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FM
Former Member

A most worthy alliance

February 18, 2015 | By | Filed Under Letters 
 

Dear Editor, I was one of the fiercest supporters of an AFC-led broad based alliance (BBA) as explained by AFC leader, Khemraj Ramjattan. In this regards, the terms of the recent Cummingsburg Accord have caused me some anxiety. However, after much consideration, this Accord, in its current construct, still emerges as a superior option than another term with Ramotar and Rohee. I continue to have absolute faith in Ramjattan as a principled politician whose only motivation has been the return to a path of social justice with economic empowerment for all. We all can learn from Ramjattan. I have known him for years and he has always placed the welfare of the people before his personal ambitions. I believe he has played this innings as best as he possibly could on a very sticky wicket for the team and the people of Guyana. Going it alone is not an option at this point. It could mean five more years of the PPP corruption, crookedness and cronyism.  If an APNU-led BBA can achieve the positive changes we all seek, then the choice is clear. When all the cameras are gone, every single Guyanese, like me, will have to level with our conscience in our private space and battle our fears because come tomorrow, we have to walk out that door and embrace the future.  This alliance has to work! When black South Africans made the honorable compromise and embraced white South Africans who oppressed them for years inside the Mandela cabinet they did it for the country. As an outcome of those interactions, understanding rather than racial fear won the day. Shouldn’t we in Guyana have the same dreams and ambitions? My name is Sase Singh and I endorse the decision of the AFC to join an APNU-lead broad based alliance. Sase Singh

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The harsh reality that faces APNU

February 11, 2015 | By | Filed Under Letters 

Dear Editor,
Whose Freedom at Midnight on May 11, 2015?
β€œDiscovery creates unity and unity is created in struggle….” – Walter Rodney (1974).
We in the working and academic class must never be distracted by the public antics of the Ramotar β€œpro-rogued” regime to truly appreciate that we have a duty to never allow an ethnic driven political force to dominate public life in Guyana again.  Participate-YES! Dominate-NO!
That is why in increasing numbers, we must speak out in our homes, in our villages, in the newspapers and debunk this obsession with harmony as a back door to ethnic supremacy. We have a right to call a spade a spade and understand that the PPP and the PNC which dominates the APNU are ethnic political parties.  No shame in that! But with that fact established, they must also know their place.
History will show that it was Walter Rodney who by the late 1970s had established himself as the principle threat to the afro-centric PNC dictatorship and to the indo-centric PPP because he was galvanizing support from all races.
One just has to revisit history to see our people coming together at the Bourda Green to identify with the message.  It was done, it can be done and it will be done again – unity.  But this is feat that neither the PPP nor the PNC which dominate the APNU can achieve.
After 50 years of suffering under various leaders in Government (I would always discount the decade of progress from 1989 – 1999), by way of this failed model of ethnic supremacy and a message of ethnic fear, do we think the working class is prepared to go on for another 50 years like this?
The sad truth remains that after 50 years, real freedom is still a prize to be won for the masses.  So why try the same old formula that failed to work in the past?  It is total insanity to do the same thing over and over and expect a different outcome.
Some vocal social commentators and newly converted APNU supporters would want to pretend they have the permission of the working class to advocate for an APNU-led Government, but it appears they selectively forget the events that unfolded at the 2014 PNC Congress – voter disenfranchisement, padded lists and the whole nine yards of how not to conduct one’s political affairs and mold a nation.  They are misinformed to think they can play with the intelligence of the working class.
That is why it is imperative, if these partnership talks between the AFC and the APNU are to succeed; we must all be true to ourselves and ask – what is the best programme and the best political construct that can motivate more people to abandon the PPP and beat the party at the ballot box – fair and square.
Those who never voted for the PPP will continue to not vote for the PPP whether the slate is APNU-led or PNC-led or AFC-led.  But what the PNC which dominates the APNU, has failed miserably to do over the last 50 years was to peel away enough voters who traditionally voted for the PPP to win the plurality or the majority.
My prediction in a three-way race, the APNU will fail again at this task.  This is the intangible asset of the AFC – the party successfully peeled away some voters from the PPP in the 2011 elections and will do even better in 2015.
That is why it is important to these talks because it is the AFC that is breaking the back of the PPP, not the APNU.
That decision to walk away from the PPP was not a cosmetic decision, it is a substantial decision.  There is a clear migration path for those who choose to walk away from the PPP and it is not into Congress Place.  If we are honest to ourselves, ask any person from Enmore or Albion who has made the decision to abandon the PPP if he or she will vote for APNU and the answer will be to the effect – β€œare you loco?”
This is not an abnormality since if you flip the same question in Linden or Buxton and ask – are you willing to vote for the PPP, the response will be even more resoundingly negative.
So with this background, I wish Mr. Carl Greenidge and Mr. David Patterson all success in these talks but they must know they are but only plenipotentiaries of the people and until the people ask for a different paradigm, the PPP and the PNC which dominate the APNU will continue to never win the hearts of the majority of our people.  This is another reason why it makes absolute sense for there to be an AFC-led coalition.
Sase Singh

FM

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