November 15, 2024

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Home Affairs Minister declares that diversified workforce leads to professionalism

Home Affairs Minister, Robeson Benn

The Home Affairs Ministry’s vision for improving the force’s image and ensuring professionalism at all times is through diversifying the Guyana Police Force to include more ethnic groups and women.

The ministry noted that the police force over the past few years has been facing harsh criticisms from the public with respect to its image when dealing with certain issues and its overall conduct. As such, Home Affairs Minister Robeson Benn, during a seminar held virtually on Thursday, acknowledged that this is one of the many challenges being faced by the force.

He related that as the minister with responsibility for the force, he is working to address this. “Diversity will bring along professionalism, it will bring along the platforms from which we could do the reform of the Guyana Police Force. We’re working hard on issues of reform. We have quite a large number of studies in relation to some of the reforms which should proceed, other than bringing in a few experts,” Minister Benn said.

Benn expressed the view that without a diverse force, empathy and caring for each other will not be achieved. “Unless we have a full participation of various groupings, religions, ethnicities in these groupings, this would speak perhaps to even in the interior of the country and in particular communities, where say the police would not be viewed as an occupying force or powerful, disdainful, coast landers are there, we don’t have a particular care or interest in learning how people live, what language they speak,” Benn noted.

The minister said that in addition, that too often police officers deal with issues personally and not with professionalism. He said these officers must understand that they are the ones to protect citizens and must act accordingly.

“The issue is to make policing more professional and not personal. It is heavily personalised, it’s very disdainful, not that there aren’t many many good policing but the negatives are sometimes overwhelming and surprising and even ridiculous at times, comical sometimes,” Benn explained.

The minister pointed out that the ministry is looking to install cameras at every police station to monitor engagements between police officers and members of the public.

“We are going to be putting in cameras in all the police station, so where there is contact between the police and the population, there will be cameras that will be recording that engagement. “We’re talking the talk about how when people come to the police station how they’re treated, whether they’re chased out, whether their information is taken down, whether there’s a safe space for women who are suffering from domestic abuse or for children who may have issues under the law. So, the issue is to make policing professional and not personal,” he disclosed.

The minister disclosed that the improvements to the force will not be done overnight, but it would need cooperation from individuals, communities, religious bodies and the changing cultural behaviour.

Minister Benn expressed the view that with the current leadership, vast improvements will be made. “I think with the new leadership and new vision and new approach to the issue of making out policing better, we’re moving along that pathway,” he added.