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Submitted by by Rickford Burke, President of the Caribbean Guyana Institute for Democracy (CGID)
14 year old Torture VictimTeen Being Transported to Hospital
14 year old Torture VictimTeen Being Transported to Hospital

I join Guyana’s former Attorney General, Bernard de Santos, Attorneys-at-Law Nigel Hughes, Raphael Trotman, Khemraj Ramjatan and 25 other prominent Attorneys, in strongly condemning the barbaric torture of the 14 year-old son of Ms. Shirley Thomas, as well as the torture of Deonarine Rafick, by Guyana Police at the Force’s “D” Divisional headquarters at Leornora Station, over the alleged murder of ruling People’s Progressive Party (PPP) official, Ramnauth Bisram.  When ever criminal investigations involve justice in the interest of the PPP, government agents are allowed to employ torture as a interrogation instrument.

I have been in communication with individuals in Guyana. Despite the diatribe of Police Commissioner, Henry Green, it is evident that the Police Force (GPF) indeed attempted to cover-up this barbaric act. Their investigation in how the media got word of this criminal ac and photographs of the tortured boy is repugnant. Commissioner Green and others may have committed obstruction of justice and malfeasance in office; crimes which warrant removal from office and prosecution.

The evidence shows that detectives from the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) who had been tasked with investigating Bisram’s murder, doused the teenager’s genitals with a flammable liquid and lit him afire, after they failed to coerce him to give up presumed information on the murder. He sustained third degree burns around the genital area. This is a most inhumane and evil act that is deserving of capital sanction.

14 Year Old Thomas Tortured by Guyana PoliceWhat is even more abhorrent and criminal, is that the depraved detectives held the teen in prison for four days and refused him access to a medical doctor, his parents and an Attorney. He was only taken to a hospital on the fifth day, after the press photographer secretly gained access into the prison and photographed his injuries, and the matter was reported in the press and condemned by the Guyana Bar Association and a group of prominent Lawyers.

The brutal torture of the 14 year-old exposes the active policy of torture that has been countenanced by President Bharrat Jagdeo and his government. Dozens of Guyanese citizens have been tortured for political reasons, with impunity in the past under President Jagdeo – acts which his government has implausibly denied and covered-up.

The Jagdeo government cannot disclaim torture is an official government instrument. Recently, Guyana’s Minister of Home Affairs and National Security, Clement Rohee and Minister of Agriculture, Robert Persaud, had the effrontery to argue in Parliament that several individuals who were tortured (for political reasons) with electric shock and then burnt, including three Guyana Defense Force (GDF) officers who were tortured in connection with missing GDF AK 47 rifles, were not tortured but that their treatment amounted to “roughing-up.”

This hogwash was later repeated by GDF Chief of Staff, Commodore Gary Best, while defending those criminal torture techniques. Commodore Best further demonsted contempt for the rule of law, by foolishly positing that the United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment Persons, “defines torture too broadly.”  Best’s contention is preposterous, repugnant to the constitution and international law and warrants stern rebuke.

Minister Rohee’s recent postulation on the torture of the 14 year-old is a phony, ostentatious, Rip Van Winkle-like argument of necessity, which has only been proffered because their agents were caught “red-handed.”  Guyana’s Army and law enforcement officers are given carte blanche authority to torture certain citizens whenever it is politically expedient.

The lawlessness espoused by Ministers Rohee and Persaud, Commodore Best and others, have manifestly created an enabling criminal milieu in which the brutal torture of the 14 year-old and others, occur with impunity. Government officials who countenance and sustain such reckless and depraved disregard for human life – which constitute serious crimes against humanity, belong no where in public office, and must be held to account. Those who promote and commit acts of torture are indistinguishable. They must be removed from office, prosecuted and jailed, as prescribed by extant national and international law.

There are several Police and Army officers with ostensible political loyalties to the ruling party, who have been accused of barbaric acts of torture, and against whom compelling evidence has been provided and corroborated. Although their names known and have been published in Guyana and internationally, they are being protected by the PPP government. President Bharrat Jagdeo has a constitutional obligation to allow the course of justice to prevail against these individuals. They must be charged and brought to justice.

I read on Reuters news wire service that Minister of National Security, Clement Rohee has called for the interdiction of the Commanding Officer of the Force’s “D” Division, Assistant Commissioner of Police, Paulette Morrison. He argued that she must be removed from office for poor supervision of officers under her command. I know Ms. Morrison; she is a woman of dignity and integrity who would never condone or cover-up criminal acts of torture. Ms. Morrison did not institute or countenance torture. The PPP government did.

Minister Rohee has therefore betrayed himself as a hypocrite who fails to realize that Ms. Morrison is under the command of Police Commissioner Henry Green, over whom Rohee himself has ministerial jurisdiction. Therefore the buck stops at him. By judicious application of his logic, he and Commissioner Green must accept responsibility for abdicating their statutory and constitutional supervisory duties of the Police Force, and resign in disgrace.

It is a national ignominy that under Minister Rohee’s government and Police Commissioner Green, torture and other crimes against humanity have been institutionalized as law enforcement interrogation techniques; drug dealers operate above the law in full public view and collaborate with certain government and police officials, who allow their criminal enterprise to flourish, and officials who commit crimes retain the confidence of the President and are even promoted in some instances.

It is obvious that such corruption will not end until the United States Justice Department or prosecutors at the International Criminal Court (ICC)) begin to nab these individuals. Suffice it to say, that I intend to contact US Attorney General, Eric Holder, about this and other matters.

The officers who tortured the 14 year-old child as well as the other individuals must be arrested and charged with attempted murder and aggravated assault, prosecuted and jailed. I call on Guyana’s Director of Public Prosecutions, Ms. Shalimar Ali-Hack, to discard any possible fidelity to the politics, if and where it may exist, and honor her duty to the constitution and proffer indictments in these matters. Not only is her professional integrity at stake but so too is her personal credibility and her commitment to the rule of law and the course of justice.

It is also critical  for the matter of torture in Guyana generally, to be publicized in the international community and for torture cases to be filed against the government and against Guyana Police Force and Army officers at the ICC, Inter-American Human Rights Commission and UN Committee against Torture.

Finally, President Bharrat Jagdeo must cease his silence on this matter. It is immoral. He must unconditionally condemn all acts of torture committed by Guyana’s Police and Army. There is no room for political or moral equivocations by Guyana’s Head of State on this serious criminal issue of torture.


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8 responses to “Guyana Government Has Institutionalized Torture As An Instrument Of Law Enforcement In Violation Of Extant Constitutional And International Law”


  1. Where does the PM of Barbados stand on this issue? Where do the other ministers in Barbados stand on this barbaric issue? Where is the rest of the CSME on this? Or is there some unwritten clause within that manifesto that condones silence toward this behaviour? Is this what CSME is all about? Had this child been of a different ilk [societal status] no stone would have been left unturned. I realise that torture is the menu of the day but how is it that Guyana, led by Jagdeo, steeped in such human depravity, condoned and perpetrated by arms of that government, can still come to the table with other CARICOM Heads of government? Why is he not ostracised?

    The criminals that perpetrated this is way beyond their 70×7.

    When the average man takes justice into his own hand, then we’ll have balance in society.


  2. I suggest that at the next Caricom heads of government meeting and wherever Jagdeo goes, protestors should protest his visit(s) with oversized photographs of the teenager’s burnt body as a reminder to all, that Jagdeo is in charge of a government that tortures individuals at will. By doing this the leaders will have no choice but to address the issue of never ending human rights abuses in guyana. How can one human being torture a child in this manner? Isn’t Guyana a signatory to the United Nations Charter on Human Rights? And by the way, despite all the outrage and disgust locally and internationally, Jagdeo has remain silent on this matter, it is deafening.


  3. The big problem is one of education and awareness about what is happening in Guyana. The media in Barbados would prefer to go after the meaningless story of a vagrant rising from the dead at the QEH rather than highlight the suffering and tensions in neighbouring Guyana. Bear in mind this is a country which Barbados sources significant labour. How can the people protest if they don’t know?


  4. Y. Paris:
    Guyana is a signatory to the UN Convention against Torture and Inhumane Treatment but the regime in Guyana is obeys no low. The world must understand that there is an absence of rule of law in Guyana. By the way, it has now been revealed that the Police officers who tortured the 14 year-old also used a stable gun on his genitals and beat him about the head and ears with a Police baton. Guyana’s corrupt Police Commissioner, Henry Green, who is under investigation by the US for alleged involvement in drugs and other crimes, just announced that the boy has confessed to the murder of the ruling party official. This fabrication is to justify why he was arrested and tortured. But if someone sets Commissioner Green’s balls on fire and then staple his penis with a staple gun and beat him in the head with a 2X2 wood, then he himself will confess to every murder in Guyana as well as to that of Jesus Christ. The problem is that the Guyanese nation is docile and accepts these atrocities as if they are helpless. Woe be unto Guyanese living at home!!!


  5. And WHY do we have them here? Because we’re too damn LAZY to do stuff ourselves!

    Look, if we all did our jobs and did them well, we wouldn’t HAVE to look to outside help! Let’s JUSTIFY ourselves, Bajans! We ARE the laughingstock of the Caribbean!

    Why else would the world talk about Jamaica & Trinidad, and not us so much? People ask if WE are a city in JAMAICA! Well, well, well! If the biggest thing we have in Barbados is Rhianna, we need to do a helluva lot more to make our presence known!

    Then, when Rhianna leaves & tries to “big us up,” she is chastized! Girlie, boast that you from GUYANA, do! We too blasted foolish to realize what the hell we’re doing to ourselves!

    Hypocrisy will shove us right down to the bottom of the barrel, and crabby behaviour will not help us either, not if we getting drown in “oil!” Make sense from nonsense…

    Get up Barbados, prove the Caribbean wrong when they laugh…!


  6. Rickford
    Amnesty International has issued an official statement about the tortured teenager. This is great. I hope the international community keeps the pressure on the criminal jagdeo government and investigate other tortured cases which has transpired under this murderous regime.


  7. November 8, 2009 at 1:01 am | #11 Reply | Quote SEELALL PERSAUD, THE CRIME CHIEF AND WIFE BEATER, COMMISSIONER OF POLICE IN WAITING GAVE THE ORDERS TO TORTURE THE YOUNG LAD.
    HE WAS PLEASING HIS BOSS CLEMENT ROHEE, WHO WAS A CLOSE FRIEND TO THE LATE MR.BISRAM.
    THE U.S.A, CANADA AND THE UK SHOULD BAN SEELALL PERSAUD FROM ENTERING THEIR COUNTRY. REVOKE HIS VISAS NOW.


  8. “Guyana Government Has Institutionalized Torture As An Instrument Of Law Enforcement “….Oh really now, what the hell could a 14 year old young man have done that would require Guyana’s so call law officers to inflict torture to the point where he exhibits fifth degrees burns?
    This is not dicipline, this is clearly an act committed by Guyana’s finest sadists; there finest bullies. It’s a pitty that instead of progression, they are the epidomy of a nation’s regression.
    Every Guyanese knows that they only thing those officers are good for is bribery. There is no such thing a “LAW” Guyana; where is the “LAW” when children are being raped and murdered by adults. Where is the “LAW” when innocent people are being robbed and killed because the bloodsucking leches of Guyana refuses to find ways of making money for themselvs. Where is the “LAW” when children are killed daily because of reckless driving and the drivers gets off with merely a slap on the wrist.
    BUT THEY JUSTIFY THE TORTURE OF THIS CHILD AS “LAW”
    GET YOUR PRIORITIES STRAIGHT!!!
    LAW? HA!!!! WHAT A JOKE…..
    GUYANA’S AUTHORITY, YOU MAY CALL THIS ACT LAW; HOW DO YOU DEFINE CHARACTER?

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