
CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHAT’S APP GROUP
Question of the Day:
In the aftermath of Chantel Crump’s tragic death, are we as a society ready to move beyond outrage and rumour to take meaningful, united action to improve child safety and uphold justice through due process?
CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHAT’S APP GROUP
CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHAT’S APP GROUP
CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHAT’S APP GROUP
CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHAT’S APP GROUP
CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHAT’S APP GROUP
CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHAT’S APP GROUP
Advertise with the mоѕt vіѕіtеd nеwѕ ѕіtе іn Antigua!
We offer fully customizable and flexible digital marketing packages.
Contact us at [email protected]
The real question is, how many more children have to be at risk before action is taken?”
The Chantel Alert sounds good on paper. But is the system really ready to act fast when a child goes missing?
Plenty outrage online but we need to start in our homes, schools, churches — everywhere. Safety can’t just be a hashtag.
I been ready, what happened to Chantel Crump is so sad, I prayer for justice for the family. I also want to say kudos to Government for wanting to take action after the situation. But when is that Alert going to be ready? After another child goes missing. Come on Browne focus on what important. They talked about that Alert so much, but I don’t any action is being taken to put things in place for it
Yes we are ready …. Come on it’s about time!!!!
This captured everything I’ve been feeling but couldn’t quite put into words. It’s painful, but we need this level of honesty if we’re going to grow as a society. Thank you for writing with empathy and clarity.
The public thirst for punishment without due process was disturbing. If we’re to have a society based on law and justice, we can’t throw that away the moment we’re hurt or afraid. Leadership must reinforce this, not pander to the mob.
This piece hit home. The tragedy of Chantel’s death was warped by hysteria, superstition, and social media toxicity. Politicians and institutions should have stepped up then to calm and educate, but most stayed silent.
This is the kind of national conversation we need, not just outrage, but reflection. The writer is right, our leaders must moveThank you, Mr. Murdoch, for holding the mirror up. But where is the government in all of this? Where’s the national address, the action plan, the investment in child welfare systems? Mourning isn’t enough, we need legislation.
Truth.