Dear Editor,
Former Commissioner of the Guyana Police Force, Seelall Persaud, opened up about his remarkable journey in law enforcement in his autobiography or memoir, ‘Stepping Out of the Herd: My Life in the Guyana Police Force (2022)’.
The book takes us through the humble life of young Seelall as he was growing up; life in Essequibo; his family life; his ancestors; and his 33.5 years as a law enforcement officer, rising through the Police Force (GPF) ranks to become the top cop; challenges and obstacles faced, including political interference and racism; reforming the GPF, and his forced retirement.
He also gave a brief overview or history of the Police Force (GPF) from its founding in 1838, and how it was used and abused as a force to control the population rather than as an institution for law enforcement. He offers recommendations for reforming the Force, including recruitment, training, promotion, and professionalism.
It is one of the finest books I have read, having found it gripping and quite engaging.
I think it is the first book from a former Guyana Police Commissioner or anyone from the GPF. I have written dozens of book reviews; this one gives me joy in penning it.
I do not hesitate to recommend this book for readership and for research purposes, especially for students and those in academia in the fields of political science and sociology. It should be compulsory reading for all college students, to know about various aspects of Guyana’s history, sociology, and politics.
Politicians should grab a copy and pay heed to the last couple of chapters on reforming the Force. Persaud makes definitive statements.
The book reveals how Seelall had a dazzling rise through the GPF, and ultimately had a dazzling career, becoming among the most famous Police Commissioners in Guyana’s history. In this vital memoir, Seelall revealed the inside stories of his family, his grandparents, his training as a Police officer, and his Policing career. He shares his candid experiences as a lawman, from recruitment, undergoing training, being forced to consume beef against his cultural and religious upbringing, and his many encounters with criminals, politicians, and ordinary folks.
His professionalism, integrity, and reputation as a no-nonsense officer catapulted him to the position of Police Commissioner.
The son and grandson of farmers, Seelall grew up in rural Essequibo, and also spent time during school breaks on the islands with cousins. He came from very humble beginnings, receiving his primary and secondary education on the Essequibo Coast. He loved cricket. He told how he lived a life marked by relative poverty and deprivation, and experiencing racism and yet soaring through the GPF ranks.
The book addresses controversial topics and offers insights into the challenges the GPF faces – recruitment training cadets, anti-Indian racism, Police morale, corruption inside the Force, political interference in law enforcement, and so much more. He sheds light on anti-crime measures, youth programmes to get gangs off the streets, the prison outbreak, and the so-called Buxton Uprising; Fineman Gang, Phantom Gang, and individuals tied to them; Lusignan and Bartica Massacres, the capture of violent criminals, Roger Khan, drug trafficking, Colombian connection; his training in UK, USA, Brazil; shootouts with violent criminals, corruption among some elements of the Force, declining morale, political directives of the Coalition that compromised his professionalism and that of the Force, and much more.
Seelall was dismayed by the corruption among some Police officers, especially among the old guard, and it is fair to say that the corrupt were upset with him for cracking down on them. He made passing reference to Burnhamism and banning of foods. He gave chilling accounts of terrorist plots against political opponents during the dictatorship, and harassment during the tenure of the Coalition (2015-2018, the year he retired). He describes his experiences with politicians, including President Cheddi Jagan, Bharrat Jagdeo, Donald Ramotar, David Granger, Khemraj Ramjattan, Basil Williams, and Winston Felix.
He also gives accounts of how some of his colleagues undermined him.
Seelall came to be known as a tough leader, a fixer of problems, not afraid to address complex matters. His interest in fighting crime cannot be denied. Although the GPF was politically compromised during the dictatorship, and had a bias toward the PNC, he acted professionally and did not take political sides. He was quite upset when he was told that Police officers were expected to vote PNC, and when instructed how to vote, marked the X next to the PNC palm tree in the December 1985 fraudulent election, witnessed by his commander. He accepted at the time that was the way things were done in the Force.
After working with various departments within the GPF, including overseeing Intelligence, when he became PC, Seelall tried to transform the force. He tried to slash crime rates and professionalise the vocation of the cop by providing computerised training in filing reports. Zara Realty (Sobhraj family) of NY equipped the Force with a computer training lab. Seelall tried to use computers to revolutionise the Force, especially in reporting and keeping tab of crimes, and to combat crime with modern data-driven policing. Efforts at reform were stymied. He did not receive support from the then Coalition Administration to modernise and reform the Force.
Seelall’s career has not been without controversy, certainly under the PNC-led Coalition Administration. There was the crisis of relations between himself and the Coalition, a crisis inflamed by a virtual non-issue relating to then President David Granger. Seelall was sent on leave while an inquiry was launched into why he did not investigate a benign (non-serious, jovial) threat against Granger, which was reported some five months later and which turned out to be bogus after investigation.
It was a plot to get rid of Seelall, hatched by a senior officer. The case against Seelall fell apart, yet he was not kept in his substantive position, and was unjustifiably sent on leave till retirement age.
This is one of the finest autobiographies I have read. It is a frank, forthright, free-spoken, open, plain, straightforward, candid account of the culture of the Police Force and his training and enforcement experience as a Police officer, and how politicians compromise the Force by using it for their political agendas, rather than for law enforcement.
Seelall’s no-holds-barred autobiography of his career as a tough, honest Policeman, who rose from a young farm boy to a cadet to the top cop of the nation, is a must-read.
Yours truly,
Vishnu Bisram