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Amerindian rights under a PPP/C led Gov’t assured – Moruca residents hear-at PPPC meeting

Georgetown, GINA, November 5, 2011
Sourc - GINA

President Bharrat Jagdeo speaking to residents of Moruca, Region One during a public meeting at the Kumaka playfield

Moruca, Region One residents were told of the transformation indigenous peoples of Guyana have made from the most neglected population to the most progressive when the ruling People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) held a public meeting in the community today.

President Bharrat Jagdeo joined PPP/C Presidential Candidate Donald Ramotar, Minister of Amerindian Affairs Pauline Sukhai, Minister of Local Government Norman Whittaker, Presidential Adviser on Governance Gail Teixeira, Chairman of Region One, Fermin Singh and others in speaking to residents as the campaign trail to national and regional elections continues.

The meeting held on the Kumaka playfield saw residents turning out in support of the ruling party and endorsing Ramotar as the first presidential hopeful with Amerindian lineage.

Presidential Candidate Donald Ramotar greeting residents of Moruca minutes before a public PPP/C meeting

The Regional Chairman, Community Development Officer (CDO) Zola Da Silva and Toshao Marco De Souza while addressing the gathering gave testimony to many aspects of developments in Moruca under the PPP/C, pointing to education, health and road infrastructure.

For 2011, road works include 22 miles from Santa Rosa to Waramuri, 3 miles from Kumaka to Acquero, 3 miles from Kamwatta main road to Kwebanna and 11 miles that link Manawarin to the main road.

Minister Sukhai said Amerindians can today walk with their heads held high since under the PPP/C they have made unprecedented achievements as Government Ministers and doctors.

“When it was the PNC (in Government) the Amerindians were not even in the mainstream of society. We did not have the democracy, Amerindians did not have the chance or could not even dream of becoming ministers,” Minister Sukhai said.

Residents of Moruca, Region One assembled at the Kumaka playfield for a public meeting with the PPP/C

The Amerindian population in Guyana, once five percent, has now grown to nine and according to Teixeira; the increase came as a result of efforts by the government to improve the quality of life for Amerindians.

President Jagdeo said that today the gap in opportunities available on the coastland and the hinterland has been significantly reduced and pointed to improvements in access to education beyond primary school.

Over 700 students in Moruca alone are accessing secondary education and according to Minister Sukhai, there are now 10 secondary schools in hinterland communities. In Region One there are the Port Kaituma, North West and Santa Rosa Secondary school.

Reference was made to the Hinterland Scholarship Programme (HSP) which affords students from the hinterland communities, access to quality secondary or technical education in the city which they would otherwise not have been able to access in their communities.

Scholarships to Cuba were also mentioned and according to President Jagdeo, Amerindians have proven themselves to be the most intelligent.

“You have some of the brightest people in the world from the Amerindian communities. Today our policemen, doctors, nurses and scientists and engineers are coming from the Amerindian communities,” President Jagdeo said.

The Head of State said that under the PNC, Amerindians were treated as second class citizens and recalled the period when the opposition party had criticised government’s plan to enroll hinterland students at President’s College even though in the end an Amerindian was the top student.

Ramotar criticised the opposition parties’ attempts to discourage the land titling process by recruiting agents from the communities to stymie attempts at a consensus on the titling.

The Presidential Candidate assured the residents that under his tenure the rights of Amerindians are ensured.

“You can trust us. We have given you the land and we will do nothing to ever deprive you of any of your rights. I will never allow your rights to be restricted,” Ramotar said.

The opposition parties’ categorization of government’s support to Amerindian communities as “handouts,” was also strongly criticized during today’s meeting.

Teixeira said that Guyana is the only country with an indigenous population that has been given communal land title rights. She also made reference to the amendment of the archaic Amerindian Act which she described as the best model in the world.

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quote:

The Presidential Candidate assured the residents that under his tenure the rights of Amerindians are ensured.

“You can trust us. We have given you the land and we will do nothing to ever deprive you of any of your rights. I will never allow your rights to be restricted,” Ramotar said.

FM
quote:

Scholarships to Cuba were also mentioned and according to President Jagdeo, Amerindians have proven themselves to be the most intelligent.

“You have some of the brightest people in the world from the Amerindian communities. Today our policemen, doctors, nurses and scientists and engineers are coming from the Amerindian communities,” President Jagdeo said.

FM
At Moruca rally … PPP/C slams PNC’s past hinterland education policies

Written by Johann Earle
Sunday, 06 November 2011 04:27
Source - Guyana Chronicle

Yesterday at Moruca (Photos by presidential photographer, Sandra Prince)

BOTH PPP/C presidential candidate Donald Ramotar and outgoing President Bharrat Jagdeo condemned the previous administration’s education policy in Amerindian communities when the PPP/C held its rally in Moruca, Region One (Barima-Waini) yesterday morning.

A number of Moruca residents and those from contiguous villages braved the scorching mid-morning sun to hear the plans a Donald Ramotar presidency would implement for the lives of Amerindians and hinterland residents.

The theme of most presentations yesterday focused on education and the possibilities under continued PPP/C rule.

Tapping into his riverine roots, Ramotar disclosed that many of his friends from Caria Caria, Essequibo, never had the opportunity to fulfil their potential because they lacked school facilities under the PNCR administration. He deemed himself fortunate to have had relatives on the coast, with whom he resided together with some of his siblings in order to attain an education.

He said that because of the lack of opportunities in Caria Caria, many of his friends had withered away and had resorted to rum-drinking and destroying themselves, “obviously out of frustration that they didn’t have this opportunity to develop.” He said that only 30 percent of the children in the primary schools could have found a place in the secondary school system at the time. “They were condemning most of our people into a life of poverty and lack of education. They did not care, as long as they stayed in office. We, on the other hand, have been concentrating all of our efforts on spending money on you,” he said.

He added that the PNC spent $1 billion on education the last year that party was in office. “Today, we are spending about $20 billion a year on education, and we are ensuring that you will have equal opportunity as anyone else in our country,” he said. “That is why we have been providing secondary schools in these areas, and providing them with hostels and providing three meals a day.”

“We are still a poor country. We still have many things to do, many things to work for, but we have made the sacrifices in investing in education,” he said. “We have given opportunities to people in the interior to study at the highest institution in our land.”

He said that it was because of the PPP’s attitude to the people of interior communities that he became attracted to the party. “I remember (that), in my early life, the PPP was making attempts to change those conditions,” he said. He recalled the days when the early PPP government made provision for the healing of the sick in the riverine and other far-flung communities.

The PPP presidential candidate said that the PNC government became unaccountable to the people of Guyana and stole their votes. “That is why we had a very serious problem with them, because of how they conducted business in our country,” he said. “They made the Parliament like a rubber stamp...the last four years Dr. [Cheddi] Jagan spent in Parliament (while in opposition) he could not speak...he was banned from speaking. And now, today, they talk all kinds of nonsense,” he said.

“Every time we take a step forward, there are those who are trying to pull us back,” he said.

He told the gathering that some of the people who were discouraging persons from accepting titles from the government for their lands also come from the community of Moruca. “I want to assure you that we have already demonstrated that you can trust us. We have given you the land, and we will do nothing – nothing – to ever deprive you of any of your rights. [You will have] a president who will have running in his veins Amerindian blood,” he said. “I will never ever allow your rights to be restricted, or allow anyone to take away any of your land,” he said.

Speaking at the meeting, President Bharrat Jagdeo said: “It is your courage, your commitment, and your hard work that give us the strength to continue, because the PPP feeds off the strength of its people.

“I want to thank the many comrades who have, from long, long years, struggled to see these changes that we are experiencing in our country today. [They] struggled to bring back freedom to our people, because after colonial rule we lost that freedom for three decades to undemocratic rule by the PNC, and it is here in Moruca, in many other villages similar to this one, and in the city and along the coast that ordinary people followed Cheddi Jagan to bring back freedom and dignity to our land; and without freedom nothing else was possible,” he said.

“I see a lot of young people here, and I hope you take time to learn of that struggle too, because too often the things we experience today we take for granted. But they didn’t just fall from the sky...we had to struggle for them.” He emphasised: “If we don’t appreciate that struggle, we will never really value what we have today.”

“There is something that we have that is worth fighting for, it is worth marching for, it is worth holding rallies for, it is worth turning out to vote on November 28 for: that is the freedom and progress and dignity that has come to all Guyana, but particularly Amerindian people,” he said. “We have to offer young people the infrastructure so that they could get the best quality education in the world,” he said, scoffing at opposition parties’ offering of sports gear to young people in Amerindian communities.

“There is still some way to get where we want to be, but we have come a long way to reduce the gap between what takes place on the coast and what takes place in the hinterland. Thousands of [these children] now are going to secondary schools. Under the PNC, all they had was primary education in regions where Amerindians lived. What that meant is that your children’s future ended when they ended primary school, because they (the PNC) didn’t see Amerindian people as a very important part of this country,” he said.

The President urged the residents of the communities to be wary of the wild promises of the opposition as the countdown to elections on November continues.

Among the speakers at yesterday’s meeting in Moruca were Amerindian Affairs Minister Pauline Sukhai; Presidential Advisor on Governance, Gail Teixeira; Region One Regional Chairman, Fermin Singh; and Moruca Village Toshao Marco De Souza. In attendance were former Minister of Amerindian Affairs Vibert De Souza and Chairperson of the National Toshaos Council, Yvonne Pearson.
FM
Simple; we want our land. We want it per teh pre independence agreement and not on some formula invented by the PPP. We also want clear subsurface rights and control of who passes through using the rivers. We do not want miners thinking the rivers in our regions are theirs to pollute. All else is bead trading. Either we are on a path to independence or we are wards of the powers that be. The Government cannot give us anything. If we are undeveloped it is their fault. If development comes it is because it should as administrative functioning to provide basic services to a people. It is why we have governments.
FM
quote:
Originally posted by D2:
Simple; we want our land. We want it per teh pre independence agreement and not on some formula invented by the PPP. We also want clear subsurface rights and control of who passes through using the rivers. We do not want miners thinking the rivers in our regions are theirs to pollute. All else is bead trading. Either we are on a path to independence or we are wards of the powers that be. The Government cannot give us anything. If we are undeveloped it is their fault. If development comes it is because it should as administrative functioning to provide basic services to a people. It is why we have governments.


The Red Indians of America also want their lands back.......Geronimo, Sitting Bull, Cochise, and Chato they all from the great beyond, asking back for their land.

I think that you are right, trying to get independence for your people will not be a bad idea.

Better yet, the Indians, and the Africans and the Chinese, and the Dougla should all try to get their own piece of Guyana.

.
FM
quote:
Originally posted by asj:
quote:
Originally posted by D2:
Simple; we want our land. We want it per teh pre independence agreement and not on some formula invented by the PPP. We also want clear subsurface rights and control of who passes through using the rivers. We do not want miners thinking the rivers in our regions are theirs to pollute. All else is bead trading. Either we are on a path to independence or we are wards of the powers that be. The Government cannot give us anything. If we are undeveloped it is their fault. If development comes it is because it should as administrative functioning to provide basic services to a people. It is why we have governments.


The Red Indians of America also want their lands back.......Geronimo, Sitting Bull, Cochise, and Chato they all from the great beyond, asking back for their land.

I think that you are right, trying to get independence for your people will not be a bad idea.

Better yet, the Indians, and the Africans and the Chinese, and the Dougla should all try to get their own piece of Guyana.

.
There are no "red Indians". Further, Native peoples in all across the regions are seeking their native patrimony on their own terms.

When I speak of Independence I speak of it in terms of the modern colonizers in the form of Africans and Indians who use democracy and its majoritorian creed as a license to steal. Democracy and statehood came with pre conditions that the present administration conveniently forgets since it facilitates their thievery
FM
Why do PPP members more frequently [than others] use words like Indos, Blacks, Red Indians , Bucks, etc..
Is this a party that want to see unity among the races in Guyana or do they want to continue their racist attitude and want 'Indos pan tap' and use other races only for their selfish purposes.

If some Americans have it their way, they will still be shooting Native Americans. In Canada they dropped the word 'SQAW', it is degrading towards First Nations women and they even renamed the sqaw fish.
I can see why some Guyanese fit just right, in America.
Tola

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