UN Human Rights Committee Rebukes Guyana Government for Failure to Address Extrajudicial Killings

The United Nations Human Rights Committee has raised serious concerns regarding ongoing extrajudicial killings in Guyana, particularly involving the country’s police forces. In a recent report addressing Guyana’s human rights situation, the Committee expressed dismay over the lack of adequate measures to combat and prevent such offenses, as well as the failure to investigate and prosecute alleged extrajudicial killings dating back to the early 2000s.

The report underscores the Committee’s concern that extrajudicial killings have persisted in Guyana, with insufficient information provided about efforts to address and prevent these grave human rights violations. Of particular concern are allegations of extrajudicial killings occurring between 2002 and 2006, which have not been adequately investigated or prosecuted. Despite plans to establish a Presidential Commission of Inquiry to investigate these allegations in 2018, substantive progress has yet to be made.

In response to these findings, the UN Human Rights Committee has issued a series of recommendations to the Guyanese government. These recommendations include ensuring prompt, impartial, transparent, and thorough investigations into all allegations of extrajudicial killings, with perpetrators prosecuted and appropriately penalized if convicted. Additionally, the Committee calls for the establishment of a Presidential Commission of Inquiry to investigate alleged extrajudicial killings between 2002 and 2006 as a matter of priority.

Furthermore, the Committee emphasizes the importance of providing full reparation to the families of victims of extrajudicial killings and taking all necessary measures to prevent such violations from occurring in the future.

The issue of extrajudicial killings in Guyana has a troubling history, with reports of such incidents dating back several years. Addressing these violations and ensuring accountability for perpetrators is essential to upholding human rights and the rule of law in the country.

As Guyana works to address the concerns raised by the UN Human Rights Committee, it is important that steps are taken to end impunity for extrajudicial killings, ensure justice for victims and their families, and prevent such violations from occurring in the future.