Vice President Dr Bharrat Jagdeo on Thursday blasted Opposition MP and U.S.-indicted businessman Azruddin Mohamed for what he described as a “brazen act of arrogance,” after Mohamed drove his luxury Lamborghini to Parliament earlier this week — reportedly without valid insurance.Speaking during his press conference at Freedom House, Robb Street, Georgetown, Jagdeo said the move was intended to provoke and demonstrate impunity.“He brought his Lamborghini to show me… that’s what he said,” Jagdeo recounted. “From what I gather, that vehicle doesn’t even have insurance. Any ordinary Guyanese caught driving without insurance would be in serious trouble. But he drove it to Parliament to show Jagdeo that he can break the laws of the country.”The Vice President stressed that driving an uninsured vehicle on public roads is illegal, noting that such actions endanger lives. “If you hit someone without insurance, you’re in big trouble. Yet the police just stood by and allowed it. That’s unacceptable,” he said.Jagdeo went further, warning that Commissioner of Police Clifton Hicken should be held accountable if any harm occurs as a result of the vehicle being on the road. “If a child or anyone gets hit and injured or killed by that Lamborghini, Hicken should face criminal charges too, because he allowed it,” Jagdeo declared.The Vice President accused Mohamed of flaunting his wealth to defy the rule of law and taunt state institutions. “He wasn’t showing the finger to me — he was showing the finger to the country, to law and order,” Jagdeo said. “What he’s saying is, ‘I can steal, I can evade taxes, I can buy off people in the police, the GRA, or the courts and get away with it.’ That’s the message.”Jagdeo reminded that U.S. financial records show a cashier’s cheque for US$680,085 issued by a California bank to purchase the same Lamborghini from Lamborghini Newport Beach, even though it was declared in Guyana for just US$75,000.“This is the same Lamborghini the U.S. has tied to his financial dealings,” Jagdeo said. “But rather than address that illegality, some sections of the media romanticised it… like it was a show of glamour. That’s complicity.”He argued that Mohamed’s behaviour reflects a deeper arrogance and belief that he is above the law. “It’s criminal behaviour, flaunted in people’s faces,” Jagdeo said. “If your child had been hit down by that car, you would not be cheering it on. They think there are two sets of laws in this country… one for them and one for everyone else.”The Vice President maintained that such actions underscore a culture of entitlement and disregard for accountability. “They believe they can do anything in Guyana and get away with it,” Jagdeo said. “That’s not showing off a car…that’s showing contempt for the law.”The post Azruddin drove Lamborghini to Parliament possibly without insurance – ‘he showed the finger to law and order’ – Jagdeo appeared first on News Room Guyana.