Chronicle of a charade

Come September, one year would have elapsed since the start of a spate of allegations of torture against the Guyana Defence Force, Guyana Police Force and Guyana Prison Service. The past eleven months have also experienced a cynical and sometimes comical charade on this issue by administration spokespersons.

When in September 2007 Patrick Sumner and Victor Jones appeared before the media displaying their injuries, it was evident that they had been victims of abnormal and cruel treatment. The men claimed to have been arrested by members of the police and defence forces in Buxton-Friendship and were taken to various police stations and military camps where they were badly beaten before being released without explanation or compensation.

Two weeks later, Minister of Home Affairs Mr Clement Rohee gave the assurance that the allegations were being investigated, adding, “I want to maintain that we have always denounced torture as a means of extracting information.” But, by the next month, October, Mr Rohee seemed less concerned about investigation and more about condemnation of the People’s National Congress Reform which had taken up the victims’ claims, suggesting that the party was exploiting the allegations for political purposes.

By December, Mr Rohee’s attitude had changed further. He declared that ordinary people were more concerned about receiving goodies from overseas and acquiring their own homes than the torture of two Buxtonians. As minister responsible for public safety, he dismissed the grave matter of torture as just another allegation saying injudiciously “When you finish with one allegation there will be another. I am not expected in my life-time at the ministry to dispense with all these allegations.” That pretty much explained why so little progress has been made on this issue.

Meanwhile in November back in Buxton-Friendship, another resident − David Leander called David Zammett − who was arrested by the police, had to be hoisted bodily into the Georgetown magistrate’s court to face certain charges. His counsel told the magistrate that the defendant had been beaten while in police custody.

Hardly had the furore over the various victims from Buxton-Friendship subsided that the defence force faced fresh accusations from three of its own members in January this year. Alvin Wilson, Michael Dunn, Sharth Robertson and others who were considered to be concerned in the disappearance of a weapon from Camp Ayanganna complained to the media that they had been badly beaten by officers of the defence force’s Military Criminal Investigation Department.

Asked for a comment on the issue, President Bharrat Jagdeo impatiently told a reporter not to waste his time as there were more positive things happening in the country. By mid-January, however, the President modified his posture saying that his administration was taking the torture claims against the GDF seriously. He promised that a board of inquiry would investigate the allegations.

Time passed. The Guyana Defence Board which the President chairs did receive the report on the inquiry into torture allegations which was submitted by the Chief of Staff.  But, by mid-April, the President admitted that the board was yet to examine the report. “We did have a general discussion… the investigation was done and there is a report, but the report itself was not circulated. That is where we are,” the President said.

By March this year, as would have been expected, the stellar performances of the Guyana Defence Force and the Government of Guyana earned a paragraph in the US Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor’s Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2007. According to that report, “the Guyana Defence Force (GDF) was accused of physically abusing two of its own soldiers during an interrogation related to the search for a missing weapon; the GDF promised a full investigation. Some senior officials in the government publicly dismissed all such abuse allegations, despite physical evidence that appeared to corroborate some of the claims.”

After eleven months of verbiage, the administration has evinced little enthusiasm for bringing the perpetrators of these crimes to justice. This policy is perilous. As former British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said two years ago, “When torture begins to take root anywhere, it is one of the first indicators that the forces of ideological fanaticism and corruption are in the ascendant… that the boundary between order and chaos is dissolving.”

Are the administration’s inaction and verbalisation allowing torture to take root in the defence and police forces?

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8 Comments
  1. Pantha CANADA says:
    Amazing how a Government functionary of any level can speak to a reporter as and how one pleases, and answer (if answer it can be called) dismissively and almost insouciantly on a matter of grave social importance. Remember Minister Rohee and his astounding “I don’t answer to you” retort? When are these arrogant bureaucrats going to get it through their heads that they are the servants of the people, and answer, ultimately, to us?

    The only way and the only circumstances under which such violence against the citizenry will cease is if the relative of some high-ranking official (of the police or the politicos) gets brought into the lockups and is not recognized, his protestations of “Do you know who I am?” ignored, and he gets the treatment. Then, believe me, you’ll get action.

    I abhor violence — especially by the so-called forces of law and order (which in Guyana ignore the law and are really not in any order) against those they are tasked with protecting — but on occasion I really wish they could get a taste of what so many mete out so casually to the helpless, merely because they can.

    • bishnu R CANADA says:
      pantha you are sporting a canadian flag.
      tell the boys how many people died frombeing teasered in canada in the past 2 years.
  2. coolieman UNITED STATES says:
    Why not wait for september for this editorial or is there a motive during carifesta
    • German UNITED KINGDOM says:
      How dare the Stabroek News inconvenience the Government during Carifesta by speaking up on behalf of the victims of police brutality?

      How dare they hold the Goverment to account when so many do not have the means to and have no voice?

      Like they don’t gat Time and Place………The Time? NEVER. The Place? NOWHERE

  3. badlall CANADA says:
    Simply put the answer is YES.
  4. La vie est bonne! CANADA says:
    There are mechanisms in place to deal with police burtality and excessive force. No one advocates that there are no rouge cops in Canada, UK or USA. However, the IAD, courts and other commissions deal with them forthwith. It boggles the mind why you continue to live in Canada and support the brutality of the GPF. Why don’t you go back and enjoy the lovely treatment from the GPF? Biting the hands that feed you. Very typical.
  5. Pantha CANADA says:
    Bishnu: Eight people in five years, 20 altogether (CBC News/Canada Press, Aug 27, 2008). And you better believe that there is stern legal action in every case, as you know yourself from living in the same country.

    Not sure why you are starting on with tasers, though: the question you should be asking is how many people died or were beaten to a pulp during questioning by the police while in the lockups.

    In any event, I feel the same way about police brutality irrespective of the country I’m in. Because, in my opinion, those who would protect society from lawlessness, should not themselves be lawless.

  6. Light CANADA says:
    Injustice and violation of the rule of law should always be exposed and struggle against; there is no ‘ holiday ‘ for humanity fighting against this terrible violation of basic ‘ Human Rights’ ; which is enshrined in UN convention.
    Our forefathers and mothers struggled against tyranny, slavery and colonialism, indentureship, facism, communism and other forms of despotic rule; our heritage is to continue on this noble and glorious path, in the interest of all members of the society.
    Anything less will be a grave injustice to our children !

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