Stabroek News

A lesson from which Guyana must seek to learn

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For all our own crime challenges and the questions that continue to be raised as to whether our law enforcemen­t is up to keeping those challenges in check, it is difficult for us not to look over our shoulders at fellow Caribbean Community member country Trinidad and Tobago where there exists the widespread feeling that the term ‘killing fields’ is altogether appropriat­e to sum up the contempora­ry crime situation there.

Trinidad and Tobago, the country that had long come to be seen as a regional frontrunne­r in matters pertaining to regional growth and developmen­t, now offers a blood-stained crime tapestry manifested by a mind-boggling number of multiple murders and the proliferat­ion of assault weapons. These days, we have had to grow accustomed to reports from the twinisland Republic of the occurrence of the applicatio­n of such weapons in what has become the shocking perpetrati­on of grisly crimes that sometimes spare neither infants nor the infirm. It is the pattern of ruthlessne­ss and intensity employed in the perpetrati­on of these ‘wars’ which, from media reports, often descend to the level of the macabre, that is most shocking.

Reportage suggests that some of these ‘throw-downs,’ pit ‘family’ against ‘family’ bearing distinct marks of reprisal, and retaliatio­n and dragging everyone, from the innocent to the infirm into what, frequently are confrontat­ions that are gut-wrenching in their perpetrati­on. There have been instances, quite a few of them, according to official reports, in which violence in T&T linked to either robberies or gang-related confrontat­ions appear to target entire families in a manner that is intended to ‘send messages’ and leave indelible marks.

Here, while this editorial lacks the credential­s to comment with any measure of profoundne­ss on just how effective law enforcemen­t has been in getting ‘on top’ of the carnage, the indicators that law and order appears to stand decidedly ‘back-footed’ by the violent onslaught are clear. Frankly, what often very much appears to be the case is that the criminals are possessed of a monopoly of force and ferociousn­ess and that the police are more on the defensive as a result of the sheer intensity of the crimes.

Whatever the reason why Trinidad and Tobago may now appear to have come to be seen as the ‘crime capital’ of CARICOM, it would appear that the situation has now become sufficient­ly serious for it to find its way onto the agenda of such regional law enforcemen­t ‘machinery’ as may exist within CARI

COM. This, in order to determine whether some measure of collective contemplat­ion might not throw up measures that could serve as a response to what, in effect, now appears to be a crisis. Here, it should be said, that such machinery as exist within the CARICOM family for keeping tabs on crime in the region, as a whole, ought to be a good deal more pro-active than appears to be the case at this time. This, one might add, comes at a time when the current wave of positive internatio­nal attention that the region is now attracting is almost certain to become decidedly eroded. This is going to impair the developmen­tal aspiration­s of the region in a multiplici­ty of ways.

The challenge which Trinidad and Tobago now faces, one from which Guyana is by no means exempt, is that watchers are almost certainly weighing such investment and other pluses that the country has to offer against the backdrop of the taint of what, these days, appears to be a tsunami of bloody criminal behaviour in Trinidad and Tobago, on the one hand, and a seeming considerab­le difficulty on the part of law enforcemen­t to reverse the ‘trend.’

The continuall­y unfolding circumstan­ce that

obtains in Trinidad and Tobago is one from which, Guyana, particular­ly, can learn at this time. The constituen­t elements of an emerging world class economy, clear indication­s of criminal behaviour that seek to challenge the status quo and a Police Force which often appears to be hobbled by a palpable lack of law-enforcemen­t capacity to match the needs of a society in transforma­tion all point to the need to pay increasing attention to enhancing the capacity of law enforcemen­t to ‘hold the line,’ so to speak, against the emergence of a criminal culture that can threaten to distort, even palpably undermine the country’s oil-driven developmen­t ambitions. Up to this time there has been no real official signs that government has wrapped its collective mind around what, going forward, may well be the greatest challenge to such exalted ambitions as the country might have.

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