RICKEY
SINGH COLUMN DIPLOMATIC ARROGANCE IN 'DEATH SQUAD' AFFAIR Let the 'evidence' be provided TODAY, I wish to revisit the controversy surrounding Guyana's Home Affairs Minister Ronald Gajraj about his alleged involvement with a phantom `death squad' and demands for his resignation by the political opposition: Since
my column in this newspaper of January 18 on `Death Squad Politics Row'
- in which I suggested that Minister Gajraj should offer his resignation
to President Bharrat Jagdeo, while all relevant investigations are
thoroughly pursued - there have been some strange developments. First,
disclosure last week of the sudden revocation by Canada of the Home
Affairs Minister's Canadian diplomatic visa - without any prior
communication with him, or since the matter reached the public domain Secondly,
the related issue of the main opposition People's National
Congress/Reform hailing, with supporting placards in a demonstration
this past week, Canada's visa revocation decision. It came as the
party's extended demands for Gajraj's resignation, and more than implies
that the revocation decision supports its own position. Thirdly,
there remains the baffling failure by the police to locate the
self-confessed informant to the death squad, George Bacchus, who has
since disappeared from public view. Fourthly,
the failure by Bacchus's lawyer to help produce him to the police for a
statement in support of his allegations; and the refusal by the PNC/R
leader, Robert Corbin, to provide "information/intelligence"
to the police he claims to have in connection with the existence of
`death squads' and Gajraj's alleged involvement. It
seems essential to any transparent probe that those with claimed
"information" in relation to death squad allegations, as made
by Bacchus and Corbin make such information available to the police who
are the ones to carry out investigations into criminal offences and work
in cooperation with the Director of Public Prosecutions. This course
cannot and should not be avoided much longer. But
outgoing acting Police Commissioner McDonald got a tongue-lashing from
the PNC leader for the letter inviting his cooperation in the pursuit of
the death squads allegations. Instead,
Corbin slammed the Commissioner for pursuing the "political agenda
of your masters", but held out no hope of sharing the information
he claims to possess. At
the same time, the governing PPP/C was calling on Corbin to either
produce to the police information to back up his allegations, or to shut
up. Bacchus's
own criminal record would certainly not place him in the category of a
saint. But he could be helpful to the cause of justice by showing up
with his lawyer to give a statement to the police, in support of his
allegations. This
would be the appropriate thing to do, given the very serious nature of
his allegations, the puzzling behaviour of diplomatic missions in
Georgetown, and knowing, as even his own lawyer (s) would be aware, of
the fundamental difference between due process and condemnation without
trial. The
company has denied involvement in providing such information, as it
would be unlawful. It, however, recognises that it could be made to do
so by a court order. For
now, therefore, there would rightly be questions about the accuracy of
the claimed telephone conversations by Bacchus - as reported in the
local media - until appropriately verified. Such
factors would, I think, support my own view that Minister Gajraj, who
remains dismissive of the allegations against him, should proceed on
vacation - if he is not yet ready to offer his resignation, and allow a
transparent probe to take place. At
the same time, neither Bacchus nor Corbin should be excused for not
helping the course of due process by providing the Police Commissioner
or the DPP, "information" they claim to have in support of
their respective death squad allegations and links to Minister Gajraj. It
is relevant to recall here that the office of the Director of Public
Prosecutions had already authorised an inquest into the killing of a
man, Axel Williams, shot to death last December 10, as a victim of a
"death squad" and, according to Bacchus, one of the links to
Minister Gajraj. Such
an inquest could itself prove helpful to Gajraj's rejection of any
culpability with a phantom death squad, and expose his accuser Bacchus
to the glare of media and public scrutiny. Right
now Bacchus's accusations are being used as political fodder for
intensified anti-government crusading by the main opposition PNC, while
Gajraj himself concurs that an inquest into Williams's death should take
place. The
sudden visa revocation and reference to the media about Canadian privacy
laws, instead of offering a forthright explanation, smacks of more than
arrogance, and a judgement, without trial, on the part of the Canadian
authorities. Not
to mention, of course, the public perception of taking sides in a highly
sensitive, and far from resolved national issue by a foreign diplomatic
mission. The
same mission, incidentally, whose country had previously violated
Guyana's airspace when it chose to fly in a group of Guyana-born
criminal deportees, without first alerting the relevant authorities in
Georgetown. It subsequently apologised for the incident. Whatever
may be his own errors of omission or commission, Minister Gajraj has
made it clear that having had no direct communication from the Canadian
High Commission, he, nevertheless, would welcome the public disclosure
of ANY information that would have led to the very surprising sudden
revocation of his diplomatic visa. The
ball is, therefore, in the court of the Canadian High Commission. In the
interest of continuing "friendly" Canada-Guyana relations, it
should desist from referring the local media to the Canadian High
Commission in Port-of-Spain for information about "privacy
laws". Why
should an officer in the Port-of-Spain Canadian High Commission have to
explain or justify the sudden revocation of the diplomatic visa of a
senior Guyanese cabinet minister - without any explanation, even to him,
the affected minister, in the face of escalating partisan politicking? Is
new Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin paying any attention to what's
going on in the name of Canada's diplomatic relations with Guyana? Nevertheless,
it is more than passing strange that the US Embassy in Georgetown which,
like the British High Commission, has signalled its interest in a
transparent investigation into the allegations against Minister Gajraj,
had not, up to the time of writing late last week, considered it
appropriate to communicate with the Guyana Government about the
"information"/ allegations it had been provided by Bacchus. It
so happens that this is the other diplomatic mission in Georgetown which
has been stunningly silent over the past month on media reports about
its failure to renew a US visa for Minister of Foreign Trade and
International Cooperation, Clement Rohee - and with no connection to the
so-called `death squad' affair. Why
the delay and silence over renewal of the minister's US visa? Is this
the way to foster good relations between two "friendly"
countries and their governments? Is
the American embassy so unmindful of the implications of its attitude
towards a long standing senior cabinet minister of successive legitimate
governments in Guyana? Or is this another case of diplomatic arrogance? If
Rohee, as a senior cabinet minister could be so shabbily treated, think
of the contempt to which ordinary Guyanese, across the society, may have
suffered in seeking the relevant visa for visits to the "land of
the free and home of the brave"!! No
amount of diplomatic language, involving either the Guyana Ministry of
Foreign Affairs or the US Embassy in Georgetown, or both, to minimise
the damage, can justify the embarrassment caused to Minister Rohee who
has refused to speculate on what he regards as "this surprising
issue". On
top of this came Canada's revocation last week of Minister Gajraj's
visa, even before Bacchus could be found to provide a statement to the
police about his allegations. There
seems a tremendous rush to judgement by the PNC/R and some diplomatic
missions on one hand, and, on the other, the reluctance by Minister
Gajraj to at least take a vacation while investigations are being
pursued into the allegations against him. I say again, if there is
nothing to hide, there is nothing to fear. Governments
and people in the rest of CARICOM would be wise to follow closely this
case of death squad allegations against a Guyanese cabinet minister and
the perplexing behaviour exhibited by the Canadian High Commission, as
well as that of the USA in relation to information received from Bacchus
and the long delay in renewing the visa for Foreign Trade and
International Cooperation Minister, Rohee.
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