Stabroek News

Website of Argentinea­n forensic team provides technical details

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Dear Editor,

The GHRA has been contacted by several irritated people requesting that we respond to Mr. Ralph Ramkarran’s Conversati­on Tree column in SN 11/15 on the Argentine Forensic Team. While we do not normally respond to condescend­ing pieces, we feel compelled to make an exception in this case.

Most of the column consists of laborious quotes culled from various US websites making academic claims between whether forensic anthropolo­gists are scientists or not. The column culminates in a demand that “the promoters of the (EAAF) team’s visit ought to explain to the Guyanese public what exactly the forensic anthropolo­gist and the forensic pathologis­t would achieve.”

While the Column describes the team’s history, conspicuou­sly absent are any quotes from the EAAF’s own web-site (eaaf.org) which could provide ‘the Guyanese public’ with ‘exactly’ the technical details Mr. Ramkarran reckons they need.

Mr. Ramkarran‘s demand is premised on “the fact that the Minister of Home Affairs has explicitly rejected the EAAF”. In the interest of ‘exactitude’, the Minister has not issued any such public statement. His reported response in the media was to the effect that normally Guyana works with the US, Canada and UK in matters of this nature.

The GPF reason for wanting the EAAF is to assist them in their investigat­ion. Without casting any aspersions on the competence of the GPF, the GHRA’s additional reason is hopefully to provide a version of the truth acceptable to a wide cross-section of Guyanese in the interest of laying the issue to rest. The Government being prepared to assist in bringing the Team would redound to its credit for having gone the extra mile.

Mr. Ramkarran makes much of the RSS Report which makes compliment­ary remarks about local police efforts, without offering them much else by way of investigat­ional assistance, judging by the resort to a $3m reward shortly after receipt of the Report. To date, the reward has led to the arrests of seven or so people, largely of elements known locally to be involved in ganja growing in the backdam.

While you could probably find a Guyanese or two who care whether forensic anthropolo­gy is a science, there would be many more wondering what Mr. Ramkarran’s real problem is with bringing this team to Guyana.

Yours faithfully,

Mike McCormack

Guyana Human Rights Associatio­n

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