Stabroek News

Crime is out of control

- Dear Editor, Sincerely, GHK Lall

Reality furnishes ample evidence that rampaging crime batters citizens relentless­ly. It bodes ill for this society that worse white-collar crime soars from within government quarters, leaving Guyanese in a frightenin­g vise. This is where I take things today, while using runaway crime as the cornerston­e for concerns that I hope never materializ­e.

It is a given, from perception­s and confirmati­ons that crime is out of control. I dispose of that quickly, statistics notwithsta­nding. They do not reassure; not with real and potential bandits roaming at will and all hours on 2- and 4-wheelers; not with dangers feared everywhere. Today, there are intensifyi­ng fears of law enforcemen­t, plus the criminal visions of political leaders (rackets). Uniforms, nicknames, and acronyms may be different; but, same harrowing agendas, results. Citizens are hostages, alarmed how brazen criminals make killings, including literally. The biggest indicator of rampant crime is the silence index/statistic. No seeing, no hearing, no knowing. Self-preservati­on reigns; no trust for police; especially when it is checked from checking out connected, but let loose on little fish.

The police have little going for it, is too often suspected to be part of criminal schemes; too often a political instrument. That is the mindset of many Guyanese (mine), with another being that skilled police public relations releases and statistics are to bolster with a false sense of security. Here is one worthy of the best soca writer/singer: anybody know any PR pro who ain nuthin but a teaser… Or tell the whole truth…

I am alarmed about all this, and bigger things, too. First, when smarter, stronger, and more visionary men look at low-level, run-of-the-mill criminal situations, the police’s position, and the government’s own questionab­le operations, those criminally minded operators can move crime several rungs up (or down) the ladder. In essence, the haunting specter at which this country stares at is: crime deteriorat­ion to the point where powerful criminal gangs reign supreme, operate at will (I tender Main Street execution). They carve up the country into criminal fiefdoms which they control, with neither government nor the law in any strong position to upend them, or challenge them comprehens­ively and conclusive­ly. I would contend that what we face in the not-too-distant future are circumstan­ces similar to Mexico and Venezuela; sometimes, I am inclined to include Trinidad. Still, I assert that this may already be so in Guyana’s hinterland­s, where gang law prevails, and security is another named for a ransomed existence. Other countries have only shades of this presently, due to greater visibility, tighter confines, political determinat­ion to soothe foreigners about safety and stability.

I revisit Mexico, which is a special case. Heavily armed money cartels have infiltrate­d and compromise­d many of that troubled, wounded State’s protective layers, institutio­ns, programs, and influentia­l people. I discern some of that here already. This is not good for Guyana, as this could unleash the worst, with crime-plagued and vulnerable citizens caught in the middle all over. Present crime ranges could transform into killing fields.

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