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PNCR-1G Member of Parliament, Basil Williams says that the government here needs to move on the illegal weapons tracing agreement with the US because of the proliferation of illicit firearms in the country which “poses an enormous security problem”.

Gun crimes have spiralled over the past decade, Williams said, noting that the administration must direct focus to the large cache of illegal arms here. While the PNCR-1G is yet to discuss the agreement with the US at a party level, Williams said, its policy has long been firm against the surge of illegal weapons.

Basil Williams

Basil Williams

He underscored the issue of gun smuggling along the borders, but homed in on what he described as the damaging practice of certain characters being handed weapons within the approved channels, adding that the administration had had to directly address this issue a few years ago.

Alliance For Change leader, Raphael Trotman has observed that while the signing of an illegal weapons tracing agreement with the US is critical to the security sector here, the necessary capacity building to support the initiative must be in place.

He said that the US-Caribbean initiative, which provides for the electronic tracing of illicit firearms and was signed onto by ten other regional governments on Tuesday in Barbados, offers benefits, but that it also ”raises questions about enforcement and points to what resources are available to support it”.

Trotman, in an invited comment on the ongoing discussions between Guyana and the US, asserted that officials here need to negotiate the pact wisely and cautiously with a focus on what is to be achieved and how.  But he emphasized that the country’s borders are porous and remains a key smuggling point, noting that strategies must be initiated to arrest the problem.

 Raphael Trotman

Raphael Trotman

The AFC leader said too, that Guyana has in the past signed onto important agreements which lacked any commitment for capacity building. This, he said, has had major implications for the future of those agreements as the country struggles to achieve the successes that are projected. Trotman referred to the Trafficking in Persons programme initiated a few years ago saying that enforcement efforts continue to be cited as a major challenge here because “the necessary support is absent”, adding that as a result, Guyana continues to suffer low ratings.

But Trotman did point out that it is important for Guyana to negotiate the weapons tracing agreement in its best interest, and if the necessary conditions are met, possibly ink the deal.

Ten countries in the region signed the agreement with the United States to make the tracing of illegal weapons easier, but Guyana was not among those at the signing ceremony in Barbados because bilateral discussions are still ongoing nearly two years after the initial proposal.

The memorandum of understanding which was signed between the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and regional governments provides for the electronic tracing of illicit firearms under a system called eTrace.

Home Affairs Minister, Clement Rohee when contacted by Stabroek News on Wednesday had said that he is not ready to speak on  the agreement, saying he had “no comment at this time” as to why Guyana was not a signatory.

Signatories include Barbados, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, Antigua, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Dominica and Grenada.

Regional governments that signed onto the US-Caribbean eTrace initiative are expected to benefit from an electronic, paperless system that gauges crime guns seized in their respective countries. Countries are expected to submit, via the Internet, firearms tracing requests in real time and directly to the computer at ATF’s National Tracing Center.  The system allows investigators to trace the history of the weapon from the manufacturer, through the dealer to the original purchaser.

Data gained and analyzed from thousands of such traces also provide useful leads in firearms trafficking investigations and eTrace significantly reduces the turnaround time required to process a trace request, and increases the overall number of crime gun traces by providing a user-friendly mechanism.

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Reader Comments

  1. Andy UNITED STATES says:

    There was a recent US sponsored drug confab in one of the small islands, but was Guyana represented? If not, why not?

    I don’t get the impression the government is keen on working with the US authorities perhaps but is it it suspects the US has a dossier on several government actors involved in drug or other related activities?

  2. Guyana needs to get with the program, or loose the benefits to be gained.

  3. A. Persaud UNITED STATES says:

    Pass laws that make possession of illegal firearms a serious criminal offense. The laws should be draconian and should be implemented fairly, to help stem the tide of these illegal weapons that are causing chaos in our society and lost of many innocent lives. An incentive should be offered for all illegal firearms turned over to the police stations. And these weapons should then be audited and ultimately destroyed or use by relevant authorities where possible.

    On a lighter note I wonder where was Basil Williams when the so called freedom fighters were killing innocent citizens and police officers?

    Finally if signing on to the tracing the movement of weapons will benefit the Guyanese people, there should be no reason for the PPP government to be pussyfooting. they need to get with the program and stop politicizing everything.

    • Where was President Jagdeo when Guyana biggest drug lord was given permission to purchase the spy equipment ?, where was Home Affairs Minister Ronald Gajraj and former Crime Chief now Commissioner of Police Henry Greene when Khan was requting members of the Guyana Defence Force, Guyana Police Force and people from some caribbean countrys to join his phantom squad,

  4. Mackydog. UNITED STATES says:

    First of all…what is the real name of ‘this’ political party? They’ve changed their name to hide their identity so often, it’s confusing me, PNC, PNCR, PNC/R1, PNC/1G, PNC/R1G, whats next? This is like an algebra equation…find the value of R if P = Pain, N = Nurturing, and C = Crime?

  5. PPP-PPP/C-PNC-PNCR-PNCR1G-AFC-KFC&POPEYE CANADA says:

    What about those weapons that the very PNC can not give account for when they were in Power?
    Those were legal weapons issued to the GDF.Were they not?
    What about those missing weapons again from the GDF? Like ak47s.Were those not legally issued to the Army?
    Is this how you want to share power in Guyana?

    • Brandon Samaroo UNITED STATES says:

      That is a good point leroy both the P Hen C and de Pee Pee Peed on need to account for weapons that disappeared mysteriously under their watch.

  6. quibian CANADA says:

    could basil williams tell us what happened to the 200 weapons missing from the ministry of mobilization when the pnc were in power?

    • Observer LUXEMBOURG says:

      Which 200 weapons Quibinan ?
      List them right here on this blog together with their make, model and serial number.

      keep drinkin PeePeePee KoolAid

    • colin2nice GUYANA says:

      How many years has the PNC being out of government? Are we for real when keep blaming the PNC for the incompentenc of this government while being out of government for the last sixteen year.

      Yo PPP-PPP/C-PNC-PNCR-PNCR1G-AFC-KFC&POPEYE why you living in Canada?

    • could the ppp tell us of the gun licenses they issued to their cronies to get guns, when one finger is pointed ten is pointed back to you.

    • UFO UNITED KINGDOM says:

      you right ,what happen to that man who lives in East Coast who had a couple of weapons including SLR’s during the last two election or so.

  7. Brandon Samaroo UNITED STATES says:

    The Pee Pee PEeeds on are so stuck looking in the rear view mirror they are running off the road.



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