JPS engineers worked through the night to restore power after an unprecedented blackout plunged the entire island into darkness. Share Jamaica was plunged into darkness on Friday night after a major system failure within the Jamaica Public Service (JPS) network triggered a rare island‑wide blackout, cutting electricity to homes, businesses and essential services across all 14 parishes. The outage, which began shortly after 8pm, spread rapidly across the national grid and exposed once again the fragility of the country’s energy infrastructure. Energy Minister Daryl Vaz confirmed the nationwide collapse, calling it “unacceptable” and ordering a full investigation into what went wrong. J PS said the failure originated deep within the system and activated emergency protocols as engineers worked through the night to stabilise the grid. A phased restoration began with the careful restart of generating units to avoid further instability. While the exact cau...
The treatment of Henry Nowak exposes a painful truth about modern policing and the cost of forgetting the person behind the “suspect” label. Britain must decide what kind of justice it stands for.
In the final hours of his life, Henry Nowak was not treated as a man in medical crisis but as a suspect to be contained. Officers approached him with suspicion rather than concern, procedure rather than compassion. What unfolded was a stark reminder of how easily a vulnerable person can be misread, mishandled and ultimately failed when policing leans too heavily on rigid protocol. His death has since become a painful symbol of a system that sometimes sees threat before it sees need.
The Nowak case forces a difficult but necessary national conversation: when officers are confronted with a distressed, confused or deteriorating individual, what should come first – humanity or the law? Supporters of strict enforcement argue that officers must prioritise control to protect the public. But critics point out that policing is not merely an exercise in authority; it is a public service rooted in safeguarding life. In Henry’s case, the absence of empathy was not a minor misstep. It was the difference between a man being helped and a man being lost.
Vickrum Digwa, a 21‑year‑old Manchester man charged with the murder of Henry Nowak. He has been sentenced to life in prison with a minimum term of 21 years. He stabbed Henry with a large Sikh ceremonial knife.
Across the UK, families, campaigners and frontline officers themselves are questioning whether current training truly prepares police to recognise medical emergencies, mental health crises and signs of vulnerability. Too often, people like Henry are funnelled into confrontational encounters because the system defaults to suspicion. The public is left wondering how many more tragedies it will take before compassion is treated as a core policing skill rather than an optional extra. The debate is no longer abstract; it is painfully real, and it is happening in living rooms, courtrooms and communities nationwide.
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Henry Nowak’s story is not just a case study. It is a warning. A reminder that policing without humanity is policing without purpose. If the law is to mean anything, it must be applied with an understanding of the people it is meant to protect. Henry’s final moments should never have unfolded the way they did — and the final moments of this young life should not be “I’ve been stabbed, I can’t breathe,” practically limp and lifeless while handcuffed, and still not be believed. His legacy, if anything, should be a call to rebuild a system where officers are empowered and expected to see the human being first. Because when humanity is sidelined, justice is too.