PNCR leader Robert Corbin says there is
sufficient evidence to warrant an immediate
investigation into allegations linking Home
Affairs Minister, Ronald Gajraj, with an alleged
killing squad.
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Corbin said yesterday that President Bharrat
Jagdeo's request for formal reports to be given to
the police to facilitate an investigation suggests
that the government has something to hide.
"Instead of dealing with the matter
decisively he first claimed that there was
insufficient information [but] three men have been
charged with murder on the basis of the same
allegations," the Opposition Leader said.
President Jagdeo's request was in response to a
letter written by Corbin, who has demanded
decisive action by the government on the recent
explosive disclosures about the existence of a
death squad and its alleged ties to Gajraj. He has
also led calls for a public enquiry into the
allegations.
Alleged irregularities in the issuance of
firearm licences by the Home Affairs Minister, the
formation of several questionable groups under the
guise of community policing groups, and the
existence of death squads under the control of a
senior government functionary were some of the
issues which Corbin says, in his letter to the
president, necessitate an enquiry.
At the PNCR's weekly press briefing yesterday,
Corbin told reporters that the President's
response is irresponsible and an attempt to
intimidate would-be informants by the suggestion
that further reports should be made to the police.
"Naturally, many persons who have
information would, given the manner of deaths of
Axel Williams and Shafeek Bacchus, be afraid to
come forward," he said in his letter.
"Unless," he added, "there is
confidence in any inquiry to be established."
Corbin also said that the PNCR supports the
call for amnesty from prosecution to persons who
want to come forward with useful evidence.
PNCR Member of Parliament Raphael Trotman
pointed out that formal statements are not
necessary for a public enquiry.
But he said if an investigation is announced,
witnesses will come forward. However, Trotman
said, the PNCR does not envisage an investigation
that is conducted by the police, since allegations
have also been made about complicity between
members of the force and the killing squad. He
said it is telling that George Bacchus approached
the American Embassy rather than the local law
enforcement authorities.
Corbin said it is also inconceivable that such
an investigation can be conducted while the
minister, who is one of the subjects of the
investigation, remains the political head of the
investigating agency.
He has led a call for the minister to resign to
facilitate an investigation. Similar calls have
been made by other political parties, including
the WPA, ROAR and members of the trades union
fraternity like the TUC and the GPSU.
Caribbean
journalist Ricky Singh, has also
said that Gajraj
"should seriously consider offering his
resignation... while all relevant investigations
are being thoroughly pursued." He said this
was required given the very serious allegations
and their implications for the rule of law.
The head of state in his reply to Corbin had
said that the disclosures were merely allegations
being transmitted via the media. But Corbin
yesterday noted that there are still several
unsolved murders and he suggested that the police
should, if they are indeed investigating, be
concerned about the statements in the media.
In shocking disclosures two weeks ago, George
Bacchus confessed that he was once an informant
for a killing squad that was responsible for the
murders of several wanted men and suspected
criminals over the last 18 months.
He also said that Minister Gajraj was aware of
the activities of the group's members, who he
implicated in the drive-by shooting that resulted
in his brother, Shafeek Bacchus' death.
George Bacchus did give a formal statement
about the murder to the police, who were directed
to institute charges against three men who
voluntarily turned themselves over to the
authorities after they were identified.