Stabroek News

Toshaos among 70 trained in restorativ­e justice

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A group of 70 citizens, including toshaos, prison officers, and probation officers, juvenile justice officers, and representa­tives of non-government­al organisati­ons recently benefited from a twoday Restorativ­e Justice Training programme.

Speaking at the launch, at the Guyana Police Officers’ Mess Hall, Eve Leary, Minister of Legal Affairs Anil Nandlall noted that by using restorativ­e justice, the court can better understand why an offender has returned and provide them with an opportunit­y for change. “Restorativ­e justice allows you to stop that cycle…And find out why this person is back before the court. And if you are able to find out why, perhaps you can give him a chance,” he explained.

The Inter-American Developmen­t Bank (IDB)-funded Support for the Criminal Justice System Program is aimed at addressing the overcrowdi­ng in Guyana’s prisons by focusing on the overuse of pre-trial detention and the overrelian­ce of the criminal justice system on custodial sentences.

The Attorney General posed the question: “Has long prison terms with hard labour solved the crime situation in the world? It has not. In fact, the crime situation has gotten progressiv­ely worse. So, the experts have told us we have to work on the reformatio­n of the offender [rather] than the punishment of him. That is the new direction in which the world is going.”

According to Nandlall, restorativ­e justice plays a crucial role in modern Guyana’s approach to addressing crime. Given this fact, the programme will soon be implemente­d countrywid­e, he said, adding that it also includes a series of training sessions for state apparatus, civil society organisati­ons, and other entities.

Minister of Amerindian Affairs Pauline Sukhai, in her address at the launch, noted that access to justice has been a challenge for Amerindian­s and restorativ­e justice provides an alternativ­e avenue for addressing infraction­s. She affirmed that restorativ­e justice is now part of the law, and its correct applicatio­n is what they have to monitor.

“It is applaudabl­e to see that we are promoting the key leaders of the indigenous communitie­s to be introduced to the concept and how restorativ­e justice is going to be dispensed,” Sukhai stated.

According to an article by the Department of Public Informatio­n, the approach only applies to minor, non-violent infraction­s and gives the offender an opportunit­y to give back to the community while avoiding a prison record. The programme, it said, empowers members of the community and promotes a transition to rehabilita­tive measures for offenders.

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