The government must act to bring an abrupt end to the killings

Dear Editor,

The fall of the PPP government brought a sigh of relief from the masses. The Guyanese people not only hoped for a change. They woke from an induced coma; a long, harrowing and nightmarish reality where they were buried in the sands of hopelessness. The decades of crippling fear brought from them a burdened silence. Those who challenged the status quo were merely a countable few, courageous, committed, fearless and long suffering. Men and women who refused to be silenced. They journeyed laboriously to the point of May 2015, where the bright light of change illuminating the nation’s skyline drove out the darkness of an era and shone on a new one. And not so long ago I had watched, with tear-filled eyes and an overpowering sense of elation, as men, women and children in their thousands were standing on a solid foundation of a long sought after victory. And their faces converged into one gigantic mask smiling brightly up at the heavens. Their bodies gyrating to the rhythms of freedom and change in a single motion, releasing the pains and all the anguish.

What has happened now that has caused them to be afraid to open their doors and windows? Overnight, they are besieged by murders and robberies. And in that short leap to victory, freedom and change, the nation sank into a low where the creeping tentacles of fear have clawed their way back into the psyche of the Guyanese people. While we may justifiably wish to cast blame elsewhere, we must hold accountable those now in the seat of power. The responsibility is now theirs to act. And act they must to bring an abrupt end to this madness of the senseless killings of the very citizens who cried in jubilation for the freedom they are yet to have and the right to life that is daily being snatched away from them. I am challenging Minister Khemraj Ramjattan to make a clear statement about his immediate plans and strategies to deal with the crime spree in Guyana. There can be no politicking or excuses or even silence at this crucial juncture. No other business of the government must take precedence over the safety of its people and security of the nation. I would rather fast for a few days than dine in a restaurant where a bullet may be the first thing that I may be forced to digest.

Yours faithfully,
Norman Browne