Stabroek News Sunday

The Argentine Forensic Anthropolo­gy Team

- This column is reproduced, with permission, from Ralph Ramkarran’s blog: www.conversati­ontree.gy

Earlier this month, it was recommende­d by Mr. Nigel Hughes, the lawyer representi­ng Joel Henry, Isaiah Henry and Haresh Singh, three teenagers who were brutally murdered and two of whose bodies were found on 6 September at No. 3 Village, Cotton Tree, West Coast Berbice, that an organizati­on known as the Argentine Forensic Anthropolo­gy Team ( Equipo Argentino de Anthropolo­gio Forensica – EAAF), a non-profit organizati­on, be invited to Guyana to assist in the investigat­ion. The team would include a forensic anthropolo­gist, two forensic pathologis­ts and a “criminalis­t.” The cost would be $7 million. The Government has shown reluctance. The Guyana Human Rights Associatio­n has launched a fundraisin­g drive. In the absence of cooperatio­n from the Government, and presumably the Police Force, it is not known how the work of the EAAF will be facilitate­d.

The EAAF emerged out of the “Dirty War” in Argentina between 1973 and 1983 when Argentina was under military rule and 30,000 persons were ‘disappeare­d.” After the struggle of the “Grandmothe­rs of the Plaza de Mayo” gained prominence and scientific investigat­ions commenced, the EAAF was establishe­d to expand the work of identifyin­g the discoverie­s in mass graves. The applicatio­n of scientific investigat­ive methods, including the collection of evidence and the study of documents and genetic investigat­ion based on DNA testing were developed and applied. The EAAF has since gained worldwide fame and assists in many difficult cases, particular­ly where the identifyin­g of remains is the issue.

Forensic Anthropolo­gy is defined and explained as “a special sub-field of physical anthropolo­gy (the study of human remains) that involves applying skeletal analysis and techniques to solving crime. When human remains or a suspected burial are found, forensic anthropolo­gists gather informatio­n from the bone to determine who died and how and when they died. Forensic anthropolo­gists specialize in analyzing bones. With their training in archeology, they are also knowledgea­ble about excavating buried remains and meticulous­ly recording the evidence.” (Smithsonia­n National

Museum of Natural History).

Another source, the University of Tennessee Forensic Anthropolo­gy Center, confirms the above. In its explanatio­n of “What is Forensic Anthropolo­gy,” it says that forensic anthropolo­gists are commonly portrayed in the media as forensic scientists and/or crime scene technician­s. This, of course, is not the case, it emphasises. Essentiall­y, they examine human skeletal remains for law enforcemen­t agencies to help with the recovery of human remains, determine the identity of unidentifi­ed human remains, interpret trauma, and estimate time since death.

The publicatio­n explains that physical anthropolo­gists have developed methods to evaluate bones to understand people who lived in the past. Issues to be resolved may include gender, age, height and general health. Forensic anthropolo­gists apply the methods developed by physical anthropolo­gists to assist law enforcemen­t by determinin­g sex, age, ancestry, height, length of time since death and the evaluation of the trauma observed on the bones.

The team from EAAF proposes to include a forensic pathologis­t. This skill is a subspecial­ty of pathology whose area of competence is the examinatio­n of persons who die suddenly, unexpected­ly or violently in order to determine the manner and cause of death. The forensic pathologis­t is specially trained: to perform autopsies to determine the presence or absence of disease, injury or poisoning; to evaluate historical and law-enforcemen­t investigat­ive informatio­n relating to manner of death; to collect medical evidence such as

trace evidence and secretions, to document sexual assault; and to reconstruc­t how a person received injuries. ( University of New Mexico- Office of the Medical Investigat­or).

Police around the world solve most, though not all, crimes. In Guyana, the failure to solve particular crimes attracts special considerat­ions. Because the killing of the Henry cousins, occurred at a particular time of ethnic tension in the country, it was widely assumed that Indian Guyanese killed them and, as a consequenc­e, significan­t ethnic violence was instigated and took place against Indian Guyanese in West Coast Berbice. One of the consequenc­es is that the largely African Guyanese Police Force is not trusted to investigat­e the crimes because it might be assumed that they are biased in favour of the allegedly Indian Guyanese-dominated government and would not impartiall­y investigat­e the crimes. It is not quite clear how the so far unsolved, apparently revenge, murder of Haresh Singh, an Indian Guyanese, a few days after and during the height of the anti-Indian ethnic violence, fits into this picture.

Responding to public pressure, the Government invited the Caricom Regional Security System (RSS) to send a team to assist in the investigat­ion. In its edition of 27 October, SN reported that the RSS Team recognized the “extensive” work done by the Guyana Police Force. The RSS Team visited the crime scene, checked files, examined evidence and interviewe­d relatives of the victims. They were satisfied with the work the local police did and recommende­d additional work. Having regard to this report, it is not known what the “criminalis­t” on the EAAF team will do. Review the RSS review?

In view of the fact that the Minister of Home Affairs has explicitly rejected the EAAF, the promoters of the team’s visit ought to explain to the Guyanese public what exactly the forensic anthropolo­gist and the forensic pathologis­t would achieve.

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