Stabroek News

No word on Combe’s report

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Dear Editor, In an interview with Stabroek News early in May this year Mr Russel Combe, a UK security expert announced that he would be submitting by June (2017) month end an Interim Security Reform Action Plan for Guyana. We are now in July and there’s no word about the whereabout­s of Mr Combe or his plan. The nation anxiously awaits its publicatio­n.

It is expected that that the Combe plan would be posted on the Ministry of Public Security’s website for public scrutiny and comments. Because the plan is related to public security in particular, and not national security in general, the government should not invoke any excuse whatsoever to keep the plan under wraps as it is wont to do.

The recent attempted robbery at Republic Bank on Water Street demonstrat­es once again the urgent need for security sector reform in whatever shape or form, provided that the recommenda­tions when implemente­d are operationa­lly effective and correspond to the exigencies of one situation or another.

In so far as the foiled bank robbery is concerned, questions are being asked as to why the SWAT team was not activated and immediatel­y dispatched to the scene of the robbery, since it included hostage-taking, and attempts to take control of a commercial building in the centre of the city. In a worst case scenario, it could have been terrorists. In either situation, the task of removing the danger created to public safety was the responsibi­lity of a SWAT team. In the circumstan­ces, it should have been immediatel­y activated and sent into action. This just did not happen.

Further, it is unfortunat­e that the neither the police nor army operatives who share imagery from the National Intelligen­ce Center and are tasked with the responsibi­lity to monitor 24x7 unusual movements on the streets of Georgetown where 40 CCTV cameras are located, did not detect any suspicious movements in or around the vicinity before the crime was committed.

Moreover, the attempted bank robbery proved once again that all the talk about intelligen­ce-led police work is not bearing fruit as was expected. From all indication­s, it appears that the bandits sought to invoke the element of surprise, considerin­g that they chose to do so at the beginning of a normal business day.

The attack on the bank reaffirms the contention that it is in Police ‘A’ division that gun crimes are most prevalent and out of control. Guns continue to be easily available to young people in the city where 2 gun crimes are committed each day. The government seems to be at their wits end on how to address this situation. The National Security Council (NSC) should think twice in future before supporting any of Mr Ramjattan’s half-baked recommenda­tions, the latest being the extensive barricadin­g in of Members of Parliament during sittings of the National Assembly ‘protecting’ them from a possible terrorist attack.

Incidental­ly, the threat of a terrorist attack should be determined by a specific threat level establishe­d by the local intelligen­ce community and not simplistic­ally or whimsicall­y by what has occurred in other jurisdicti­ons. The NSC should direct

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