Corbin
among PNC/R protestors arrested
- demonstrators overturn car
CHAIRMAN of the main Opposition People's National Congress/Reform (PNC/R) and attorney-at-law, Mr Robert Corbin and Chairman of the Reform component of the party, Mr Jerome Khan were yesterday arrested by police when they refused to remove from the entrance of the Office of the President in Georgetown.
The two and other supporters of the PNC/R were protesting against the re-appointment of Dr Roger Luncheon as Head of the Presidential Secretariat.
April 10, 2001
Cabinet Secretary Dr Roger Luncheon said yesterday that
government has established that the PNC/R has firm linkages with the five
prison escapees, a charge the PNC/R has strongly dismissed.
Speaking at his weekly press briefing yesterday, Luncheon said that Minister
of Home Affairs, Ronald Gajraj, had revealed the PNC/R's connection with the
criminals. He did not elaborate further.
Luncheon said the verbal excesses of the PNC/R has led the "young and
not so young... the impressionable and confused souls" to attempt to
fulfil the utterances of the party. He said that some of the statements
coming from the PNC/R were: "do as you please," "fight the
government," confront the law enforcement agencies" and "make
Guyana ungovernable."
He stated that worse was expected to come from the party as the struggle
continued for political succession in the PNC/R, when rivals will attempt to
outdo each other.
Luncheon said the outrage over the murder of law officers, the latest being
Sherwin Alleyne, reverberated around the society and would redound to the
discredit of the PNC/R.
Alleyne died on Monday night after he was shot when a vehicular patrol he
was in came under fire on Saturday evening at Coldingen, East Coast Demerara.
The five prison escapees broke out of the Georgetown Prison on February 23
and there has been an upsurge of brutal crimes since.
PNC/R central executive committee member and Member of Parliament, E. Lance
Carberry, said yesterday that his party's position was clear: It did not
condone lawlessness and illegality.
Carberry pointed out that the law was there to be enforced and if Luncheon
and the PPP/Civic had the evidence to support those statements then the
authorities should take the necessary action.
He said that because the PNC/R called for a commission of enquiry into the
operations of the Guyana Police Force, there were persons who wanted to
distort the party's position and claim it was anti-police and pro-criminal.
Carberry noted that President Bharrat Jagdeo had alleged that some persons
in the PNC/R were linked to the criminal elements and now Luncheon was
saying it was the entire PNC/R. He called for an explanation of the
contradiction.
Luncheon told reporters yesterday that the PNC/R and its leadership
continued to trumpet wild charges against the PPP. He stated that
"veiled and unveiled" threats continued to flow from the PNC/R's
offices and public functions.
He said this did not mean the administration would not respond to the
PNC/R's utterances, since government had an unwavering resolve to carry out
its mandate as an elected government. Government would continue to take
decisive action, he said, and was prepared to engage in dialogue with the
opposition to bring a closure to the situation in a civil manner.
Luncheon acknowledged that some sections of society might feel that not
enough was being done by government to remedy the lawlessness pervading the
society. He said this might have come about as a result of the failure so
far to recapture the February 23 prison escapees.
Noting that the law enforcement agencies have the responsibility to maintain
law and order in civil society, he pointed out that President Jagdeo could
also engage the army in the process on the request of the Police
Commissioner. He stressed, however, that such a step was taken in certain
circumstances where specific conditions existed.
The Cabinet Secretary said the progressive military and joint services
response to crime reflected the administration's commitment to addressing
the situation. He declared that society would see greater involvement of the
joint services in confronting the situation.
"All the action so far has failed to recapture the escapees. I concede
that it has contributed to the notion that enough was not being done,"
he said. "It's a reality the administration would have to confront
every day as long as the escapees are not captured."
Missing image of former prosecutor, George Jackman