President convenes high level security meeting
President David Granger sits alongside Prime Minister ,Moses Nagamootoo, Minister of Public Security , Khemraj Ramjattan ,  Minister of State , Joseph Harmon , Attorney General Basil Williams (partly hidden) and a member of the security services.
President David Granger sits alongside Prime Minister ,Moses Nagamootoo, Minister of Public Security , Khemraj Ramjattan , Minister of State , Joseph Harmon , Attorney General Basil Williams (partly hidden) and a member of the security services.

President David Granger on Thursday morning convened a meeting of the National Security Committee to address problems of crime and security, review the security sector’s 2017 performance and to plan programme for 2018, the Ministry of the Presidency said.

Earlier this week the Guyana Chronicle reported that the Guyana Police Force (GPF) solved 77 percent of all murder cases last year, the highest percentage achieved by the police   force in years.

The meeting in progress on Thursday morning.

Acting Commissioner of Police, David Ramnarine told a news conference last week that there were 116 reports of murder in 2017 as against 142 in 2016. The figure represented a decrease of 18 percent, but what was more significant is of the 116 cases of murder, 88 were solved. “This percentage has been very high for the Guyana Police Force (GPF) and for this country for quite a long while and we believe this ranks among the highest solved or clear-up rate anywhere in recent times,” he said.

Speaking about the 11 per cent decrease in serious crimes, the acting Top Cop said that at the end of the year, the figure was around 10 per cent. He commended his ranks for the extra work they put in during the holidays to achieve a further reduction.” He also expressed concern about the troubling spate of carjackings, with the perpetrators showing a preference for Toyota Premio and Toyota Allion brands.

According to Ramnarine, the carjackings seem to have some sort of “criminal industrialised concept, with apparent collusion between several players in the criminal enterprise. “In the first two months of the last quarter of 2017, we saw an increase (in carjackings) which was worrisome. In 2015, there were 41 cases, there were 36 in 2016, and 47 (carjackings) in 2017. We note of the 47 cases, in 2017, 16 (of the stolen vehicles) were Toyota Premio, and eight were Toyota Allion,” he said.

Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo, Minister of Public Security, Khemraj Ramjattan; Minister of State, Joseph Harmon and Attorney General, Basil Williams attended the meeting along with heads of the security services.

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