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Anguilla has now recorded its second murder for 2026, and this one unfolded not under the cover of night, but in the clear light of morning. Just before 10 a.m., in Blowing Point near a busy commercial area, gunshots rang out and shattered what should have been an ordinary Saturday.
Clashawn Gumbs, only 19 years old, was found suffering from multiple gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead at the scene. He was a young man known to be committed, proud of his responsibilities, and devoted to the needs of his newborn child. His life did not end in secrecy or isolation — it ended in public view, in a country small enough that no act of violence should be able to disappear unanswered.
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| Clashawn Gumbs (19 years old). With his new born child. |
What makes this killing even more disturbing is what followed: no assailant immediately identified, no clear witnesses stepping forward, and a community once again left searching for clarity instead of justice. Anguilla spans just 35 square miles. Technology today can track faces, vehicles, movements, and patterns in real time — yet critical areas remain without surveillance.
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How does a young man get gunned down in a populated area in broad daylight, and we still struggle to piece together what happened? The absence of widespread CCTV is no longer just a policy gap; it is a dangerous vulnerability.
Two murders and the year has only just begun. That reality should stop every conversation in its tracks. Why does violence feel like an option at all? What is breaking down in our thinking, our conflict resolution, our sense of community responsibility? Guns do not belong here, yet they continue to surface. They are being brought in, passed around, and used with devastating ease. Peace cannot remain a slogan while violence becomes habit.
This is a moment for decisive leadership. Commissioner Robert Clark must urgently seek assistance from the United Kingdom for island-wide CCTV installation and enhanced policing support. A force of roughly 130 officers cannot adequately police Anguilla, especially when close family and social ties complicate enforcement in such a small population.
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| Anguilla had a 0% homicide clearance rate for the year 2025 — a rare and troubling statistic for any jurisdiction, especially one as small and tightly knit as Anguilla |
This is not a criticism of officers doing their best — it is a reality check. Anguilla must choose whether it will confront violence with action or continue reacting with mourning. Silence, delay, and familiarity with tragedy will only guarantee more loss.
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Rest well my boy.
ReplyDeleteVery Sad. Anguilla turning into a live movie channel. Smh
ReplyDeleteCCTV would only show they own police corruption and cover ups.
ReplyDeleteAnguilla fraid CCTV cause the government doing slackness we shouldn't see
ReplyDeleteYea CCTV now!
ReplyDeleteThis is very sad. But to not have CCTV is 2026 is diabolical. Shameful.
ReplyDeleteSo a foreigner was murdered by another foreigner, caught straightaway! but an Anguillian is Murdered and crickets.? Anguillians easier to give up a foreigners than their own start there.
ReplyDeleteRIP 🙏 🪦 😌
ReplyDelete