Thursday, February 07, 2008

Lusignan Issue

Indeed we're seeing what amounts to the demise of the Guyana we know. Such atrocities aren't in the minds of anyone I know of or anyone else for that matter. Guyanese are usually peaceful and loving. What happened to change that many can speculate but to see this death and destruction makes you wonder what else to do. Now based on the actions going on, the backlands from BV to Enmore is being destroyed to disable coverage so that the bandits would have no place to hide. While I support the intent of the action, I am skeptical if such a hasty response would amount to much. I am skeptical if this action would indeed stop the bandits and render everyone safe.

One more point, it seems that since the folks killed are Indians, there's this feeling coming out that the intent was racial. Even the president said that the PNC should acknowledge that Buxton is a "safe haven" for criminals. Its as though the ordinary Buxtonians have a say when you have guys walking around with AK-47s, the true Weapon of Mass Destruction.

When one looks at it, with the advent of the PPP government, there was a reduction of support for the security forces in Guyana. The GDF was reduced in numbers, the police didn't get the funding for what was needed and the National Service was disbanded. These institutions were manned heavily by Afro-Guyanese and one must only wonder if this is the reason for the reduction. Well now you have an untrained force to deal with crime and actions were only stepped up when the bar was raised. Had there been a tight security structure as was in place before, the death and destruction caused by the men who escaped prison on Republic day 2002 would not have happened as they would've been caught and prosecuted quickly. With the security forces toothless and incapable of solving even the most simple crimes, these criminals, these bandits got stronger and capable of inflicting the damage they did. In fact, what the government did was to hire criminals such as Roger Khan to help maintain the law. You know the deal, putting egg-sucking dogs to mind the fowl pen.

The product of the rise of these gangs is what produced the slaughter that occurred in 2006 of the 8 people in one day in Agricola, the beheading of the man in that village and a host of murders. It was this criminal machine that inflicted the damage on the people of Lusignan. To think that this is a racial thing is unfounded and would work to the benefit of the bandits as they would only have to step aside while the races fight each other and they would be in the background to get the spoils -- money and property -- while the war goes on. Criminals don't care much about race. Their intent is strictly to steal, kill and destroy, they being agents of the Devil. You get in their way, you get killed. In BV we lost a brother, one of the Todd's to this kind of violence. One of the bandits from Buxton blasted him in the middle of the night.

Now the people of Guyana voted in 2006 and tried to do the insane. Given all the crime, lack of jobs, all the situations going on there, they had the opportunity to pick someone new that would've at least meant a different approach to managing the country. What they did was install the same government. The result, the same thing. Someone described insanity as doing the same thing over and over again while expecting a different result. Things changed, alright. For the worse.

My heart goes out in sympathy to the families who have suffered as a result of this tragedy. My heart also goes out to the village of Lusignan for having to endure their suffering and the feeling of vulnerability among their residents. My heart also goes out to the country of Guyana who have to suffer even more at the hands of the present administration in Guyana. I do hope that in the future, Guyanese would take things more in their hands and be more active in deciding who will govern their affairs.

May God help us all.

Iain

Iain

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