Paul Bogle's legacy and Gaddafi's life
ON OCTOBER 20, Colonel Muammar al-Gaddafi's reign as leader of Libya came to an end.
Gaddafi's regime became known for its brutality to the Libyan citizens.
Similarly, one must be concerned about the death of Osama bin Laden, former leader of a terrorist organisation.
Admit mistakes
There are challenges in making split-second decisions in life-threatening circumstances, especially when the person has committed heinous crimes and has the desire and potential to continue along that pathway. However, if mistakes have been made, then it should be admitted by the Obama administration. Otherwise, persons with legitimate grouses and causes might believe it is kosher to kill, without going through the judicial system, enemies and persons who have committed crimes against humanity.
The world has come a far way in dispute resolution and we must use the United Nations and the International Criminal Court.
No widespread killing
So they killed no women or children, but they responded to the gun attack and killed 18 in self-defence and not one more after that day. There was no widespread killing by Bogle and his followers, because justice demanded that punishment must be commensurate with the crime and, in addition, they always hoped for reconciliation with the oppressors.
This is a point missed by one colonel of the Maroons, who listened to my recent St Thomas Credit Union Lecture which examined the role of the maroons in the Morant Bay Freedom War. This colonel, in justifying the maroons' burning of the homes of the people of St Thomas, claimed that maroons only destroyed the homes where there was loot. I pointed out that, in today's society, finding stolen goods in a house would be no justification for burning the house down. Fortunately, Colonels Wallace Sterling and Noel Prehay did not think like he. The way forward is that we should not defend abuses and extrajudicial killings
Bogle's legacy would have spared the life of Gaddafi and allowed him to have his day in court.
Devon Dick is pastor of the Boulevard Baptist Church in St St Andrew. Comments to columns@gleanerjm.com.

