Latest update November 17th, 2024 1:00 AM
Feb 01, 2014 Editorial
Youth involvement in crime has reached unprecedented proportions. In fact, just about every country in the English-speaking Caribbean seems to be grappling with this problem. Of course, young people have always been credited with impetuousness and hostility for the greater part.
Many young people try to grab attention as they seek to make a name for themselves. The search for identity is crucial for young people; it leads them to form groups and stage so-called initiations. Sometimes the initiation can be horrendous—go kill a man or burn a house. The need to belong can override the sense of righteousness instilled in everyone; such is the power of peer pressure. Having established oneself there is now the perception that the individual hopes to create.
In every society young people seek role models but these days the role models are mostly of the violent types. They are the rich and powerful. The money is made from nefarious activities and the fame is often created by anti-social measures. So it is that drug dealers with their armies are often the role models and the more gruesome their operations the more sought after is the image.
Unfortunately, in the wider world the role models are the high profile stage performers, prominent sportsmen, and of course the drug dealer who flaunts large and impressive bits of jewellery which in modern parlance is called bling.
In Guyana, the incidence of poverty and the absence of an adequate number of male teachers have led to many boys leaving school before they are actually ready to enter the world of work. The result is that they have no jobs and they need money to live like their role models, the big spenders. The result is that they steal.
In Guyana we have on many occasions commented on the open borders and about the things that can cross these borders. That there seems to be a proliferation of guns; just about every young man who commits a crime does so with a gun. While it is not unheard of, a fifteen-year-old was shot and killed in a house whole attempting to commit a robbery. At that age most boys were doing childish things.
We are now being exposed to the range of teenage and other youth criminals. In this month alone the nation has been exposed to two teenagers transporting an M-16 rifle, grenades and some sixty rounds of ammunition. Then there were the young men who made life for taxi drivers a nightmare. So far, there is no evidence to suggest that the men who kidnapped and killed some hire car drivers before taking their cars were older than eighteen.
During the crime wave that spread from 2002 to 2006 and even in the years after the nation got used to teenage gunmen. Survivors of the Lusignan Massacre spoke of children carrying high powered rifles and using them with deadly effect.
Many of the out of school teenage boys have become drug couriers because the pay is good and the work is nothing compared to the manual labour of the skilled personnel. And each year an increasing number of young uneducated men join the ranks of the criminals.
The Caribbean governments are now devising plans to curb this trend of the young men rushing to swell the ranks of the criminal world. They are considering measures that are rooted in job creation. Guyana for its part is now piloting a programme called Hope For All. It involves skills training and computer learning. The hope is that once armed with a skill the youth would pursue honest labour. But this would only be a reality of the young men and young girls are also targeted by other social organizations. This is where the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Home Affairs and the Ministry of Culture make their presence felt.
Yet this may only be wishful thinking because the nation is experiencing a wave of crime by a group of educated people, to wit, University of Guyana students, who have been committing violent crimes.
Nov 17, 2024
Kaieteur Sports- The Petra Organisation’s MVP Sports Girl’s Under-11 Football Tournament kicked off in spectacular fashion yesterday at the Ministry of Education ground on Carifesta Avenue,...…Peeping Tom Kaieteur news- The People’s Progressive Party Civic (PPP/C) stands at a crossroads. Once the vanguard... more
By Sir Ronald Sanders Kaieteur News – There is an alarming surge in gun-related violence, particularly among younger... more
Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: [email protected] / [email protected]