Ten killed in Jamaica in outburst of gang violence

KINGSTON, (Reuters) – Gunmen in Jamaica killed eight  people early yesterday in suspected gang killings on the  Caribbean tourist island, police said.

Police later shot dead two of the suspected killers  following the early morning murders in St. Catherine County,  west of the capital Kingston.

A church was set ablaze in the violence on the island,  which has one of the highest per capita murder rates in the  world.

In the first attack, the gunmen killed a mother and her  daughters aged 24 and 11 and a son aged 16 after kicking down  the door of their home. They then attacked another house where  they killed a grandfather, his son, his grandson and a nephew.

Police said the two suspected gunmen killed by police were  known members of the Clansman Gang, which operated near the old  capital Spanish Town in an ongoing bitter gang turf war over  drugs and arms. Five other gang members were being sought.

The killings were likely to reignite debate over whether  parliament should have extended last month a state of emergency  declared in May when security forces clashed with armed  supporters of fugitive accused drugs kingpin Christopher  “Dudus” Coke.

Prime Minister Bruce Golding’s government did not receive  enough supporting votes in parliament to extend the emergency  measures.

Coke, described by U.S. prosecutors as the leader of the  “Shower Posse” that murdered hundreds of people during the  cocaine wars of the 1980s, was extradited to the United States  in June. He has pleaded not guilty, and faces life imprisonment  if convicted.

Before Coke was arrested in June after a five-week manhunt,  76 people were killed in four days of gun battles in May when  Jamaican police and soldiers stormed the Tivoli Gardens slum in  west Kingston in an attempt to capture him.

Some slum residents complained of abuse by the security  forces, and Amnesty International called for a thorough  investigation of the high number of civilian deaths.