Stabroek News

Continuous training of cops key to tackling domestic violence -Ramjattan

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There is a need for continuous training sessions for police officers on how to deal with domestic violence cases, to fill the gap in their formal police training, Public Security Minister Khemraj Ramjattan says.

“Policemen again are law enforcemen­t officers and are trained for that. Now, we will have to expand this thing and that is what we are trying to do… There is lots of training going on especially with the women police [on] how to deal with these domestic violence cases. We have men too who are involved in the programme,” Ramjattan told Stabroek News recently.

The police force has had multiple sessions of training in the past from a variety of persons on handling domestic violence cases, but complaints continue about the indifferen­t response from law enforcers. This has resulted in persons who have made complaints to the police, being maimed or killed by their abusers.

Ramjattan, when asked what it is that the police may be doing wrong, made it clear that them having to deal with this social issue, is a very difficult thing.

“Policemen now got to be doctor… accountant… a social worker too, that knows a thing or two about domestic violence,” he pointed out.

He opined that what may be required, is for recruits to have attained more than just three or four CSEC passes as the minimum requiremen­t for joining the force. According to Ramjattan, because of this, their capacity “might [not be] there in relation to all of these things. We have to get more qualified, educated recruits to join up as cadet officers so that we can place them there.” He acknowledg­ed that with higher qualificat­ions, the provision of salaries may prove to be a challenge.

In August, a Corentyne family filed a complaint against the police after their relative, Rohanie Lakhan, was murdered by her husband after the two were left together by a policewoma­n who had been deputed by a magistrate’s court to ensure that the woman safely collected her belongings from the marital home. The family said that the officer acted carelessly and contended that if the policewoma­n had not left the house, the husband, Ramesh Ramdeen, would not have had the opportunit­y to murder Lakhan. After committing the act, he killed himself. A police investigat­ion has since cleared the officer.

There have been other similar cases, and the police have long been accused of treating these matters as `husband and wife’ business.

After Lakhan’s murder, the Public Security Ministry, under the Inter American Developmen­t Bank-funded Citizen Security Strengthen­ing Programme, advertised for a consultant to train police on responding to cases of domestic violence.

The ministry’s advertisem­ent said that the consulting services include developing a comprehens­ive training module which addresses the skills and knowledge that would enable the police to “demonstrat­e the requisite levels of profession­alism, empathy, and integrity” when dealing with incidents of domestic violence.

The consultanc­y also includes the training of 120 police ranks and public officials. The duration of the consultanc­y is six months.

Human rights activist, Vidyaratha Kissoon, had questioned the rationale for the consultanc­y given that police had been exposed to training over the years.

In a letter published in this newspaper shortly after the consultanc­y was advertised, Kissoon pointed out that since the late 1990s, the Canadian – Caribbean Gender Equity Fund started providing exchanges and opportunit­ies for the Guyana Police Force to respond to domestic violence. NGOs like Red Thread and Help & Shelter, he said, were involved in providing resources.

Kissoon informed that the Caribbean Associatio­n for Feminist Research and Action (CAFRA), a regional NGO, was involved in a project with the Associatio­n of Caribbean Commission­ers of Police to provide training and to institutio­nalise the training for police and other frontline workers. Modules, some of which are still available, he said, were developed for the police training, covering the items which were in the Terms of Reference.

He said that the domestic violence training was embedded in the training at the police training schools but quickly pointed out that things changed, as perhaps the leadership had different priorities.

“Some police like the late Derrick Josiah voluntaril­y took their knowledge about domestic violence into community settings. The problem is not so much the lack of training and awareness, as the lack of accountabi­lity on the part of the Guyana Police Force when dealing with domestic violence. It is easier to fund, organise and implement training sessions. It is more difficult to implement policies and procedures. It is more difficult to ensure that the police are consistent­ly applying what they have learned, and are examining the other attitudes which have to change to successful­ly intervene in domestic violence,” he opined.

According to Kissoon, Dr Janice Jackson, in a presentati­on at the 24th Conference of the Associatio­n of Caribbean Commission­ers of Police in March 2009, proposed several elements in addition to training, which the police should implement. These elements, he said, include the articulati­on of policies and procedures, the involvemen­t of the police in public education and awareness, treatment for survivors and perpetrato­rs of domestic violence within the police force, and continuous monitoring and evaluation of the police performanc­e.

Her presentati­on is entitled “Policing Domestic Violence: Context, Status and Prospects”, and can be accessed at http://www.h ands.org.gy/node/118

“Some of these elements do not require donor funds but rather require political will and a serious commitment to transformi­ng the personal attitudes of individual­s – especially at the senior level of the police,” Kissoon stressed.

He opined that the government and the Citizen Security Strengthen­ing Programme might have other initiative­s to ensure that this “one-off” training is accompanie­d by some of the other activities needed to ensure that the police are consistent­ly meeting the needs of survivors of domestic violence.

 ??  ?? Rohanie Lakhan
Rohanie Lakhan
 ??  ?? Khemraj Ramjattan
Khemraj Ramjattan

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