries in the world. Data from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) for 2025 shows that Latin America and the Caribbean account for a disproportionate share of global femicides. Between 2021 and 2023, thousands of women were killed across the region, with 45% to 74% of all female homicides linked to intimate partners or family members, depending on the sub-region. In small island nations like Grenada, an even higher share of female homicides are classified as gender-based.\n\nSurveys show that one in four Grenadian women have experienced physical violence, nearly one in ten have endured sexual violence, and three in ten have suffered emotional abuse at the hands of a partner. The economic cost of violence against women and girls in Grenada is estimated at US$63 million per year — equal to 5.24% of the country’s total GDP — according to 2025 data from UN Women Caribbean and the World Bank. This cost comes from lost productivity, healthcare spending, burdens on the justice system, and intergenerational trauma passed to survivors’ children. The data also confirms that Grenada’s femicide rate rose during the COVID-19 pandemic, alongside entrenched patriarchal social norms, controlling behavior in romantic relationships, and stark gender gaps in employment: recent data puts female unemployment at 31.8%, compared to just 17.8% for men. Studies also confirm that lower educational attainment correlates with a higher risk of intimate partner violence.\n\nAmèdé argues these killings are not random “crimes of passion” — they are symptoms of deeper systemic failures: repeat violent offenders are repeatedly released on bail, law enforcement agencies face crippling forensic backlogs and underfunding, and the justice system allows convicted murderers to linger on death row for decades without resolution, due to repeated legal challenges and rulings from the Privy Council, the region’s highest appellate court.\n\n## How the Crisis Evolved: From Post-Independence Hope to Modern Crisis\n\nGrenada’s trajectory mirrors that of most other English-speaking Caribbean nations. Gained independence in 1974, the country saw a period of idealistic political change followed by upheaval during the 1979–1983 revolutionary government. The 1983 U.S. intervention and the execution of former Prime Minister Maurice Bishop and 16 other supporters left deep national scars. Economic shifts away from agriculture toward tourism and services created growing income inequality. The 1980s and 1990s saw a boom in drug transhipment, as cocaine moved from South America through Caribbean islands to markets in Europe and North America, flooding local communities with illegal guns, cash, and gang culture. Firearms violence rose dramatically, while traditional community social controls eroded.\n\nChanging economic conditions also fractured family structures: widespread migration of working-age young men created gaps in family life, and welfare policies sometimes inadvertently discouraged the formation of stable two-parent households. Childhood exposure to domestic violence normalized aggressive behavior toward women. The traditional Caribbean “macho” culture that glorifies male control over women, combined with high rates of substance abuse, fuels a sense of male entitlement that can explode into lethal violence. Social media has amplified these toxic influences, normalizing the objectification of women, spreading revenge porn, and enabling cultural dynamics that sometimes shield abusive men while blaming victims for their own attacks.\n\nBy the 2000s and 2010s, intimate partner femicide and random stranger attacks on young women had become a “perennial scourge.” Convicted rapists and abusers regularly received bail or overly lenient sentences, were released back into communities, and reoffended — often killing. Aleandra’s alleged killer fits this pattern exactly: a repeat sexual offender who was granted release before he attacked her. Courts, constrained by human rights appeals and chronic resource shortages, move far too slowly to deliver justice. Police often launch aggressive manhunts after killings, but lack access to advanced forensics and struggle to build trust with communities in high-crime areas. The Grenadian government has maintained a de facto moratorium on executions since 1978, after the Privy Council ruled mandatory death sentences unconstitutional in high-profile cases, even though the death penalty remains on the country’s statute books for murder. The last execution carried out in Grenada was in 1978.\n\nThe result of this system is widespread impunity for killers, Amèdé argues, fulfilling the warning of Ecclesiastes 8:11 in real time. When offenders see other killers serve only 10 to 20 years (or less) or remain free pending appeals, “the heart of the children of man is fully set to do evil.” Young men learn that violating and killing women carries very little risk, while women live in constant fear — on public buses, walking home from university, even in their own yards.\n\nThis pattern holds across the entire Caribbean. High rates of single-mother households (reaching 40% to 60% in some islands), chronic youth unemployment, weak gun control enabled by porous national borders, and cultural tolerance for “discipline” of women that crosses into abuse have created fertile ground for violence. After the COVID-19 pandemic began in 2020, lockdowns caused a sharp spike in domestic violence, and uneven economic recovery has left widespread frustration that often boils over into gender-based violence.\n\n## A Biblical Case for Swift Capital Justice\n\nAmèdé argues that the Bible is unambiguous in its support for capital punishment for premeditated murder. After the Flood, God’s covenant with Noah states in Genesis 9:6: “Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed, for God made man in his own image.” This is not a rule tied to a specific cultural moment, he argues: it is a foundational principle rooted in the sanctity of human life, which demands an equivalent consequence for the intentional destruction of an innocent life.\n\nMultiple passages in the Old Testament reinforce this principle: Exodus 21:12 commands that anyone who kills another person must be put to death; Exodus 21:23–25 codifies the principle of lex talionis — life for life — as measured justice, not a call for vigilante violence; Numbers 35:30–31 explicitly rules out offering ransom or showing pity to a convicted murderer, stating “he shall surely be put to death”; Deuteronomy 19:11–13 commands the community to remove guilty murderers from the land, lest their unpunished bloodshed pollute the entire community, saying “Your eye shall not pity him, but you shall purge the guilt of innocent blood from Israel, that it may be well with you.”\n\nProverbs 6:16–19 lists “hands that shed innocent blood” among the things that God hates, and Ecclesiastes 8:11 explicitly warns of the harm of delayed justice. The New Testament affirms the right and responsibility of the state to deliver justice: Romans 13:1–4 states that governing authorities “do not bear the sword in vain” but are “God’s servant… an avenger who carries out God’s wrath on the wrongdoer.” Amèdé notes that Jesus’ teaching to “turn the other cheek” in Matthew 5 applies to personal revenge, not official state justice or self-defense, and the Apostle Paul appealed to the Roman state court system (which practiced capital punishment) in Acts 25:11, acknowledging the state’s legitimate authority to impose the ultimate penalty.\n\nAbolitionist groups like Amnesty International often cite the Ten Commandments’ command “Thou shalt not kill” to oppose capital punishment, but Amèdé argues this ignores the full context of Scripture: the same Torah commands capital punishment dozens of times for murder and other grave sins. Abolitionists prioritize the “dignity” of convicted offenders over the life of the victim and the community’s right to protection, he says, calling this selective theology. True biblical compassion, he argues, protects vulnerable people — including the young women being killed — by deterring predators. Delayed or absent justice mocks the sanctity of life (the Imago Dei) in both the victim and the perpetrator.\n\nGrenada’s strong Christian heritage, where a large majority of the population identifies as Protestant or Catholic, should embolden leaders to act on these principles, Amèdé argues. He notes that the verse “Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord” (Romans 12:19) prohibits private revenge, not state-administered justice, which the Bible ordains for magistrates.\n\n## Reassessing the Death Penalty in the Caribbean Context\n\nCritics of capital punishment often argue there is no conclusive evidence that the death penalty deters violent crime. But Amèdé points to classical criminological theory, which emphasizes that deterrence works through three core principles: the certainty that an offender will be caught and punished, the celerity (speed) of that punishment, and the severity of the penalty. Grenada’s current broken system fails all three of these tests: certainty is undermined by the routine grant of bail to repeat rapists, celerity is destroyed by years of appeals, and severity is neutered by the de facto moratorium on executions.\n\nWhile global empirical studies on deterrence are mixed, Amèdé notes this is because implementation of the death penalty varies wildly across countries. Some analyses show that U.S. states that carry out executions regularly see a measurable marginal reduction in homicides, and Singapore’s strict regime, which uses the death penalty for serious crimes, has one of the lowest homicide rates in the world at just 0.2 per 100,000 people. Public opinion across the Caribbean overwhelmingly supports retaining the death penalty: a 2025 poll from the Death Penalty Project shows 89% of Trinidadian respondents support capital punishment for murder, and while opinion leaders in the Eastern Caribbean are divided, a large share support keeping the death penalty as an option, and the public outrage after the recent killings in Grenada shows strong public support for action.\n\nRetribution, Amèdé argues, is not barbarism — it is moral balance. A rapist-murderer who destroyed the life of a young nurse with her whole future ahead of her deserves the ultimate penalty that society can impose. Capital punishment also provides absolute incapacitation: a executed offender will never reoffend or traumatize another victim. While the risk of wrongful execution exists everywhere, Amèdé argues this risk is minimized in a small, tight-knit nation like Grenada, where modern forensics, independent judicial review, and time-limited appeals can reduce the chance of error. He argues that life without parole is no substitute, especially in the Caribbean where prisons are chronically overcrowded, escapes happen, and early releases are common.\n\nAmnesty’s successful lobbying has forced moratoriums on executions across the Caribbean, framing the death penalty as “cruel and unusual punishment.” But Amèdé asks: whose cruelty is greater? Executing a proven violent offender after full due process, or allowing that offender to go on to kill another young woman like Aleandra because human rights frameworks shield the guilty? He notes that many sovereign nations around the world — including Japan, India, Singapore, and parts of the United States — maintain the death penalty without descending into tyranny, and that Grenada has a right to reclaim its sovereign right to set its own justice policy. In 2025, the Grenadian government signaled it planned to move forward with full abolition after public consultation, but recent public protests and polling after the 2026 killings show the public opposes this move. Amèdé calls for a national referendum to let Grenadian voters decide the issue.\n\n## A Three-Prong Plan to End Impunity\n\nAmèdé lays out a practical, three-part plan to address the femicide crisis and end impunity for violent offenders, focusing reform on police, the courts, and national government.\n\n### First: Police Reform for Frontline Deterrence\n\nAmèdé calls for increased funding for the Royal Grenada Police Force to build fully functioning DNA forensic labs, equip all officers with body-worn cameras, expand community intelligence gathering, and create specialized, well-trained Gender-Based Violence (GBV) units. He demands an immediate ban on bail for any defendant charged with murder, rape, or aggravated assault who has prior violent convictions, and requires mandatory risk-assessment tools to flag repeat violent offenders. Police should partner with communities to expand neighborhood watch programs and anonymous tip lines, and train officers in trauma-informed victim support to encourage more women to report violence early before it escalates to lethal violence. While the manhunt for Aleandra’s killer was swift, true prevention requires locking up dangerous offenders before they can attack.\n\n### Second: Court Reform to Deliver Speed and Certainty\n\nAmèdé calls for legislative reform to end repeated mandatory challenges to death sentences, replacing the old mandatory system with clear discretionary guidelines for aggravated murder — defined as premeditated killing, rape-murder, serial killing, killing of a child, or murder by an offender with prior violent convictions. All GBV homicide trials should be fast-tracked, with limits on adjournments for trivial reasons and mandatory inclusion of victim impact statements. The appeals process should be reformed to impose a strict two to three year limit on all appeals for death penalty cases, with automatic review by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (JCPC) only granted for clear constitutional errors, not endless re-litigation of cases. Specialized courts should be created to handle family and sexual violence cases, judges and prosecutors should receive specialized training on gender-based violence patterns, and all conviction and sentencing data should be published transparently for public accountability.\n\n### Third: Government Leadership for Lasting Change\n\nThe Grenadian government should immediately reinstate an enforceable death penalty through constitutional amendment or targeted legislation for premeditated aggravated murder. Amèdé calls on leaders to resist pressure from Amnesty International and United Nations bodies, noting that Article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) explicitly allows the death penalty for “most serious crimes” when full due process is followed. Beyond criminal justice reform, the government should fund a massive expansion of women’s shelters, 24/7 crisis hotlines, and economic empowerment programs for at-risk women and young people. School curricula should be updated starting in primary school to teach consent, emotional intelligence, and healthy masculinity. The government should subsidize job training and employment programs for idle young men to reduce the economic frustration