Roger Khan should be returned
to Guyana
THE Government
of Guyana should immediately make amends to its outrageous statement that it is
not yet interested in the extradition of Mr. Roger Khan. Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces, President Jagdeo The government
must not try to weasel itself from its legitimate
responsibilities. The government
is obligated to intervene to ensure that Mr. Roger Khan, a Guyanese
national, is accorded at
the minimum, the basic rights and privileges entitled to CARICOM nationals being
prosecuted in the judicial system of Suriname.
Shame-on-police-Gouveia
Jagdeo_the_novice.
Civil
Engineer Viticharan_rescued
Regardless of
what our opinions are, he must be the recipient of rights guaranteed under the
democratic principles by which all sister-CARICOM nations operate, and abide
with.
The claims of
this Guyanese citizen being subjected to cruel and inhuman treatment while in
the custody of Suriname police, must be investigated immediately, and if found
to be true, condemned wholly. The government should retain a legal team in this
matter immediately.
As the
Surinamese have moved from one form of charge to another, making inconsistent
statements, there is need for verification by the Government of Guyana that what
this Guyanese national is to be tried for is indeed based upon legitimately
acquired evidence, and not what may have been assembled through illegal or
coercive if not tortuous means.
In our country
where the very police commissioner is being made to answer to charges of having
(allegedly) planned to plant drugs on a Guyanese national, the government must
not assume that the police system of Suriname is a convent operated by bishops
and nuns. Further, it is well known that Guyanese nationals are not well
received in certain Caribbean territories (e.g., Barbados), and this fact should
emphasize the need for Guyana’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Mr. Rudy Insanally, to
likewise intervene.
Mr. Khan
should be returned to Guyana for he is, apparently, in possession of very
critical intelligence pertaining to the very security and future of
Guyana.
Until such
information regarding an alleged intended coup involving the PNCR and other
bodies, to force a new government upon the people of Guyana is verified, Mr.
Khan remains of immense importance.
If the Guyana
police under Commissioner Felix issued “wanted” bulletins for legitimate
reasons, and not because of the commissioner’s personal vendetta, then the
police must maintain its interest in Mr. Khan.
Therefore, it
must issue an immediate statement and if it fails to do so, the public must
necessarily assert that those bulletins were mere concoctions created under a
false guise to “ferret” (as per PNCR) Mr. Khan to commit the illegal act of
trespassing into Surinamese territory, and thereafter facilitate pre-election
disturbances to benefit the aforementioned coup and illegal government into
being.
It is vital
that all political parties be reminded that ours is not the business to
sacrifice their countrymen and women in order to reap favours from external
agencies (e.g., U.S.).
The PNCR
especially should take note. It has gone on record in Linden that it wants to
get answers from Khan regarding alleged “phantom” activities.
Well, if the
PNCR is serious, it must also ask that Khan be returned to Guyana and not be
sent to the U.S.
Only if Khan
is inside Guyana, can the PNCR get its answers. If we do not see this call, then
Mr. Robert Corbin was fooling the people in Linden.
In similar
light, those “civic” groups should now re-emerge and also call for Khan to be
returned to Guyana; since they have publicly demonstrated their faith in the
“rule of law” and “due process,” the public expects a statement asking for the
same rights to be accorded to Mr. Khan in Suriname.
Should they
fail to do so, then the public would regard their previous statement as
bogus.
Finally, the
PPP/C Government ought to be very careful. People are not blind: we know well
that the Joint Services
are not looking for any guns, but are doing the
groundwork for something else.
Any attempt to walk away from
the Khan trial may lead to a serious backlash.
People are
extremely angry, and rightfully so.
RAKESH RAMPERTAB
Saturday, June 24, 2006