More than 250 vehicles with outstanding traffic tickets were identified in a single night during a pilot mobile AI enforcement exercise on the East Coast, President Dr Mohamed Irfaan Ali said today.

He said the test run involved mobile units that can move through communities and automatically flag vehicles with unpaid fines as part of government’s push toward a fully technology-driven national security system.

“No human can interfere with the system because the system would pick them up, document it on a screen, and put it in a database,” he said.

President Ali explained that the mobile enforcement initiative is part of a wider plan to integrate artificial intelligence into policing and traffic management across Guyana.

Alongside the mobile units, the government is also moving ahead with the establishment of smart police stations equipped with AI-powered systems, online crime reporting, digital service delivery, integrated national databases, and real-time command and control operations.

He said the new system will eventually allow citizens to access services such as police clearances without physically visiting police stations, with kiosks to be installed at key locations to reduce waiting times.

The administration is also investing in predictive security technologies, including facial recognition, behavioural analytics, automated threat detection, and smart surveillance tools.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here