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‘Shocked and outraged’ over escalation of criminal activities, says Indian Action Committee

October 21, 2016 5:45 pm Category: latest news A+ /A-

The Indian Action Committee (IAC), in a statement earlier today said it is “shocked and outraged” over the escalation of criminal activities the country is currently experiencing and has called on the authorities to take immediate action to arrest the security crisis.

The IAC said that in spite of what the Public Security Minister and other officials are saying, the public’s perception is that crime has risen sharply in several communities, mostly targeting one ethnic group. However, most of these crimes are unreported.

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Following is the full statement: 

The IAC is shocked and outraged with the escalation of criminal activities in Guyana especially since the beginning of 2016 in which the majority of the victims of these heinous crimes are persons of Indo-Guyanese origin, many of whom have been deprived of their hard-earned material wealth and, in some instances their lives.

The IAC has noted statements made by the Minister of Public Security about a decline in the crime rate but the public perception is that the crime rate has risen sharply because of a massive amount of unreported crimes.

The IAC understands that the Guyana Police Force is undermanned and the organisation believes that urgent recruitment is required in a manner that involves representation from the country’s ethnic groups.

The IAC is calling for the resuscitation of the Community Policing Group that was once prevalent during the previous administration.

The perception is that there is an ethnic flavour to these economic crimes which is counter-productive in relation to the government’s stated policy on social cohesion.

In the current situation of a constantly declining economy, the IAC is cognisant of the negative effects on foreign investments, local businesses, and the tourism and hospitality sector, all of which has led to growing unemployment amongst youths, many of whom have inadequate educational requirements for gainful employment.

The IAC wishes to remind the government of its pre-election’s manifesto promise of proving jobs for youths.

The IAC calls upon the government to swiftly, in partnership with the private sector, establish an enabling environment for job creation, and the organisation envisages the setting up of a council comprising representatives of all the parliamentary parties, the religious bodies, the trade unions, the non-governmental organisations, civil society, the University of Guyana and other tertiary institutions to deal with this national crisis.

http://www.inewsguyana.com/sho...an-action-committee/

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Gun crimes major concern among Guyanese despite 21% decline in serious offences; time for multi-stakeholder collaboration- Fmr. Chief-of-Staff Phillips

 
Former Chief-of-Staff of the Guyana Defence Force [GDF), Retired Brigadier, Mark Phillips addressing the Security Seminar organised by the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GCCI).

Former Chief-of-Staff of the Guyana Defence Force (GDF), Retired Brigadier, Mark Phillips addressing the Security Seminar organised by the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GCCI).

Former Chief-of-Staff of the Guyana Defence Force (GDF),  Retired Brigadier Mark Phillips Friday said although the official police statistics show a decline in serious crimes, the feeling of insecurity among Guyanese is very high makes it necessary for collaboration among several stakeholders.

“Notwithstanding the statistics that speak to a reduction in crime- and here I am not hitting at the police force- it is my firm belief, as a citizen of Guyana, that the high incidence of gun-related crimes is today the most pressing problem in our Guyanese society,” he told the opening of a security seminar and exposition by the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GCCI).

Phillips, who recently retired after 36 years of military service, noted that despite investments by the People’s Progressive Party Civic (PPPC) and A Partnership for National Unity+ Alliance For Change (APNU+AFC) administrations in improving security,  that “the high incidence of gun-related crimes is today the most pressing in our Guyanese society.”

“Everyday our citizens are exposed to more and more violent robberies at their places of business- be it shops, factories, delivery vehicles, rice fields, night clubs, churches and other places of worship and even in the sanctity of their homes. No one is safe from violent crimes and criminal activities in our urban and rural areas today. It’s just a matter of time when the criminals will attack any one of us,” he said.

Retired Brigadier Phillips, who ended his military career on October 5, 2016, recommended collaboration among private and public sector agencies, civil society and the media to collectively ensure the security and safety of Guyanese. He identified the promotion of Guyana’s development as one of the major reasons for collaboration.

With citizen security being defined as the capacity of the individuals and groups to exercise the political, economic, civil and human rights that make them citizens who live freely, peacefully and safely to participate fully in governance, the former Chief of Staff called for better protection from assault, murder, rape, robbery, theft, fraud, kidnapping, extortion and financial crimes.

“Citizen security is the measure of State security since the extent to which the people of Guyana can live in freedom and safety is the extent to which the State is secure because the safety and welfare of the people of Guyana are the central objectives of State security,” he said.

Phillips also recommended less cash transactions, greater collaboration with the police force by business leaders and commit to a public –private mechanism to curb violent crimes which could affect foreign direct and Diaspora investments.

Other security challenges listed by the former Chief-of-Staff include territorial integrity;  illicit trafficking of  drugs, small arms, counterfeited and un-custom goods and persons;  transnational organised crime, terrorism and cyber crime.

The Guyana Police Force say it has recorded a 21/% decrease in serious crimes at the end of September, 2016, relative to the same period last year.  “The consistent and continuous reduction in all of the above listed serious crimes, is an indication that the strategies are working well, have yielded and will continue to yield positive results, thereby assuring all citizens that their collaborative effort in partnering with law enforcement is vital,” the police force said.

That law enforcement agency said there was a 9% reduction in reports of murder; a 5% decrease in gun-related robberies; a 17% decrease in armed robberies where other instruments were used; a 15% decrease in robberies where no instruments were used; a 25% decrease in Robbery With Violence; a 4% decrease in Robbery With Aggravation; a 33% decrease in Larceny from the Person; a 19% decrease in Rape; a 13% decrease in Burglary and a 21% decrease in Break and Enter and Larceny respectively. Sixty-seven illegal firearms were seized which includes 29 pistols, 21 revolvers, and 17 shotguns.

Assistant Commissioner of Police, Paul Williams expressed concern that members of the public refuse to cooperate with law enforcement agencies in providing surveillance footage to help identify perpetrators. “Today, we still face challenges in terms of going ahead and asking persons for footage for crime that was committed right within their domain and still we don’t have that cooperation. Sometimes, we receive excuses that we just have cameras but it is not recording,” he said.

Williams acknowledged that Information Technology (IT) plays a major role in crime-fighting, examples being the police force’s closed circuit-television surveillance system, Advanced Fingerprint Information System (AFIS), Integrated Ballistic Information System (IBIS), the use of body cameras and computer-driven intelligence gathering analysis.

Citing budgetary constraints in accessing the technologies, he called on the private security to share surveillance technology with law enforcement agencies to help curb serious crimes. He hoped that private security entities, the business community and the police would sign a memorandum of understanding to share information securely. The Assistant Commissioner offered the Guyana Police Force as a testing ground for new crime-fighting technologies that the private sector might import.

FM

Dem boys seh …Who seh crime gone down


 

Since last year, ever since de government change de police begin to talk how crime going down. People always seh that is only a fool gun show off. People does only sit down and wait fuh see who gun jump up, then people gun burst ee bubble.
Every month de police talk about how crime on de decline suh de bandits decide to show dem that it ain’t so. Imagine gunmen go inside a supermarket to rob a man. That man actually go in de supermarket to kill time but de gunmen was out waiting to rob him. Because he tek long to come out, de gunmen go in and rob him.
Dem didn’t even concern that de security guard inside had a gun because dem shoot him and all. Jagdeo call a press conference and he tell people that crime was never so bad. Well if he can seh suh it got to be that he can lie bareface.
He was de president when he Ministers use to frighten to sleep in dem own house because of de gunmen but he never see so much crime as today.
People robbing dem own family and mekking de police believe is strangers. Husband killing wife and Jagdeo seh is de government cause that.
But dem boys notice something. When was de jubilee and all dem policemen been in lying dem didn’t have no robbery. When de police boss man seh crime gone down all of a sudden it gone up. Dem boys seh is de junior testing de boss, telling him that he talking too fast.
Poor Soulja Bai, he can’t seh nutten because Rum Jattan ain’t saying nutten bout he crime plan. In fact, dem boys want to know if he existing because dem ain’t seeing him.
De message is that people shouldn’t talk about crime going down.
Talk half and get out you tape and measure crime.

FM

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