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Originally Posted by TK:

The PPP’s rebuttals of Ramkarran are laughable

 

Posted By Stabroek staff On December 14, 2012 @ 5:06 am In Letters | No Comments

 

Dear Editor,

 

... We hear talk about corruption in the streets in our neighbourhoods, and in our homes where citizens lament the fact that Guyana could be such a progressive country if only we had a leader like Mr Obama who fights corruption every day of his political life. ...

 

Yours faithfully,

 

Cheddi (Joey) Jagan (Jr)

This is proof that Joey is a half-wit. The Obama administration just decided that there would be no criminal prosecutions of the one bank that dominates the global laundering of drug money, despite overwhelming evidence of malfeasance. Obama is made of corruption.

FM
Originally Posted by Henry:
Originally Posted by TK:

The PPP’s rebuttals of Ramkarran are laughable

 

Posted By Stabroek staff On December 14, 2012 @ 5:06 am In Letters | No Comments

 

Dear Editor,

 

... We hear talk about corruption in the streets in our neighbourhoods, and in our homes where citizens lament the fact that Guyana could be such a progressive country if only we had a leader like Mr Obama who fights corruption every day of his political life. ...

 

Yours faithfully,

 

Cheddi (Joey) Jagan (Jr)

This is proof that Joey is a half-wit. The Obama administration just decided that there would be no criminal prosecutions of the one bank that dominates the global laundering of drug money, despite overwhelming evidence of malfeasance. Obama is made of corruption.

Oh shut up! It is a lot more complicated than that. 

FM
Originally Posted by TK:
 

Oh shut up! It is a lot more complicated than that. 

Don't let me catch you complaining about drug trafficking,then. If anyone seriously wanted to stop it, they would go after its Achilles heel -- money laundering. You can jail a street-corner dope peddler and two more will take his place. But if you start jailing a few bankers, you will see startling results. Most people who decry drug trafficking are faking it.

FM

Perhaps this is what you mean by "more complicated." But it really doesn't matter. We all know Obama would never prosecute a banker, no matter what the banker did wrong. And neither would the AFC, which I suspect is actually based in the Caymans.

FM

How Guyana became a narco-state

 

DECEMBER 16, 2012 | BY  | FILED UNDER FEATURES / COLUMNISTSPNCR WEEKLY COLUMN 

 
Another year and the US Department of State issues another warning in its annual International Narcotics Control Strategy Report that “Guyana is a trans-shipment point for South American cocaine on its way to North America and Europe.”
Another month and another report makes international headline news. Another batch of cocaine has been seized by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police or the Canada Border Services Agency from a star-apple shipment at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport or another pink suitcase of cocaine sails through Guyana’s porous airport security and lands safely at the John F. Kennedy airport in the United States, for example!


Another week and more cocaine is found in drinking straws at the Timehri airport bond; or cocaine found in fish food; or cocaine found in soap powder; or cocaine-in-coconut milk; or cocaine found in fish, vegetables, fake walls of suitcases, false-soled shoes or in the wheel chair of a crippled pensioner who was about to board a flight to the USA.


Another day and another display of dumb denial by the Minister of Home Affairs who has responsibility for the Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit and the Guyana Police Force’s Anti-Narcotics Section.


Guyana, under the People’s Progressive Party Civic administration has become a narco-state. It has become a national warehouse and an international emporium from which narco-traffickers export their merchandise to foreign markets. From the start of Bharrat Jagdeo’s tenure as President, the US Department of State’s International Narcotics Control Strategy Report has been making increasingly critical reports of the administration’s failure to suppress the narcotics trade.
The INCSR has routinely criticised the Administration’s inability to control the country’s porous borders that allow traffickers to import and transport narcotics without resistance.


It is a well-known fact that cocaine continues to come into the country through the unpatrolled borders of the hinterland and the rivers of the coastland. Light aircraft land at any of the sixty isolated airstrips or make airdrops into rivers where the drug is retrieved by local retailers. The administration, however, has never seen it fit to give CANU and the Police the resources or personnel to reach those places.

 

The INCSR, for the first time in 2004, cited the administration’s “lack of political will” as a contributory factor to the continuing ineffectiveness of the national counter-narcotics programme. The INCSR, since then, has focused on the remarkable relationship between the inactivity of the administration’s counter-narcotics agencies on the one hand and the vitality of the narco-trafficking and money-laundering cartels, on the other.

 

The United States Embassy some time ago estimated that narco-traffickers’ annual earnings were equivalent to 20 per cent or more of Guyana’s reported GDP. This enormous wealth pays the wages of armed gangs, purchases political influence and bribes law-enforcement officials in order to protect narco-enterprises. Money-launderers associated with narco-traffickers distort the domestic economy by pricing their goods and services below market rates thereby undermining legitimate businesses and stultifying the local manufacturing sector which cannot compete with contraband goods.

 

Clement Rohee, on being appointed Minister of Home Affairs six years ago, swore to be “tough on drug lords.” Like his predecessors in that Ministry, talk was cheap. The first, Feroze Mohamed, inherited a plan called Guyana’s Strategy for Dealing with the Drug Problem but never implemented it;   Jairam Ronald Gajraj introduced a second plan called the National Drug Strategy Master Plan, 1997-2000 but never implemented it; and Gail Teixeira introduced the National Drug Strategy Master Plan, 2005-2009. Clement Rohee inherited the Teixeira NDSMP in 2006 but, again, never fully implemented it.

 

Rohee has not been able to dismantle the rich narco-trafficking cartels or to disentangle the narcotics trade from the political connections which have helped them to thrive. Rohee’s main contribution has been to establish an impotent Task Force on Narcotics and Illicit Weapons and to add to the pile of paper reports in the Ministry.

 

Narco-trafficking is not a victimless crime. It is the force fuelling this country’s high rates of armed robbery, murder, violence and gun-related crimes. There are now three armed robberies in Guyana every day. Narco-trafficking and gun-running are driving away the local educated élite, scaring foreign investors, undermining economic growth, impeding social development and threatening human safety.
A former Deputy Chief of Mission at the US Embassy in Georgetown once pointed out that “it is clear that the drug-trade is pumping huge amounts of money into Guyana’s economy…but it is also pumping huge amounts of violence and corruption into Guyana.” Former Head of the Police Criminal Investigation Department Assistant Commissioner Heeralall Makhanlall once warned that ‘execution-type killings’ are suspected to be related to the narcotics trade.


Guyana continues to pay a high price for having become a narco-state – a dubious distinction earned by dint of the determination of ministers who have not demonstrated that they had “the political will” to combat narcotics-trafficking.

FM

Guyana, with it's small population and large geography, is a natural and easy target to become a transit point.  There are limits on what the GoG can do to control this.  The law enforcement resources are busy fighting crime in the populated areas and lack the manpower and mobility to cover the whole nation. How come Mexico cannot control their trade, how come the source nation still is Columbia with all it's own, and the US resources, bearing down.  Afganistan's opium trade rebounded even with the presence of 140k US troops and all the military assets made available.

 

The drug trade is a big issue in Guyana and many other nations and it should not be politicized.

FM

the drug trade could slow down,if donald fire rohee and put some one who can do the job.my advise is hire someone from overseas with military experience.and there is lot of guyanese living abroad who have this experience.

FM
Originally Posted by warrior:

the drug trade could slow down,if donald fire rohee and put some one who can do the job.my advise is hire someone from overseas with military experience.and there is lot of guyanese living abroad who have this experience.

I see, how come the 140k US military in Afgan could not do it, how come the US military and ATF operatives in Mexico and Columbia cannot do it.  As I said, that large unguarded territory and it's proximity to the open ocean are big factors which no "expert" can overcome.

 

You cannot just fire someone based on "maybe".

FM
Originally Posted by warrior:

the drug trade could slow down,if donald fire rohee and put some one who can do the job.my advise is hire someone from overseas with military experience.and there is lot of guyanese living abroad who have this experience.

An independent and professional police force is kryptonite to the PPP . . . their most powerful 'associates' [not to mention ministers] would be in jail if such an animal were created

 

they like it just the way it is [as planned] . . . inept, compromised and underresourced

FM
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by warrior:

the drug trade could slow down,if donald fire rohee and put some one who can do the job.my advise is hire someone from overseas with military experience.and there is lot of guyanese living abroad who have this experience.

I see, how come the 140k US military in Afgan could not do it, how come the US military and ATF operatives in Mexico and Columbia cannot do it.  As I said, that large unguarded territory and it's proximity to the open ocean are big factors which no "expert" can overcome.

 

You cannot just fire someone based on "maybe".

It is senseless to attempt to defeat the drug trade using military means, when you can so easily cripple it, simply by closing a few of TK's beloved drug money laundromats.

FM

all drugs leaving guyana do so from the airport or by boat in GT its not how it comes in that matter but how it leave,like the gold bars,guyana do not have much traffic by air or sea a good police force cannot control.

FM
Originally Posted by Henry:
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by warrior:

the drug trade could slow down,if donald fire rohee and put some one who can do the job.my advise is hire someone from overseas with military experience.and there is lot of guyanese living abroad who have this experience.

I see, how come the 140k US military in Afgan could not do it, how come the US military and ATF operatives in Mexico and Columbia cannot do it.  As I said, that large unguarded territory and it's proximity to the open ocean are big factors which no "expert" can overcome.

 

You cannot just fire someone based on "maybe".

It is senseless to attempt to defeat the drug trade using military means, when you can so easily cripple it, simply by closing a few of TK's beloved drug money laundromats.

I am convinced you are an incorrigibly malicious as well as moronic man. TK is not laundering money and you do not know his investment strategy except for the little he referenced here tangentially. We however know the open activity of a drug culture in Guyana. Many known business people are fronts for the drug business and if the racketeering and income tax laws were used they would most certainly be shackled. A military style taskforce of trained personnel has to be in place. The drug trade is not simply an exchange of money business. It is a violent business and fighting it means comprehensive coverage from surveillance to to interdiction to a functioning judicial system and these must be protected from intimidation by agents of the drug culture.

FM
Originally Posted by TK:

How Guyana became a narco-state

 

DECEMBER 16, 2012 | BY  | FILED UNDER FEATURES / COLUMNISTSPNCR WEEKLY COLUMN 

 
Another year and the US Department of State issues another warning in its annual International Narcotics Control Strategy Report that “Guyana is a trans-shipment point for South American cocaine on its way to North America and Europe.”
Another month and another report makes international headline news. Another batch of cocaine has been seized by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police or the Canada Border Services Agency from a star-apple shipment at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport or another pink suitcase of cocaine sails through Guyana’s porous airport security and lands safely at the John F. Kennedy airport in the United States, for example!


Another week and more cocaine is found in drinking straws at the Timehri airport bond; or cocaine found in fish food; or cocaine found in soap powder; or cocaine-in-coconut milk; or cocaine found in fish, vegetables, fake walls of suitcases, false-soled shoes or in the wheel chair of a crippled pensioner who was about to board a flight to the USA.


Another day and another display of dumb denial by the Minister of Home Affairs who has responsibility for the Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit and the Guyana Police Force’s Anti-Narcotics Section.


Guyana, under the People’s Progressive Party Civic administration has become a narco-state. It has become a national warehouse and an international emporium from which narco-traffickers export their merchandise to foreign markets. From the start of Bharrat Jagdeo’s tenure as President, the US Department of State’s International Narcotics Control Strategy Report has been making increasingly critical reports of the administration’s failure to suppress the narcotics trade.
The INCSR has routinely criticised the Administration’s inability to control the country’s porous borders that allow traffickers to import and transport narcotics without resistance.


It is a well-known fact that cocaine continues to come into the country through the unpatrolled borders of the hinterland and the rivers of the coastland. Light aircraft land at any of the sixty isolated airstrips or make airdrops into rivers where the drug is retrieved by local retailers. The administration, however, has never seen it fit to give CANU and the Police the resources or personnel to reach those places.

 

The INCSR, for the first time in 2004, cited the administration’s “lack of political will” as a contributory factor to the continuing ineffectiveness of the national counter-narcotics programme. The INCSR, since then, has focused on the remarkable relationship between the inactivity of the administration’s counter-narcotics agencies on the one hand and the vitality of the narco-trafficking and money-laundering cartels, on the other.

 

The United States Embassy some time ago estimated that narco-traffickers’ annual earnings were equivalent to 20 per cent or more of Guyana’s reported GDP. This enormous wealth pays the wages of armed gangs, purchases political influence and bribes law-enforcement officials in order to protect narco-enterprises. Money-launderers associated with narco-traffickers distort the domestic economy by pricing their goods and services below market rates thereby undermining legitimate businesses and stultifying the local manufacturing sector which cannot compete with contraband goods.

 

Clement Rohee, on being appointed Minister of Home Affairs six years ago, swore to be “tough on drug lords.” Like his predecessors in that Ministry, talk was cheap. The first, Feroze Mohamed, inherited a plan called Guyana’s Strategy for Dealing with the Drug Problem but never implemented it;   Jairam Ronald Gajraj introduced a second plan called the National Drug Strategy Master Plan, 1997-2000 but never implemented it; and Gail Teixeira introduced the National Drug Strategy Master Plan, 2005-2009. Clement Rohee inherited the Teixeira NDSMP in 2006 but, again, never fully implemented it.

 

Rohee has not been able to dismantle the rich narco-trafficking cartels or to disentangle the narcotics trade from the political connections which have helped them to thrive. Rohee’s main contribution has been to establish an impotent Task Force on Narcotics and Illicit Weapons and to add to the pile of paper reports in the Ministry.

 

Narco-trafficking is not a victimless crime. It is the force fuelling this country’s high rates of armed robbery, murder, violence and gun-related crimes. There are now three armed robberies in Guyana every day. Narco-trafficking and gun-running are driving away the local educated élite, scaring foreign investors, undermining economic growth, impeding social development and threatening human safety.
A former Deputy Chief of Mission at the US Embassy in Georgetown once pointed out that “it is clear that the drug-trade is pumping huge amounts of money into Guyana’s economy…but it is also pumping huge amounts of violence and corruption into Guyana.” Former Head of the Police Criminal Investigation Department Assistant Commissioner Heeralall Makhanlall once warned that ‘execution-type killings’ are suspected to be related to the narcotics trade.


Guyana continues to pay a high price for having become a narco-state – a dubious distinction earned by dint of the determination of ministers who have not demonstrated that they had “the political will” to combat narcotics-trafficking.

If this is true, it requires some further consideration.

FM
Originally Posted by Henry:
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by warrior:

the drug trade could slow down,if donald fire rohee and put some one who can do the job.my advise is hire someone from overseas with military experience.and there is lot of guyanese living abroad who have this experience.

I see, how come the 140k US military in Afgan could not do it, how come the US military and ATF operatives in Mexico and Columbia cannot do it.  As I said, that large unguarded territory and it's proximity to the open ocean are big factors which no "expert" can overcome.

 

You cannot just fire someone based on "maybe".

It is senseless to attempt to defeat the drug trade using military means, when you can so easily cripple it, simply by closing a few of TK's beloved drug money laundromats.

I'm still waiting to hear what drugs you're on to make such stupid posts. I need to act stupid sometimes, so tell me nuh man.

cain
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by warrior:

the drug trade could slow down,if donald fire rohee and put some one who can do the job.my advise is hire someone from overseas with military experience.and there is lot of guyanese living abroad who have this experience.

An independent and professional police force is kryptonite to the PPP . . . their most powerful 'associates' [not to mention ministers] would be in jail if such an animal were created

 

they like it just the way it is [as planned] . . . inept, compromised and underresourced

The police force is very independent, they enforce the law under a PPP govt yet the vote overwhelmingly PNC.  What you hoping for ain't going to happen, so get used to it.

FM
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by warrior:

the drug trade could slow down,if donald fire rohee and put some one who can do the job.my advise is hire someone from overseas with military experience.and there is lot of guyanese living abroad who have this experience.

An independent and professional police force is kryptonite to the PPP . . . their most powerful 'associates' [not to mention ministers] would be in jail if such an animal were created

 

they like it just the way it is [as planned] . . . inept, compromised and underresourced

The police force is very independent, they enforce the law under a PPP govt yet the vote overwhelmingly PNC.  What you hoping for ain't going to happen, so get used to it.

now, THAT'S what u call the PPP smartman concept of an "independent" GY police force . . . necessity is truly the mother of invention

 

no word from Freedom House on "professional" yet, eh? . . . y'all take your time, arrite

 

what's the going rate on stupidity these days, eh bai?

FM

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