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August 15,2021

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Dear Editor,

On July 30, 2021, I wrote “In our multiethnic society, all must play an inclusive role in our national defence”, refuting Hamilton Green’s antagonistic position against creating a balanced (or inclusive) disciplinary force. Terrence Campbell (7/31/21), a successful African-Guyanese businessman, raised genuine concerns about the “exclusion of Afro-Guyanese from the private sector”.  A Stabroek News blogger, Mike Persaud (8/2/21), argued that an inclusive disciplined forces should not be contingent upon any other national issue. I share the sentiments of both men. Guyana remains a deeply divided state. On Sunday, August 8, at an Indo-Caribbean Cultural Centre (ICC) Zoom public meeting with panelists Dr. Tara Singh and Ravi Dev, the audience was reminded that not a single prominent African Guyanese organization publicly denounced President David Granger’s perfidy of the 2020 elections.  While the PNC continues to gaslight its supporters, the party has successfully united its traditional base against the government, mainly using accusations of corruption, racism and economic deprivation/neglect. With a largely Indian audience at the public meeting, a question was posed: “If the PPP/C were to demit office or lose the election four years from now, would you feel safe under a PNC or coalition government?” I suggested an action plan, based, inter alia, on the following:

1) A national Affirmative Action Program to help economically and socially depressed communities, particularly Amerindians, to ensure all Guyanese benefit from state resources (small business loans, government training, etc.,) to advance their human development. Such a plan would address accusations that PPP/C supporters are primarily beneficiaries of the largess of the state. An ethnic caucus, akin to the “Black Caucus” in the US Congress, with legitimate representatives from each major community can act as an advisory body to the government on specific policies going forward.

2) Utilization of Ethnic Impact Statements to evaluate and assess effectiveness of national policies and their potential impact on specific communities. This would ensure a more equitable use and distribution of state resources and negate charges by African leaders that the PPP/C is promoting “economic genocide” (a term frequently used by Aubrey Norton and Lincoln Lewis).

3) Creation of a decentralized (or Federal) state, constructed not necessarily on the basis of ethnicity, but centered on geography and population distribution, with real power embedded in local governments. Such a systemic and structural transformation would address unequal development, empower local communities and reduce dependency on a national government with centralized powers.   

Regarding the issue of balancing in public institutions, it was Vice-President Jagdeo who reminded Guyanese at the May 2021 Diaspora Conference that Afro Guyanese maintained  “overwhelming numbers” in the army, police and public service, even during his tenure as President. However, Jagdeo’s comments were meant to benevolently placate Africans, not as an argument for inclusivity. Surely, President Ali must know about President Hoyte’s appeal to “kith and kin” or the violent street protests on January 12, 1998, following the 1997 elections, resulting in the Herdmanston Accord which truncated the PPP’s official term by 2 years. Despite its obvious urgency, the PPP/C leadership will not willingly move to create an inclusive security and defense force for two reasons. One, Cheddi Jagan bequeathed the PPP/C with an original political sin, namely that politics in Guyana must be understood through the lens of class analysis, despite the primacy of race/ethnicity. This embedded Marxist paradigm reinforces the view that as the economy develops, its trickled down effect will render ethnic politics obsolete. So why bother to frontally address the problem? Two, as Professor Tarron Khemraj noted, the oil/gas wealth has endowed the PPP/C with enormous leverage to manipulate state resources to “buy off” (coopt) potential members of the African community.

Our history has shown that both of these misguided strategies have worked to the detriment of the PPP/C, and its supporters. To date, the PNC has not renounced its penchant for violent street protest (Norton calls them “strategic” protests). We are now witnessing continued street protests, egged on by PNC Parliamentarians, as David Hinds calls on Buxtonians to protest with “aggressive militancy”. The government should also be mindful of a recent warning regarding the use of the oil windfall from Albio Sires, Chairman of the US Congressional sub-committee on the Western Hemisphere, upholding the dictum that “there are no permanent friends, only interests”.  Supporters of the PPP/C anxious over what life might bring them in a post-PPP Guyana have an obligation to demand that the Ali/Jagdeo administration frontally address the ethnic dilemma.  If President Ali is secure in his control of power, and confident in his ability to govern, a good place to start would be to enter into national dialogue with the Opposition. Waiting until the PNC reconciles its internal contradictions will only pose a greater challenge to the government with the possibility of erasing all that has been achieved during the PPP/C’s first year in office.

Sincerely,

Baytoram Ramharack

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Perfectly fine essay and proposals. There is a fight to the end. Both sides think they can win and dominate the other. When PPP wins they at least dish out goodies to many black people. When PNC win they largely keep it to demselves...they hand out contracts to a few Indos out of necessity...those who finance their campaign.

FM

3) Creation of a decentralized (or Federal) state, constructed not necessarily on the basis of ethnicity, but centered on geography and population distribution, with real power embedded in local governments. Such a systemic and structural transformation would address unequal development, empower local communities and reduce dependency on a national government with centralized powers.  



For this to happen, the Constitution would need to be changed to define the powers of the Local Governments and the Central Government whom I assume will control the purse string.

The Police force should be structured likewise. Each Superintendent answering to the "Regional Head", who shall be responsible to oversee the efforts to fight crime, with the power to terminate or demote. More power to the Local Government .

Mitwah
@Former Member posted:

Spugum...yuh going and kiss de right or what?

nah bai, dem people fh got the tears of mothers, fathers and children pun dem

as bob marley said: they eat the bread of sad tomorrow

i can never be involved with that

S
@Spugum posted:

nah bai, dem people fh got the tears of mothers, fathers and children pun dem

as bob marley said: they eat the bread of sad tomorrow

i can never be involved with that

I see you pick your side with blood on dem haans? You prefer the crew who engineered the jailbreak and Buxton uprising? Yuh ever count up all the Indos dem disappear in the backlands? Your right to choose yuh bloody haans. Lol!

FM
@Former Member posted:

I see you pick your side with blood on dem haans? You prefer the crew who engineered the jailbreak and Buxton uprising? Yuh ever count up all the Indos dem disappear in the backlands? Your right to choose yuh bloody haans. Lol!

who engineered the jailbreak?

give us the names of the indos that disappeared in the backlands, bai. yuh talking this story like yuh know it....go ahead, give us the names

S
@Spugum posted:

who engineered the jailbreak?

give us the names of the indos that disappeared in the backlands, bai. yuh talking this story like yuh know it....go ahead, give us the names

Oh, I know the story very well. Mek sure that you hide the bloody haans when you use yuh black privilege to visit your senators. Lol!

FM
@Former Member posted:

Oh, I know the story very well. Mek sure that you hide the bloody haans when you use yuh black privilege to visit your senators. Lol!

yuh lie like when horse trotting

always know and never could back it up with anything. gwaan duh side!

yuh like freddie kissoon, always with a story that is either completely false, half truth or gossip

y'all wuss than some a dem market women when it come to gossip

S

As a boy living in kitty I watched a woman curse her red daughter for 3 hours for getting pregnant for the inferior subhuman koolie. When people see you as just an inferior subhuman koolie and koolies see their fellow koolies with just hate and envy. It is a terrible position to be in

Ali Khan Azad
@Former Member posted:

Oh, I know the story very well. Mek sure that you hide the bloody haans when you use yuh black privilege to visit your senators. Lol!

Don't worry...Dem bais can pelt de evidence  pon Burke and de US senator face when time comes. Don't get too overconfident bout aluh ethnic network. Lol!

FM
@Former Member posted:

Don't worry...Dem bais can pelt de evidence  pon Burke and de US senator face when time comes. Don't get too overconfident bout aluh ethnic network. Lol!

you sound worried - lol

black organisation and resistance have always drawn other ethnicities in support because the best examples are JUST.

black people are resilient so they take more than most could but when they've had enough they organise and resist and are able to attract others to the cause. quite remarkable really

you're enjoying your civil and political rights in america because of black organisation and resistance. I'm sure you're loving it

so sit back and watch how it's done. been happening since slavery

S

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