Guyana Police Seeking Interpol Help in Aircraft Probe

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President Granger says Government has moved to reduce ministerial budgets in order to find funds to enable sugar workers to receive their severance pay.
Pres. David Granger

President Concerned Hinterland Residents Not Noticing Illegal Planes

GUYANA — The Guyana Police Force said they have sought international help as the “wide-ranging” probe into the landing of an unauthorised aircraft at an illegal airstrip in Guyana’s jungle continues.

This comes even as President David Granger on Monday expressed surprise that no one in the hinterland has been seeing the landing and taking off of illegal aircraft on unauthorised airstrips.

Head of the Guyana Police Force’s (GPF) Criminal Investigations Department, Senior Superintendent Wendell Blanhum was reported by Demerara Waves online news as saying local law enforcement agents have asked the International Police Organisation (InterPol) for help in finding who is responsible for the Brazilian-registered Beechcraft Kingair plane that was found in North Rupununi on Sunday, August 13, 2017.

“We have already involved Interpol (International Police Organisation),” he said while declining to divulge details of the probe. He said particulars of an identification card and passport found aboard the plane have been passed on to international partners.

A team of CID detectives are due to fly into the North Rupununi region to intensify their probe about the aircraft, bearing authenticated registration markings- PR-IMG- on a recently leveled illegal airstrip.

A cursory search of the plane, now located at the Eugene F. Correia ‘Ogle’ Airport has not uncovered any drugs or firearms.

The Director General of the Guyana Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA), Retired Colonel Egbert Field has said that no one has come forward to claim the twin-engine plane. The aircraft, which is formally registered to Banco Bradesco through a financing deal, was sold by Riwa SA to Sinalizacao Ltda ME in April, 2017 for US$850,000 cash.

Earlier Monday, Demerara Waves reported, President Granger, in addressing the opening of the 2017 National Toshaos Council Conference, called on village leaders to work together to combat the threat of transnational criminal syndicates.

“We cannot have a situation in any region where foreign aircraft land and deposit contraband substances and no one saw, no one heard, no one knows what occurred…We have to take responsibility for our security because these transnational cartels do not wish us any good,” he was reported as saying.

Granger said those criminals would destroy households, families and communities and erode good governance that government and the NTC were trying to forge. He warned “these criminal cartels will bring violence and death.”

The President also expressed concern about alcoholism and teenage pregnancy as well as the high level of suicide in an unnamed hinterland community. He promised that government would work with the NTC through the Ministry of Indigenous Peoples Affairs to support improvement and equality of lives.

In September 2015, an illegal Cessna plane was found sheltered in thick vegetation at Yupukari, Rupununi. Investigators later learnt that the plane bore false United States registration markings and had in fact originated from Colombia.