Latest update March 5th, 2026 12:35 AM
Mar 05, 2026 Letters
Dear Editor,
I write with deep distress and mounting concern regarding the recent reports of a teenage mother who lost her life and another underage teen who reportedly suffered abuse at the hands of her 28-year-old boyfriend. These tragic accounts demand more than sympathy; they require institutional introspection and decisive corrective action.
It is equally troubling to recognise that had the death of the teen not been made public, Guyanese may very well have remained oblivious to the circumstances surrounding this situation. That reality alone raises serious questions about transparency, reporting mechanisms, and whether other similar cases may have gone unnoticed or unaddressed.
The recurring pattern of underage girls becoming pregnant, carrying pregnancies to term, and delivering within our public health system cannot be viewed as isolated occurrences. These are clear indicators that safeguarding mechanisms are either weak, inconsistently applied, or entirely bypassed.
The law provides protective frameworks for minors. When an underage teen presents at a hospital pregnant or in labour, mandatory reporting protocols should be immediately activated. Healthcare institutions are not passive service providers; they are critical gatekeepers in the child protection system. The involvement of a minor in a sexual relationship with an adult is not a private matter — it is a statutory issue requiring referral to the appropriate authorities.
One must therefore question whether the relevant notifications were made to the Childcare and Protection Agency. Were established reporting procedures followed? If not, why not? If they were followed, what timely interventions occurred?
Institutional accountability is not optional; it is foundational to public trust. When systems fail to intervene at obvious points of vulnerability, children are left exposed to continued abuse, coercion, and, in the most tragic instances, the loss of life.
This matter must prompt a comprehensive review of mandatory reporting compliance, inter-agency coordination, and enforcement protocols. Silence and procedural lapses cannot be allowed to persist where minors are concerned.
The safety of our young girls demands vigilance, transparency, and uncompromising adherence to the law. We owe them proactive protection, not retrospective regret.
Yours sincerely,
Annette Ferguson
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