Stabroek News

Retributiv­e justice must precede visions of reformatio­n

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Dear Editor, I call upon the President, the Attorney General, and the opposition, believed honourable people to varying degrees, to up the ante to level the field against those who wage war on the populace. They can do so through the passage of more deterring legislatio­n and making available additional resources. It has been a onesided war with fear and terror the result, and the streets already either hostile territory or savage killing grounds. Some facts might help.

First, take a particular maximum penalty on the books. It is 4 years for 4 kilos (or 40) of the powdered product. On the lower end of the weight scale that amounts to US$80,000 or $16 million. Though there is tighter scrutiny and more intercepti­ons, it is still widely believed that more passes through the screens. The smart fellows know, that at best, 1 in 5 movements is detected and seized. And yet, the so-called captains of industry tell this dumb foreigner that there is little cash around, and business is bad. Of course, this depends on the kind of business contemplat­ed. Four years (sometimes not spent) mean nothing, given the rewards of the trade. That sentence means nothing when widgets, weed, wireless, weapons (and more) wend easy passage into the penitentia­ry. Four years are a mockery of the punishment regime, when it is accepted that the lowly mules take the fall (lips sealed) for the Tundra tycoons. I think 15 to life may make men think again about the heroism of protecting the big fish. Now that gilbaka is banned, the local seas gets more crowded. Remember: 4 kilos wreak much human bondage and misery; and $16 million sow considerab­le economic wickedness.

Second, smash through an object, ignore it, and then hurry away. Incidental­ly, that was once a human being, a living, breathing person. In such circumstan­ces, bail is not merely offensive, but profane. The equivalent of US$500 (or US$1000) in bail granted has to represent an abominatio­n. Surely, that cannot be the price of a life, or the claw of the law… I think that a prize heifer fetches more on the hoof. And when booze, high octane, and higher testostero­ne are introduced, they form a lethal brew. Add scorn for the law and ask the grieving families, usually poor, and that kind of bail is meaningles­s. I urge raising the bar.

Third, rip off boss and business place, gouge a visa hopeful, pauperize a prospectiv­e homeowner, or swindle a car buyer, and those doing the fleecing double over in delight. Here is why: steal millions and obtain freedom for thousands. Any seasoned horse and dice man would relish those odds. Crime pays and handsomely. In this country, there is constant caterwauli­ng about the nexus of crime and politics, and business and crime. Ignored is

the relationsh­ip between puny deterrents and the withered arm of the law. It is small wonder that there are so many repeat offenders. The disparity between the financiall­y muscled physique of crime (be it white collared, red blooded, or blue eyed) and the state’s slap-on-the-wrist response to it is so vast as to make matters laughable. Victims are not finding any mirth in their plight. They are expecting developmen­ts from chambers.

I say respectful­ly to President Granger (and General Williams) : do something. Do something different; something harsher that would make perpetrato­rs straighten up and ponder. I think that they think. In the uneven battle against crime, I go so far as to advocate following some of the steps implemente­d by that fine gentleman from the Philippine­s. In many respects, I associate with some of the elements of Mosaic Law, Islamic Law, and mediaeval English Common Law. Desperate hours demand draconian responses. Retributiv­e justice must precede visions of reformatio­n and the renaissanc­e of rogues and the recalcitra­nt. Raise the bar and crack the whip.

Yours faithfully, GHK Lall

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