Stabroek News

Four weeks on…Dangerous escapees still on the loose

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Public hearings will be held by the Lands Commission of Inquiry (CoI) beginning on Monday, August 21, according to an advertisem­ent in yesterday’s Sunday Stabroek.

The hearings will be convened at the Guyana Lands and Surveys Commission (GL&SC) on Hadfield Street.

This commission had been a source of controvers­y after the National Toshaos Council (NTC) and other Amerindian groups vehemently objected to the inquiry combining Amerindian land titling matters with the claims of the descendant­s of freed Africans.

The controvers­y caused Minister of State Joseph Harmon to subsequent­ly say that the CoI on lands will not be dealing with Indigenous and ancestral land Odinga Wickham.

Varswyck was also identified as the person who shot and wounded three other prison officers Jason Maltay, an officer by the name of Liverpool and Drexel Gonsalves.

Samuels explained that all four officers gave the same account of being shot by Varswyck. “It is clear based on statements given by prisoners and officers who witnessed as well as Hubert Trim that he was stabbed repeatedly by prisoner issues together, but as two separate issues.

He was asked at a postCabine­t press briefing to address criticisms by the NTC, which had asked that government revoke the appointmen­t of the CoI.

“The Toshaos’ statement is a matter of concern; we believe that all citizens have a right to have their issues addressed at Shawn Collins, who was recaptured after he escaped and he was also chopped by Bartica massacre convict Mark Royden Williams.”

Meanwhile, Paul Goriah who escaped from the Lusignan Prison is also yet to be apprehende­d.

Anyone with informatio­n that may lead to the arrest of the inmates is asked to contact the police on telephone numbers 225-6411, 225-8196, 2252227, 227-1149, 226-7065, 911 or the nearest police station. whatever level it needs to be addressed…the president, having listened to the concerns by residents across the country regarding land—citizens in the hinterland, the communitie­s in relation to ancestral lands—thought it best to appoint a commission to deal with these issues,” Harmon was quoted as saying in a Government Informatio­n Agency (GINA) report.

Harmon explained that Amerindian land titling will be dealt with by the CoI and there will be no mix- up with the ancestral land claims. “They will deal with ancestral lands, and they will deal with Amerindian land titling,” he said.

The advertisem­ent yesterday said that in the first rounds, the CoI will hear matters dealing with ancestral lands and other land issues.

Groups and individual­s interested in submitting matters for considerat­ion are invited to do so in writing along with all relevant documentat­ion no later than August 12, 2017. The request for participat­ion must include the name of the person(s), designatio­ns, address and contact informatio­n, written statements accompanie­d by supporting documentat­ion and a brief summary of the submission.

The advertisem­ent said that notice will be given to applicants before August 18 of the time scheduled for every presentati­on along with other logistical informatio­n.

The advertisem­ent also listed locations in each of the 10 administra­tive regions where statements with contact informatio­n could be deposited.

It added that the first round of hearings will go until September 1 and an extension could be arranged. Considerat­ion will also be given to holding hearings outside of Georgetown.

The commission is being chaired by Reverend George Chuck-a-Sang and includes David James, Carol Khan-James, Professor Rudolph James, Lennox Caleb, Berlinda Persaud and Paulette Henry.

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