Stabroek News

Gov’t forensic lab needs to meet required standards for DNA testing capability

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Although government wants DNA testing to be a feature of the Guyana Forensic Laboratory, Public Security Minister Khemraj Ramjattan says it first needs to ensure the lab meets the required standards.

“We got to get the integrity of the system that is the most important. The integrity of the officials inside, the integrity of the systems, the writing up of the documentat­ion…” he said during an interview at his Brickdam office on Monday.

He said the lab, which was officially commission­ed in July, 2014, is outfitted with highly qualified staff but they are not “yet qualified enough to reach the stage of DNA [testing]; that is because the integrity of the specimen… they have to graduate to that high integrity of maintainin­g the specimen.”

Observers have said that given Guyana’s high crime rate and the value of DNA testing in criminal investigat­ions, the laboratory to be focused on.

“I am very much concerned about the integrity and I want us to graduate there,” he said, while noting that Guyana has to prove to internatio­nal and regional partners that it has reached this stage.

“We have not in my opinion as yet and it will take some time,” he said.

Ramjattan added that currently toxicology tests are being conducted and forged documents are being examined.

He said that a lot of evidence can now be given in High Court proceeding­s in connection with video/picture analysis as staff from the lab are receiving training through an ongoing Canada- funded Justice Education Society ( JES) project.

The lab, which was built through funding from the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank (IDB), is located at the University of Guyana’s Turkeyen campus as it is expected to serve as a training ground for young scientists in the field of forensics.

During his address at the commission­ing ceremony, then Minister Clement Rohee had said that the lab would aim to use scientific techniques that the country had never seen before to solve crimes. He said that the lab would specialise in testing toxic substances, narcotic drugs, pharmaceut­ical drugs, alcohol, and biological fluids.

Rohee had also stated that the lab would not be another white elephant and said there had been discussion­s on the question of the clientele of the laboratory in order to formulate a business plan to ensure that at every stage of its developmen­t it was active.

The facility, he said, was outfitted with state-ofthe-art equipment.

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