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December 3, 2015  Source 
 

If you read this column before 11 a.m. today, you can find me outside the Office of the Attorney-General. There is a picket there for Vibert Butts calling for justice for this football hero. Butts was sentenced to four years for possession of small amounts of marijuana. Butts rose to fame when I was pretty young and was enrolled as a UG student in history. He scored the first World Cup goal for Guyana in 1976. It was during the preliminary round against Suriname. At his trial, where he was unrepresented, Butts acknowledged the stuff was his but said he used it as a Rastafari brethren for health and religious reasons (see my Friday, November 27 column; “I wonder who Vibert Butts voted for?&rdquo


Butts vehemently denied he was trafficking in the stuff. I have seen countless Rastafari adherents had their lives destroyed because of the usage of marijuana not for the purpose of trafficking but for personal use. It is a modern tragedy in this country that proves how cruel and backward is the politics of this land and how unfit are many post-colonial leaders to rule their countries.


This land is self-destructive. There are more than a thousand Rastafarians in Guyana. There are thousands of young people that enjoy a marijuana cigarette in this land. Yet they didn’t vote for the Rasta party in the May General Elections. Yet they voted for politicians whose skin colour is dark, brown and black but less modern than the White man that these politicians love to demonize in order to get your votes.


The Magistrates are fools not to order community service for small amounts of ganja when the accused is found guilty, but the Magistrates can argue that they didn’t make the law. The law was made by Desmond Hoyte, the same Desmond Hoyte that needed the same marijuana-smoking young men to join him in his campaign of ‘mo fyah-slo fyaah’ against the PPP regime.


During the 1999 Public Service Union strike when young protestors slept outside the wharves to stop scabs and strike-breakers, they had their ganja with them. I saw them smoking it during the strike in the late evenings. Three of them are still my friends. During the Buxton crime spree 2002-2005, certain politicians (the country would be shocked to know who one of them was) mixed with Buxtonian young men who smoked openly in front of them.


Poor Vibert Butts! I feel sorry for him for five reasons; I don’t believe he was trafficking. Two – he has three young kids the oldest being eight years. Three – he deserved community service which the law provides for small amounts because he is a football hero. This country is unbelievable. A cricket hero wants a diplomatic passport while a football hero goes to jail for smoking pot. Four – Butts did not only excel in playing football but together with my brother “Lightweight” Kissoon, he kept football alive in South Georgetown and created many gifted young footballers. The fifth reason is that politicians use people like him and then discard them.


My friends in the AFC told me a certain AFC Minister told a group of AFC youth leaders that the elections are over and he is a Minister and they must relate to him as such. Clairmont Lye wrote a newspaper letter lamenting the attitude of a certain Minister. Lincoln Lewis was devastating in his critique of another APNU Minister’s mistreatment of people. This is how politicians become when power is attained.


I am picketing for Butts this morning for a sixth reason. This country cries out for judicial reform. Too many young people who are first offenders are going to jail. The sentence structure must do away with that. This country is cruel to poor people. A sadistic employer robs his employee. The employee fights back by stealing from him. A mediocre Magistrate, who would starve in private practice, jails him. His life is destroyed. You can steal from an employer and be jailed. But has there been any recorded case where a businessman is imprisoned for writing a “bounced” cheque?


I am picketing today to put pressure on our post-colonial leaders to reform the marijuana laws. The police seem to be interested only in arresting young men for smoking ganja, not the cocaine barons. Khemraj Ramjattan is a dear friend and someone I like and admire immensely. But my advice to him is to leave that Ministry immediately. The corrupt, incompetent police force is going to damage his career. Khemraj has chalked up a good legacy. A depraved police force is going to destroy it sooner than later.

I wonder who Vibert Butts voted for?

November 27, 2015 | By | Filed Under Features / Columnists, Freddie Kissoon 

I was a young man on the Walter Rodney bandwagon in the mid-seventies when Vibert Butts earned the distinction of scoring the first World Cup goal for Guyana. To clarify, he scored the goal in one of the preliminary matches that would determine advancement to the World Cup. The goal was against Suriname.
This week Butts was jailed for possession of marijuana and an additional charge that really gets me uncontrollably furious – possession of a smoking utensil. For the latter charge, he was jailed for a year
Butts was unrepresented. At the time of sentencing, he was a football coach. Butts knew my brother, “Lightweight” Kissoon closely. They worked tirelessly for countless hours together to develop football in Lodge. If my brother was alive I know he would have asked me to get legal assistance for Butts. Had I known Butts was unrepresented I would have definitely secured an attorney for him. I would advise any poor family to beg or borrow, but get a lawyer when the punishment is severe as stipulated by law.
I know a wash-bay employee who got forty- five consecutive years in the High Court on two counts of sexual molestation. When I read the court’s deposition I knew a lawyer would have been more effective than the accused who represented himself.
Two grey areas stood out for me. There was a dispute about the girl’s age with no birth certificate tendered. Her birth was not registered. Can you imagine what a top criminal lawyer would have told that court? Simple! Prove to me she is underage?
The second grey area is that in the state deposition, the girl admitted that she started having sex since she was twelve and could not name the boys she had sex with up to the time of the commencement of the trial. An appeal is made, so let’s leave it at that.
Too many poor people’s lives are destroyed by incompetent magistrates because they did not have an attorney to represent them. The thing that people do not know about drug conviction is that the very law offers scope for punishment other than prison.
There is the false impression that once found guilty, jail is mandatory. Special circumstances could be cited in terms of small possessions for community service. Some have benefited from that provision.
Ironic it is that when Butts made the headlines, the magistrate wasn’t even born. Ironic that Butts must have created dozens of great Guyanese footballers, but what have some of our magistrates ever created or will ever create? One should question how well their legal talent would have served them in private practice.
It is profoundly intriguing that the very day the newspapers published the sentence against Butts, the media was saturated with the long sentence of four men who, the trial transcript would reveal, were hired to kill an aging woman for her property. This case, known as the “Robb St. granny murder trial” makes a mockery of the celebration to come in May 2016 of 50 years of Independence. What was the Guyana Government thinking when it invited an unrepentant anarchist (anarchism as a philosophical school of thought) thinker like me to be part of the National Commemoration Commission?
What am I supposed to celebrate? A country that jailed an 18-year-old girl for six months for taking a speedboat to cross the Corentyne to enter Suriname without going through immigration; an act that has been done millions of times and that is going on right now as I write?  What am I supposed to say to Guyanese as a member of the National Commemoration Commission? That is alright for my country to jail young people at a tender age for the mere possession of a smoking utensil?
What do I say to the children when the National Commemoration Commission goes to the schools? That we must be proud of our 50 years of Independence? There must be a reason to be proud of something. Enumerate for me our accomplishments that would cause a human-rights activist like me to enter a school and urge students to be respectful of our 50 years of social, cultural, economic, technological, scientific and sports accomplishments?
I will have a lot more to say about the fifty-year journey that this country joined Dr. Faust in making to the kingdom of the devil, but for now, a lawyer should appeal the conviction of Vibert Butts. I wonder who Butts voted for in the May 2015 general elections, the PPP that had Lumumba who took care of all those soccer youths, or the PNC (not APNU) that has its own quota of protectors of soccer youths?

Mitwah

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