WHO ARE THE REAL CRIMINALS IN PNG?


By David Kitchnoge

Within days of the first of two prison walk outs by late William Kapris and his band of inmates in 2010, state agencies including the police sprung into action and instantly declared the event a grave hazard to national security prompting the National Executive Council to convene and approve up to K3 million towards the recapture exercise without any hesitation.

All these agencies deserve to be commended for their super quick response, but the people of this country want to see an equal show of urgency, determination and resolve in dealing with the so called white collar crimes.
Lawlessness created by the average common criminal can easily be contained using a number of mostly more humane intervention measures outside of the justice system. Most of such crimes are born out of a quest for survival and so they can be addressed if the perpetrators are introduced to lawful alternative survival schemes.

White collar crimes or official corruption, on the other hand, are committed out of pure greed by people who already have more than enough relative to the rest of society. Hence, such crimes are harder to stop because the motive for the crime is such that the only available intervention tool is the unbiased enforcement of our laws without fear or favour.

Police, therefore, owe it to the commoner to properly investigate and effectively prosecute white collar crimes. The reason most of the common criminals find themselves on the wrong side of the law is due to gross negligence by the state towards addressing their welfare. A lot of them get into crime as a way of survival and a fair number of them commit crime as a way of rebelling against a society which they feel has let them down.

The real criminals, the wolves in sheep’s skin, steal and plunder our communal resources which should have been used to create better opportunities for the commoner. And what does the government and its agencies do about this? Next to nothing until Task Force Sweep came along. But it has been embroiled in Parakagate and has gone quiet since Tiensten.

Corruption is the biggest enemy for this country and it is the number one national security threat. If state authorities think common criminals are the major cause of national security issues, then I’m afraid but they’ve missed the ball completely.

The law must be applied consistently across the citizenry and corrupt white collar criminals must be served the equal wrath of the justice system that the common criminal is made to face. For the most part, they are the reasons for the agony that the common criminal faces behind bars.

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