Stabroek News

Guyana Police Force to benefit from new regional Interpol Secretaria­t

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In a move designed to close ranks on emerging organized crime in the region, the world’s largest internatio­nal police organizati­on, Interpol, has signed an agreement with the Government of Barbados that allows for the opening of an Interpol liaison office there, and eventually the strengthen­ing Caribbean police cooperatio­n and security.

Guyana is one of a number of Caribbean countries which the new Interpol office will serve.

The establishm­ent of an Interpol office in the region comes against the background of increasing concern over the surfeit of various types of crime, many of which have implicatio­ns for the security of other countries.

Last Wednesday, Executive Director of Interpol Police Services Stephen Kavanagh signed the Host Country Agreement with Barbados’ Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Jerome Xavier Walcott. The Secretaria­t of Interpol’s Barbados regional headquarte­rs will reportedly be located within the complex housing the Caribbean Community’s Implementa­tion Agency for Crime and Security at its Barbados-based Joint Regional Communicat­ions Centre in St Michael, and will serve Caricom and the wider Caribbean.

Kavanagh is reported as saying at the signing ceremony that Interpol was “honoured that Caricom has provided us with this unique opportunit­y to support the Caribbean in its efforts to target transnatio­nal organized crime, protect its vulnerable communitie­s, secure its cyber space and anticipate the threat of terrorism.

“The internatio­nal characteri­stics of these crime areas and their links with organized crime groups around the world make the role of Interpol’s new liaison office in the Caribbean fundamenta­l to maintainin­g national, regional and indeed global security.”

Vulnerabil­ity to transnatio­nal crimes, which flagrantly violate countries’ territorie­s, exposing the chronic weaknesses of their respective domestic police and other security forces, has been a major challenge for the region where crime prevention resources are known to be both insufficie­nt and fragile.

The objective is to nurture police cooperatio­n between each of the 25 Caribbean countries and territorie­s and increase their use of Interpol policing capabiliti­es in their national and regional investigat­ions,

The new Interpol Secretaria­t will allow for officers seconded by the various Caribbean police forces, intelligen­ce agencies, immigratio­n, customs and defence institutio­ns to staff the new liaison office and deliver Interpol operationa­l support throughout the region, with a particular focus on capacity building and police operations.

One of the key functions of the liaison office will be to provide the region with hands-on access to the police services required to tackle regional crimes from a global angle. The new Interpol office will also deliver training courses across the region to ensure law enforcemen­t is able to use Interpol’s global criminal databases and capabiliti­es to their full capacity throughout investigat­ions and border management operations.

 ??  ?? Stephen Kavanagh
Stephen Kavanagh

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