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“Arrest of the Mohameds Raises Questions About Guyana’s Independence and Selective Justice” – Observer

Staff Writer by Staff Writer
October 31, 2025
in News
L-R President Irfaan Ali, VP Bharrat Jagdeo and Azruddin Mohamed

L-R President Irfaan Ali, VP Bharrat Jagdeo and Azruddin Mohamed

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GEORGETOWN, GUYANA —In a dramatic turn of events, WIN Party Leader and prominent businessman Azruddin Mohamed and his father, Nazar “Shell” Mohamed, were arrested in Georgetown earlier today. The arrests come just weeks after the U.S. government indicted both men on allegations of fraud related to gold exports, setting the stage for what could become one of Guyana’s most politically charged extradition battles in recent history.

While few dispute that the Mohameds face serious allegations, the circumstances and timing of their arrests have stirred concern among observers who see this as a troubling test of Guyana’s independence and its uneven relationship with Washington.

Several analysts have noted that U.S. Senator Marco Rubio and his political allies in Florida have long sought to assert influence in the region.  The sudden targeting of the Mohameds, who have maintained extensive business interests and recently entered the political arena, appears, to many, less about justice and more about power and control.

“There are individuals who have done far more damage to Guyana’s reputation and economy who remain untouched,” one source close to the situation told The Voice. “Why them, and why now?”

Indeed, many question why the United States has chosen to pursue the Mohameds, while other major gold operators and political financiers, including figures with close ties to the ruling People’s Progressive Party (PPP), remain unbothered.

The PPP as a party has benefitted to the tune of tens of millions in campaign financing from the Mohameds, and it is widely alleged that the family played a significant role in the no-confidence motion that removed the APNU+AFC coalition from office in 2018. Yet today, the relationship has clearly soured. Having fallen out with the Mohameds, the PPP now appears bent on showing who holds power, and how that power can be wielded to serve political and personal interests.

For decades, the Mohameds’ companies employed thousands of Guyanese, contributing to the nation’s economic life in ways few private groups have matched. Their empire grew alongside the country’s modern economy, sometimes controversially, often visibly, but always as part of the Guyanese story.

Now, with both father and son facing possible extradition to the United States, the question isn’t only about guilt or innocence. It’s about sovereignty, fairness, and the selective nature of justice. If Washington can unilaterally define who is corrupt and who is not (corrupt enough), while local leaders cheer, then Guyana’s independence becomes little more than symbolism.

As one political observer put it, “The government should not be celebrating. If the Mohameds fall, others, perhaps closer to the corridors of power, will eventually face the same scrutiny. Washington’s favor is fickle.”

In the coming days, the case is expected to move to the Magistrates’ Court, where legal teams are preparing to challenge any extradition attempts. The Mohameds’ lawyers include British and Caribbean senior counsel, signaling a high-stakes legal showdown ahead.

For now, the arrests serve as a reminder that Guyana’s gold may glitter, but its justice gleams unevenly, and that in the new oil-rich republic, sovereignty remains fragile when power is borrowed from abroad.

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