Times of Suriname

“You can’t cure corruption by ignoring it”

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“Corruption like a malignant cancer cannot be cured by being ignored.” This was the firm declaratio­n of President David Granger on Thursday as he delivered piercing remarks at the 2018 Police Officers Conference at the Eve Leary Police Officers Mess. The Head of State wasted no time in amplifying the important role of the Police Force even as he underscore­d his ‘no tolerance’ stance against corruption within its realm. He, moreover, made it clear to his attentive audience of police ranks of various levels that “if corruption is concealed it will continue…” The Head of State emphasised that minuscule action will not suffice in addressing the issue of corruption in the Police Force. As such the President assertivel­y intoned that transferri­ng corrupt officers from one branch to another is certainly not the answer to addressing such challenges within the Force. The Police Force has overtime had cause to discipline a number of its ranks that have found themselves on the wrong side of the law. Among the recent cases is that of Head of the Special Weapons and Tactic (SWAT) Unit, Deputy Superinten­dent Motie Dookie, who has since been demoted after he became the subject of an alcohol smuggling investigat­ion. President Granger in considerin­g how the force has dealt with corrupt officers in the past, underscore­d that cases of corruption cannot merely be handled by, “posting him from one division to another or demoting him from one rank to another… [this] cannot guarantee that he will change his wicked ways.”

The president asserted that even “the best efforts of the Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity and of the Police Complaints Authority could be undermined by corrupt senior officers who condone the misconduct of their subordinat­es. They do the Force no good but rather damage the careers and worst yet endanger lives of other police (ranks)and jeopardise public security,” stressed President Granger. Even as he repeated the aphorism that ‘a fish rots from its head down’, President Granger underscore­d that this is suggestive that “misconduct at the lowest level of an organisati­on is caused usually by lack of leadership, neglect or misconduct at the highest levels.”

(Kaieteur News)

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