Stop playing with new security labels -APNU to gov’t

A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) today called on the People’s Progressive Party/Civic government to introduce, as a matter of urgency, a serious security strategy to protect citizens from criminal violence and to stop playing with labels.

At a press conference today, APNU was responding to the raft of security measures announced on Friday by Minister of Homes Affairs Clement Rohee. APNU lambasted the minister and listed security plans with similar features going all the way back to 2000 which were not implemented by PPP/C governments.

The Partnership accused Rohee, of deliberately avoiding references, in his 31st December 2012 Press Conference, to what it said was the high rate of armed robberies (about 8 per day), smuggling, gun-running, money-laundering, narcotics-trafficking, people-trafficking and piracy among other things.

It said that Rohee’s plan failed to provide assurances that human safety will be enhanced and police performance will be improved.

The statement said in part: “APNU demands that the Capita-Symonds Report – which was handed over to Mr. Rohee 22 months ago, in March 2011, and now forms the basis of the new ‘plan’ – be laid before the National Assembly. It should also be published in the media so that the public could read its contents and assess its relevance to crime fighting and the improvement of the efficiency and effectiveness of the Guyana Police Force.

“APNU points out that there has been no shortage of so-called plans for security sector reform by the PPPC administration over the past 12 years. These efforts, however, have been deliberately derailed and not one of them has been fully implemented. Some of these plans are:

“A Partnership for National Unity makes it clear that it supports the implementation of a serious security sector reform programme to enhance human safety. The Partnership will not comment on the alleged contents of the Capita-Symonds report until it has had the opportunity to study it.

“The Partnership iterates its previously-stated support for reforms based, essentially, on the recommendations of the Disciplined Forces Commission and the agreed lavish funded Security Sector Reform Action Plan both of which the People’s Progressive Party/Civic administration failed to implement over the past nine years.”