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Submitted by Caribbean Guyana Institute for Democracy (CGID)

14 year old Torture VictimTeen Being Transported to Hospital
14 year old Torture VictimTeen Being Transported to Hospital

NEW YORK: The Caribbean Guyana Institute for Democracy (CGID) Sunday harshly condemned the brutal torture of a 14 year-old boy by Guyana Police at the Leonora Police Station, West Coast Demerara. The Institute also accused the force of an attempted cover-up, and is calling for the removal of Guyana’s embattled Police Commissioner, Henry Green as well as the command of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) of the Force’s “D” Division, headquartered at Leornora Station.

“The brutal torture of this 14 year-old boy at the hands of evil Police officers should invoke the outrage of the Guyanese nation and the world as well as condemnation of the active policy of torture, which has been countenanced by the government of President Bharrat Jagdeo,” the New York based Institute said.

Recently, Guyana’s Minister of agriculture, Robert Persaud, told Parliament that three Guyana Defense Force (GDF) officers who were tortured with electric shock and burnt in connection with missing GDF AK 47 rifles, were not tortured but that their treatment should only be view as “roughing-up.”  GDF Chief of Staff, Commodore Gary Best, also made this assertion while defending torture techniques employed by Guyana’s security forces. He also claimed that the United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment Persons, “defines torture too broadly.”

The Institute has long dismissed the government’s “roughing up” claim as nonsense and accused it of granting the security forces carte blanche authority to torture certain citizens whenever it is politically expedient. CGID noted that “Individuals like Mr. Persaud and Commodore Best, who manifest reckless and depraved disregard for human beings, belong no where in public office.”

The organization called for officials of the government and security forces who countenance, promote or commit torture to be prosecuted for international crimes against humanity, and added that “The lawless public policy espoused by Persaud and Best have created an enabling law enforcement environment in which the brutal torture of this teenager, as well as others, occur with impunity.”

The 14 year-old, whose surname is Thomas, was severely burnt around the genital area, by Police officers while being interrogated about alleged knowledge of the murder of ruling People’s Progressive Party (PPP) Region 3 official, Ramnauth Bisram.

“What is even more abhorrent and criminal, is that the depraved Police officers held the teen with third degree burns in prison for four days, during which period they refused him access to a medical doctor, his parents and an Attorney. He was only taken to the West Demerara regional Hospital Saturday, after the matter was reported in the press and the Guyana Bar Association and a group of prominent Lawyers issued statements of condemnation,” CGID said.

It has been revealed that the investigating officers doused the lad’s genitals with a flammable liquid and lit him afire, after an unsuccessful interrogation attempt about Bisram’s murder. A press photographer secretly gain access into the prison and photograph the tortured teenager.

The lad was arrested from his Canal Number Two Polder home last Tuesday and taken to the La Grange Police Station before being transfered to Police divisional headquarters at  Leanora. However, when his mother, Shirley Thomas, and stepfather, Doodnauth Jaikarran, made inquiries later about his whereabouts and the reason for his detention, Police officers attempted deliberately misdirected to check with five different Police Stations along the West Coast, although they had knowledge that Thomas was transferred to Leorona.

GCID declared that “It is a national disgrace that under the leadership of the Guyanese Police Commissioner, drug dealers operate above the law in full public view and collaborate with certain police officials who allow their criminal enterprise to flourish, and that torture and other crimes against humanity have been institutionalized as Police interrogation techniques.”

The organization called for the officers who tortured Thomas to be arrested, charged with aggravated assault, prosecuted and jailed. It also called for the matter as well as the issue of torture in Guyana generally, to bee publicized in the international community and for torture cases to be filed against the government, the Guyana Police Force and the rough officers at the Inter-American Human Rights Commission and UN Committee against Torture.

CGID is calling on President Bharrat Jagdeo, Minister of Home Affairs, Clement Rohee and Minister of Human Services and Child Welfare, Priya Manichand, to condemn the torture of the teen.


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18 responses to “Guyana Police Under Fire For Brutal Torture Of 14 Year-old”


  1. CGID is calling on President Bharrat Jagdeo, Minister of Home Affairs, Clement Rohee and Minister of Human Services and Child Welfare, Priya Manichand, to condemn the torture of the teen.

    Actually they should do more than condemn, somebody needs to resign!


  2. Resign?

    Those police officers who did that should have the same thing done to them!

    “Bun fyah ‘pon dem!”

    Let THEM know how it feels! Wouldn’t do it again, would they? A 14-year-old? Have they no SHAME?


  3. What would resignation do? Allow them to move on to another victim. He who feels it knows it and the only form of justice in this world is AN EYE FOR AN EYE!


  4. Norman Faria we are waiting.


  5. Norman Faria and Rickey Singh we are waiting.


  6. Don’t hold your breath David, if this was done in Barbados Faria and Gibbs would have it plastered all over de place.


  7. Maybe Gibbs is too busy ensuring the Nation maintains a high standard. Note the heading highlighted below 🙂

    The below was the Nation editorial of today.

    Taking stock of political system

    Published on: 11/1/2009.

    FROM TIME TO TIME we need to take stock of our political system and the way we do things in this developing democracy as compared with the practices of some other more developed democracies.

    Quite often citizens compare us unfavourably with our larger neighbour to the north, the United States and call for what they say is greater freedom of the Press and sometimes for the system of committees that vote on the president’s recommendations for certain appointments to public office, such as the supreme court and the cabinet.

    Some of these comments point to greater public participation in the political process and the use of television to bring these important events to public attention and scrutiny even if the committees operate along partisan lines and excoriate many a candidate who is otherwise suited for the position because of some statement made years before he or she ever thought of entering public service.

    The current, sometimes bitter and highly partisan debate on universal health debate in the United States should provide a welcome reality check for those among us hankering after the American way of doing politics.

    Whatever its high points, the American political system does not make for easy law-making. The tortuous passage of the current legislation still bogged down in congress, with several proposed bills floating and refloating in and out of this or that committee without any agreement of the two Houses of Congress, makes a good case for urgent reform.

    Westminister-based

    Our small democracy could not long survive in such circumstances, and we should thank our lucky stars that our system of government is based on the Westminster system which concentrates real and functional legislative power at the centre in the hands of the Prime Minister and his Cabinet.

    The late Right Excellent Errol Barrow would never have had his National Insurance Scheme passed into law under a system such as that operating in the United States; nor could the late Prime Minister Tom Adams have legislated his revolutionary Freehold Tenantries Bill which released plantation tenants and their tenantry lands from historical bondage!

    There is simply too much fragmentation of political power in the United States system. An overly rigid application of the separation of powers means that the president and his cabinet control the executive power, – the right to "do" things – but they cannot sit in the legislature, which is the body exercising the power to pass the necessary enabling legislation.

    The result is that a lot of arm-twisting and deal-making goes on behind the scenes to get even the simplest law passed, and with the members of both houses loosely respecting an even looser system of party discipline, passing laws becomes a nightmare encased in a labyrinth!

    It is for these reasons that the civil rights laws took so very long to become law, and if the American system were transplanted into our country, measures such as the Holiday With Pay Act legislation might not yet have seen the light of day, especially given the not- so-distant era of malignant conservatism!

    Our constitutional system may be the result of an accident of history, but over the space of three hundred years, as one of our late Governors General reminded us, "we have made it our own".

    What we must not now do is to behave like the infamous dog with the bone. All that glitters is not gold, and while we may think that our system is not perfect, and it is not, there are other systems which are so rigid that the passage of obviously desirable and socially cohesive legislation is held captive to special interests within the society.

    The American system is one such system, and one wonders how much better off that society would be if their political system reflected the political reality that our system does.

    Constructive criticism of our system is one thing, but we must be aware that the grass always appears greener on the other side!


  8. When/How will it end?


  9. David,I must say the editorial was indeed edifying.

  10. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    David

    That Nation editorial is so disingenious.

    No one in this country is asking for a complete adoption of the american way of doing business,what we are saying is that we would like to see newspapers and radio and t.v. exercise some level of professionalism, and integrity in how they do their business.

    Investigative journalism is the cry of the average man on the streets here in Barbados.

    Something akin to Brian Ross of ABC News who is dedicated to the tasking of digging deeper.

    We admit there are some shallow media personality that we see on american t.v.,but that is not the standard we are holding up,neither is the cantakerous behaviour of the republican party in their legislative chambers our ideal.


  11. Our constitutional system is NOT the result of an accident of history, simply because THERE ARE NO ACCIDENTS in history. It has all been planned out for us and like bleeps we follow.

    So what do we have to be grateful for?

    The Westminister System.

    Had it not been for the Westminister system where would these poor, ignorant, uncivilised BLACK beast be today? Is the author of this piece melanin deficient or a house nigger? To read this drivel you’d think that BLACK folk never governed themselves until whitey came along. Let’s face it, whether it be Amerikkka or the Britshit Empire, the shitstems are not for BLACK folk. That’s why we always get the shitty end of the stick. They only feed off our ignorance. Day in and out we labour to remain in bondage. And we should thank our lucky stars!


  12. Pardon:

    Passed by, saw this which I missed on news.

    I am not really commenting on BU threads, but this cannot pass without protest.

    This case is awful — I lack the vocabulary to properly describe it . . . , and the book should be thrown at the responsible officers. 3rd degree burns mean the area is dead, dead dead:

    >> Third-degree burns occur when the epidermis is lost with damage to the subcutaneous tissue. Burn victims will exhibit charring and extreme damage of the epidermis, and sometimes hard eschar will be present. Third-degree burns result in scarring and victims will also exhibit the loss of hair shafts and keratin. These burns may require grafting. >>

    Horrible, and requiring serious intervention, serious enough that the government of Guyana should be called to publicly answer before the full Caricom heads of Government and/or the Caribbean Court of Justice.

    Responsible officers look like they are up against at minimum wounding with intent [especially the 4-day delay and denial of medical care (which could easily have resulted in infection leading to death) and misdirection of parents], if there is not a more serious law that can be applied.

    They should be locked up for life.

    (And I am resisting the emotions that would apply a far more permanent penalty; Lord forgive me. And, these men are plainly in danger of their souls over this too. Did they ever even think about what they will have to say about this, come Judgement Day — and that is assuming they are so bad that it would take thinking on the eternal consequences to move them? If someone is so benumbed in conscience and empathy that he cannot see that this is utterly beyond the pale, something is deeply, deeply wrong.)

    Guyana’s police need to be publicly investigated and reformed from top to bottom, similar to Jamaica’s [and maybe others too]. A full formal regional commission needs to be empanelled to do this — the police systems in the region are similar enough that if there is that big of a hole in the Guyana system, we had better be concerned from Belize to Trinidad as well.

    The power of the sword is given to government to defend the public civil peace with justice, not to torture 14 yo boys like this.

    D


  13. […] the incident spread internationally, the Barbados Underground blog posted a report which elicited this comment from reader Dictionary: Horrible, and requiring serious intervention, serious enough that the […]


  14. […] as news of the incident spread internationally, the Barbados Underground blog posted a report which elicited this comment from reader Dictionary: Horrible, and requiring serious intervention, […]


  15. Dictionary
    They should be tortured the same way first, then locked up.
    “Who feels it, knows it”.


  16. The Guyana Government refuse to sanction the Police and Army when they tortured blackmen. In fact they sent selected Indians fron the PPP into both forces to carry out torture. The two who tortured this kid are named Lall and Dobay.

    These people are the worse kind of people for any group to be forced to live under. Their mentality is primitive, and their reasoning borders on the assinine.


  17. Hope that when we start to recruit policemen from abroad that we do not run the risk of attracting this type.


  18. […] November 2, 2009 site admin Leave a comment Go to comments torture only becomes an issue and a problem in Guyana when the victim is not African. we need not list the names of the numerous […]

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