Stabroek News

There is something fundamenta­lly wrong with the Guyana Police Force

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“Service and Protection,” this has been the ironic motto of the Guyana Police Force since its formation. It is no secret that the force remains one of the most distrusted institutio­ns in the country. This is due to its historic and present day participat­ion in violent and corrupt activities. There is still however, a conditione­d belief that the police are there to help keep us safe. This belief makes it easier for persons to dismiss allegation­s of police brutality, as being necessary to protect loved ones and their possession­s from harm or theft. While from young we are conditione­d to see police as being a required authority worthy of respect, police are not taught to see themselves as part of the masses. This of course has had disastrous consequenc­es on those who have had the misfortune of questionin­g the authority of our nation’s peace officers.

Earlier this year, a US Department of Justice report stated that police brutality and extrajudic­ial killing rates are extremely high in Guyana. This is not surprising given the colonial legacy from which the GPF was born. Early colonists started the policing system aimed at controllin­g the labour and population of emancipate­d slaves and indentured servants. Many were imprisoned for idleness and vagrancy. Violent force against black and brown bodies was legitimize­d as necessary to bring about law and order. Modern day policing has not significan­tly changed from this model and sees officers still performing the racist and capitalist driven work of the colonial state.

Over the years, allegation­s of police brutality and extrajudic­ial killings have frequently surfaced in the media. The most recently publicized of these cases is that of a teenager who was kidnapped, beaten and burned with hot water by two officers. Commission­er of Police Leslie James made public that the two officers are brothers and are sons of a senior member of the force. While some might disregard this as just a case of two errant cops flexing their privilege, it’s actually a microcosm of the general attitudes and values of the force that enables the legitimiza­tion of violence.

The assault the police force often carries out on the Guyanese public spans the areas of physical, sexual and emotional abuse. Their targets are often young, poor and black. Some cases that stand out in our memories are 17 year old Shaquille Grant who was shot and killed by police, teenager Colwyn Harding who alleged that he was raped with a baton by police and a 15 year old young man who had methylated spirits thrown on his genitals and lit on fire by police. Untrained on how to respond to persons who are mentally ill, officers frequently maim or kill them. This was seen in 2018 with the shooting and killing of Marlon Fredericks who was a mentally ill man. Victims of police assault often garner no sympathy given that they are often likened to criminals. Some centre their positive interactio­ns with the police against many allegation­s of police abuse and corruption. When these cases are confirmed as true, they are usually disregarde­d as being due to the waywardnes­s of a bad cop or two or as being necessary to cleanse the criminal elements from our midst.

The bodies available to hold police accountabl­e are very limited. While one can aim to go through the courts, many magistrate­s rarely go against the word of our sworn peace officers. There is of course the Police Complaints Authority but its existence seems more ornamental than anything else. The PCA is notorious for its lethargic approach towards dealing with allegation­s of police brutality. Many file complaints against officers at the PCA only to never hear back a word on their complaint, even after many enquiries. One must ask who really these systems and institutio­ns are set up to protect and if it is not the public, what then are our alternativ­es to justice?

Advice is often given on how one must interact with the police given the frequency with which citizens are assaulted, maimed and killed by the men and women in blue. Black persons especially are taught that they should never give police cause to lose their tempers, as the results could be disastrous for them. We put the responsibi­lity and blame for police violence on the victim, rather than analyzing whether or not there is something fundamenta­lly wrong with our policing system. Police violence and murders won’t stop if only we teach our children how to talk and act around officers; it stops when we hold officers accountabl­e and significan­tly change the attitudes and values within the police force.

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