Amidst deeply concerning statistics showing persistent high levels of violence against children across Jamaica, the nation’s Child Protection and Family Services Agency (CPFSA) is reiterating a critical legal obligation: every member of the public is required by law to report suspected child abuse, neglect, or harm to state authorities.
The reminder came from CPFSA legal officer Kimberly Blackwood-Martin during a Wednesday Zoom convening focused on evaluating the country’s existing child protection framework. In her remarks, Blackwood-Martin cited the Child Care and Protection Act, which explicitly states that anyone with reasonable suspicion that a child has been, is being, or will face abandonment, neglect, physical or sexual maltreatment, or requires alternative care and protection must submit a formal report to the National Children’s Registry (NCR). She emphasized that this mandate is not a discretionary choice, but a binding legal requirement for all Jamaican citizens.
Blackwood-Martin lamented a marked shift from cultural traditions of collective care for children, noting that the historic “it takes a village” mindset that once encouraged community intervention to protect at-risk youth has eroded in modern times. She pointed to widespread inaction even when community members witness clear signs of harm, from children begging publicly to unexplained, frequent injuries on children in their own families.
Data shared during the meeting underscores the scale of the crisis. Between 2024 and 2025, the NCR received more than 14,183 reports involving children, covering allegations of physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional and verbal mistreatment, and neglect. Complementary data from Jamaica’s Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey shows that as of 202[corrected per original typo], nearly 76 percent of children between the ages of one and 14 have experienced either psychological aggression or physical punishment at the hands of caregivers. More than 57 percent of all children face physical punishment, with four percent enduring severe abuse including repeated beatings to the head or face. Most strikingly, the survey found that more than three out of every four Jamaican children will experience at least one form of violence before they reach adulthood.
Even these alarming figures are likely an undercount, Blackwood-Martin warned. Many abuse cases remain unreported, leaving countless children to endure harm in silence. She called out widespread public apathy: too often, when people encounter children begging on the street or spot suspicious signs of abuse within family networks, they choose to look away rather than intervene. A common response to a child begging is to give a small cash donation instead of questioning why the child is unsupervised and in public distress, and failing to alert authorities to investigate the situation.
Blackwood-Martin also criticized the pervasive cultural normalization of excessive corporal punishment, a widespread practice that continues to put children at unnecessary risk of severe harm. She argued that the combined efforts of policymakers, child protection advocates, and existing legislation cannot solve the crisis on their own—communities and individual citizens must step up to fulfill their legal and ethical roles. She specifically referenced Section 8, Part 2 of the Child Care and Protection Act, which outlines mandatory reporting requirements specifically for children found to be destitute or begging.
In closing, Blackwood-Martin urged the public to use the NCR’s 211 hotline any time they have concerns about a vulnerable child’s safety. Rejecting efforts to downplay the severity of the crisis, she stressed that current rates of child violence in Jamaica are unacceptably and alarmingly high, and that policy debates, cabinet discussions and committee meetings are no longer sufficient to drive meaningful change. Collective action from every member of Jamaican society is required to turn the tide, she said.
