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FM
Former Member
Farewell Address by His Excellency President Bharrat Jagdeo

Georgetown, GINA, 11 26, 2011
Source - GINA

Fellow Guyanese:

For twelve years, I have had the honour to serve as your President, and I wanted to take the opportunity today to thank you for that honour.

It has been the greatest privilege of my life to serve the people of this country, and to bear witness to the hard work and dedication of Guyanese from all walks of life, as you continue to create an ever better Guyana.

There have been many difficult days within the past twelve years, and there have been many moments when there were tough decisions to take. Those moments can be lonely ones. But at all times, when facing such decisions, I have drawn strength from the people of this country – from their basic sense of decency, their compassion and desire to look out for those less fortunate than themselves, and their willingness to advance our democracy so that the future can be better than the past. It is these timeless values that are the hallmark of our society. And it is these values which sustain my unbowed optimism in the future of this country.

At times, too much is made of that which divides us as Guyanese, or has divided us in the past. But if we look around us, we can see that the people of this country have rejected these attempts to create barriers between people. We should take real pride from the fact that we live in one of the most diverse countries in the world. Few nations anywhere have created such a successful multi-cultural society – and this is lived out every day in sport, culture, commerce and throughout our national life. There are streets in our towns and cities where mosques, temples and churches sit side by side - and around this time of year, we see Guyanese from all faiths and all walks of life coming together for Diwali, for Eid, and then for Christmas. Our children play cricket and football together, they take part in drama and debates, they meet in coffee shops and they chat online. It is in these settings that the true Guyana is visible for all to see, and it is here that our unity is given voice.

This unity provides us with the foundation for an even better future. And - building on this foundation - the hard work of people across our country will continue to advance our progress towards the Guyana we all want to see.

Of course, as President I am proud of all that the Government has achieved in the last twelve years. We are no longer subject to external influence over our economy by the IMF, but instead we have been one of the fastest growing economies in CARICOM and South America in recent years - despite turmoil in the global economy. Our sustained investment in education and health over the years is improving the quality of our people’s lives – and our support for the vulnerable is proving that there is no incompatibility between economic prosperity and compassion for those who need help. More people own their own homes than ever, our diaspora are return home, our private sector is expanding like never before, and the physical infrastructure of the country has been transformed.

I am also proud of all the work that can come to fruition in the years ahead. Massive new opportunities for gold, bauxite and manganese mining which could more than double our GDP. A sugar industry that is viable once more – unlike other countries, Guyana’s industry has survived the massive economic shock presented by changes in European pricing systems. New opportunities for oil export, for business outsourcing, for health services. A new airport, new hotels, new entertainment facilities.

But I am particularly proud of the fact that these are not isolated achievements to be looked at on their own – instead, they are the practical manifestation of an ever more united Guyana, delivered by hard-working people who love their country.

For progress is a compact between Government and the people. And it is people who day in, day out forge the national character of our country. It is the teachers who nurture our next generation; it is the nurses and medical staff who care for the sick; it is the police and army officers who work to keep our country secure; it is the civil society activists who seek to help those who are in need and are vulnerable; it is the business people who innovate, create jobs and generate wealth; it is the farmers and fishermen who feed our people; it is the compassionate citizens who look out for their neighbours; it is the countless acts of the people of this country that create our future.

Thanks to these people, we have come a long way – but there is much still to do. As citizens, every one of us needs to keep working to reject prejudice and division, we need to continue to expose and then root out corruption from every where it is to be found, we cannot stop working until we deal with poverty and exclusion. Too many of our people are victims of domestic and sexual violence – this is a stain on our national consciousness and everyone in this country has a duty to expose the perpetrators of these acts so that they can be brought to justice. And above all, we must never again return to the days where violence and criminality threatened the institutions of the State and took a heavy toll on decent people’s lives and sense of security. These are all violations of the values we hold dear – and as citizens, we must make it clear that such acts have no place in our land.

Our country is still a work in progress – but progress is not pre-determined. Instead, it will be as a consequence of democratic choices made by our people.

Part of that is choosing our new President and Government. But citizens also have a duty to participate in our broader democracy to give it life. I hope that in the years ahead we will see an expanded civic consciousness that is informed about our democratic institutions - and about how they can be used to advance our national development. I hope that we will see a media that fulfils its role by informing debate and holding political leaders and others to account – based on analysis, not untruths and sensationalism. I hope that we will see a blossoming of non-governmental organisations who work to enrich our civic discourse.

With this expanded civic consciousness, we can continue to aim high in the world. Our standing internationally is greater than it has ever been. In the past, we were grateful for the overseas development assistance we received from our friends as we sought to repair our damaged economy - but we are now progressively losing the dependence we had on this financing, and standing on our own two feet as we create a new Guyana. Our international relations are increasingly about trade and investment opportunities, about providing leadership on global matters like climate change or the reform of international institutions, and about embracing the challenges and opportunities in today’s inter-connected world.

Those challenges and opportunities are vastly different to what they were when I first took office. Twelve years ago, many saw our opportunities as limited because they saw us merely as a small Caribbean nation. Today, we seek to participate on a global stage. Not because we are seeking recognition for the sake of recognition – but because in the modern world, countries which turn in on themselves will not succeed. We are now very much part of a thriving South American continent with a landscape of opportunity that is transformed. The digital revolution; the low carbon industrial revolution; the fast pace of technological advance; the rise of China, India, Brazil and others; a world population of 7 billion people seeking food, energy, minerals and metals. These are all transforming how the world will operate for decades to come. We could be frightened by the complexity of this landscape, or we can continue to have the courage to embrace it.

If we have the conviction and ambition to do this, Guyana has the potential to be one of the world’s most progressive and dynamic places – with an IT-savvy population that is connected to the outside world; with one of the world’s outstanding examples of low carbon development and the world’s second largest forest climate services arrangement; with social services that protect the vulnerable, keep our population healthy and ensure that the next generation of Guyanese will be as well-educated as people anywhere in the world; with world-class protected areas at Kaieteur Falls, Iwokrama, Shell Beach and the Kanuku Mountains. And above all, a Guyana that reflects the values of its people, that is prosperous, socially just and internationally responsible.

In the coming days, we will go to the polls to choose our next President. We will also select individuals to act as our regional and national representatives for the next five years. I hope and expect that the elections and their aftermath will pass off peacefully. This will be a profound statement about the strength and maturity of our Guyanese democracy. We must remain ever vigilant to ensure that the calmness of the process, or the sometimes harsh words of competitive politics, do not hide the significance of what will happen on Monday. Millions of people across the world are denied the opportunity to take part in free and fair elections – it is just two decades since this right was denied in Guyana. We should never forget that this right is the most sacred foundation of our democracy, and it must be defended and protected on behalf of today’s Guyanese and generations to come.

So fellow Guyanese: I bid you farewell as your President. I thank you for the trust you gave me and for the opportunity to serve you. I leave with a sense of hope for the future of Guyana that makes me believe that our best days have still to come, and with a sense of confidence that the people of this country have what it takes to give full life to the vision of a free, secure, socially just and prosperous Guyana.

Thank you.

Replies sorted oldest to newest

What a great farewell speech! So full of compassion, and genuine care.

What an impressionable Stateman he is. Every word in his speech is so true and it will be forever cherished.

Thank you Mr. President.
FM
quote:
Originally posted by D2:
I hope we get to halve his pension and investigate all his crooked deals.


That is something nobody can do. The pension package is a done deal. Any other government cannot reduce his pension but can only reduce future presidents.

All the things you blacks said that you would do to indos, are the reasons why Indians would vote for the PPP again.
FM
And I was very in awe of reading the following great commentaries. I must say that Jagdeo has selflessly worked very hard for a better Guyana. What a great legacy in these past 12 years.

"I am also proud of all the work that can come to fruition in the years ahead. Massive new opportunities for gold, bauxite and manganese mining which could more than double our GDP. A sugar industry that is viable once more – unlike other countries, Guyana’s industry has survived the massive economic shock presented by changes in European pricing systems. New opportunities for oil export, for business outsourcing, for health services. A new airport, new hotels, new entertainment facilities.

But I am particularly proud of the fact that these are not isolated achievements to be looked at on their own – instead, they are the practical manifestation of an ever more united Guyana, delivered by hard-working people who love their country.

For progress is a compact between Government and the people. And it is people who day in, day out forge the national character of our country. It is the teachers who nurture our next generation; it is the nurses and medical staff who care for the sick; it is the police and army officers who work to keep our country secure; it is the civil society activists who seek to help those who are in need and are vulnerable; it is the business people who innovate, create jobs and generate wealth; it is the farmers and fishermen who feed our people; it is the compassionate citizens who look out for their neighbours; it is the countless acts of the people of this country that create our future."
FM
quote:
Originally posted by Ramakant_p:
quote:
Originally posted by D2:
I hope we get to halve his pension and investigate all his crooked deals.


That is something nobody can do. The pension package is a done deal. Any other government cannot reduce his pension but can only reduce future presidents.

All the things you blacks said that you would do to indos, are the reasons why Indians would vote for the PPP again.
You folks in the PPP are thinking like Saddam and Gadaffi! If he did wrong and the evidence is overwhelming he was an autocratic pig, he cannot hide and pass the blame. He will be culpable as any crook.

Indians vote PPP because like blacks vote PNC; they are both immersed in racist stereotypes. We had a low level race war on going for a century and neglect of to address that is the fault of all. It breeds old racists like you who pass it on to their kids.
FM
My friends,
In life, there are no certainties.... we only know NOW and what we can do together to make the best of it.

As the great Martin Luther King, Jr. said:

"A nation or civilization that continues to produce soft-minded men purchases its own spiritual death on the installment plan."


Jagdeo has uplifted Guyana and given dignity and importance to Guyanese. He was instrumental in putting Guyana on the world map in so many positive ways.


Time to party...
FM
quote:
Originally posted by Apollo:
My friends,
In life, there are no certainties.... we only know NOW and what we can do together to make the best of it.

As the great Martin Luther King, Jr. said:

"A nation or civilization that continues to produce soft-minded men purchases its own spiritual death on the installment plan."


Jagdeo has uplifted Guyana and given dignity and importance to Guyanese. He was instrumental in putting Guyana on the world map in so many positive ways.


Time to party...
When Guyana was defined colonized its borders were delimited. When it became a state it was part of the map of the world. He is irrelevant to us as a people and as a nation and his only contribution being he made us a narco heaven and the cesspool of the most craven kinds of human behavior
FM
quote:
Originally posted by D2:
quote:
Originally posted by Apollo:
My friends,
In life, there are no certainties.... we only know NOW and what we can do together to make the best of it.

As the great Martin Luther King, Jr. said:

"A nation or civilization that continues to produce soft-minded men purchases its own spiritual death on the installment plan."


Jagdeo has uplifted Guyana and given dignity and importance to Guyanese. He was instrumental in putting Guyana on the world map in so many positive ways.


Time to party...
When Guyana was defined colonized its borders were delimited. When it became a state it was part of the map of the world. He is irrelevant to us as a people and as a nation and his only contribution being he made us a narco heaven and the cesspool of the most craven kinds of human behavior


He is very relevant to more than half the people in that country. He ill remain a legacy to them.

You on the other hand can kiss his grits..
FM
quote:
Originally posted by Ramakant_p:
quote:
Originally posted by D2:
quote:
Originally posted by Apollo:
My friends,
In life, there are no certainties.... we only know NOW and what we can do together to make the best of it.

As the great Martin Luther King, Jr. said:

"A nation or civilization that continues to produce soft-minded men purchases its own spiritual death on the installment plan."


Jagdeo has uplifted Guyana and given dignity and importance to Guyanese. He was instrumental in putting Guyana on the world map in so many positive ways.


Time to party...
When Guyana was defined colonized its borders were delimited. When it became a state it was part of the map of the world. He is irrelevant to us as a people and as a nation and his only contribution being he made us a narco heaven and the cesspool of the most craven kinds of human behavior


He is very relevant to more than half the people in that country. He ill remain a legacy to them.

You on the other hand can kiss his grits..
Is that not remarkable that you can weigh the life of a scoundrel against poor people. But you are from that old irrelevant school of communist thought who think the vanguard party and its chairman is like the pope and his cardinals. Well that is detritus of history. Leaders are managers not saints. Their asses is to fired when they do not function well and if the pilfer the cash in the nations till they end up in jail or worse.
FM
quote:
Originally posted by D2:
quote:
Originally posted by Ramakant_p:
quote:
Originally posted by D2:
quote:
Originally posted by Apollo:
My friends,
In life, there are no certainties.... we only know NOW and what we can do together to make the best of it.

As the great Martin Luther King, Jr. said:

"A nation or civilization that continues to produce soft-minded men purchases its own spiritual death on the installment plan."


Jagdeo has uplifted Guyana and given dignity and importance to Guyanese. He was instrumental in putting Guyana on the world map in so many positive ways.


Time to party...
When Guyana was defined colonized its borders were delimited. When it became a state it was part of the map of the world. He is irrelevant to us as a people and as a nation and his only contribution being he made us a narco heaven and the cesspool of the most craven kinds of human behavior


He is very relevant to more than half the people in that country. He ill remain a legacy to them.

You on the other hand can kiss his grits..
Is that not remarkable that you can weigh the life of a scoundrel against poor people. But you are from that old irrelevant school of communist thought who think the vanguard party and its chairman is like the pope and his cardinals. Well that is detritus of history. Leaders are managers not saints. Their asses is to fired when they do not function well and if the pilfer the cash in the nations till they end up in jail or worse.


This is not about if they do this and do that.

In a minority Goverment, they will be the one who called the shots, not the opposition.

But it's a good thing the PPP will win again.

You cannot wish them to lose and they will. It doesn't happen like that. All Indication pointed to a majority Government. I do not know how you can be so blind. Your hatred for the PPP will bot make them a minority Governmnet.
FM
quote:
Originally posted by Ramakant_p:


This is not about if they do this and do that.

In a minority Goverment, they will be the one who called the shots, not the opposition.

But it's a good thing the PPP will win again.

You cannot wish them to lose and they will. It doesn't happen like that. All Indication pointed to a majority Government. I do not know how you can be so blind. Your hatred for the PPP will bot make them a minority Governmnet.
n a minority government they cannot shi.t without asking permission.
FM
quote:
Originally posted by alena:
An incredile speech by a man who is never lost for words. Listened to him once in New York and was very impressed. He has put Guyana on the face of the world map.


Farewell before going to the big house or is he going to live in a cave or a hole like Saddam and Gaddafi???
FM
quote:
Originally posted by alena:
An incredile speech by a man who is never lost for words. Listened to him once in New York and was very impressed. He has put Guyana on the face of the world map.


Just one notch above Haiti.
Mitwah
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Country to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you ALL the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.
Nehru
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Cpountry to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you AA the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.


His speech that he will make before he is sentenced will be one that I will be interested in!
FM
Well wait for that but your Grave will be first.
quote:
Originally posted by Lion King:
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Cpountry to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you AA the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.


His speech that he will make before he is sentenced will be one that I will be interested in!
Nehru
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
Well wait for that but your Grave will be first.
quote:
Originally posted by Lion King:
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Cpountry to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you AA the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.


His speech that he will make before he is sentenced will be one that I will be interested in!


Do you know that the FBI can trace your IP address for threatening to kill me?



Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06GEORGETOWN112 2006-02-01 13:37 2011-08-30 01:44 SECRET Embassy Georgetown

This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 GEORGETOWN 000112

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

SOUTHCOM ALSO FOR POLAD

E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/01/2016
TAGS: SNAR PINR PINS PGOV KCRM KCOR NS GY
SUBJECT: SHAHEED “ROGER” KHAN: GUYANA’S OWN ESCOBAR?

REF: A. PARAMARIBO 39
¶B. 05 GEORGETOWN 1253
¶C. 05 GEORGETOWN 1122
¶D. 04 GEORGETOWN 426
¶E. 04 GEORGETOWN 29

Classified By: Ambassador Roland W. Bullen
for reason 1.4(b) and (d)

¶1. (S) SUMMARY. Shaheed “Roger” Khan (DOB: 13-Jan-72),
Guyana’s number one narco-criminal, threatens to exert
control over the fragile Guyanese state akin to Pablo
Escobar’s erstwhile control over Colombia. Khan is presently
active in drug trafficking, money laundering, and arms
smuggling. His so-called legitimate economic interests
include construction and forestry. Vermont has an
outstanding warrant for Khan’s arrest on weapons charges.
END SUMMARY.

Narcotics
———
¶2. (S) Khan is believed to be Guyana’s leading drug
trafficker, more powerful than other established players such
as Clay Hutson, Ricardo Rodrigues, and Brahma Nandalall. He
established connections with Colombian criminals a few years
ago and has since become a major trafficker of cocaine from
Colombia. Khan has risen to the top of Guyana’s
narco-criminal class quickly and ostentatiously. His
Colombian associates scolded him in September 2004 for his
indiscriminate activities and advised him to get out of the
spotlight.

¶3. (S) DEA developed a plan in 2004 to establish a
counternarcotics operation in Guyana. An informant leaked
details about the plan. After the leak, Khan threatened to
blow up the site of the operation and threatened the lives of
Ambassador and the then RSO (Ref D). These threats forced
the operation’s abandonment.

¶4. (S) Khan surrounds himself with a coterie of former police
tactical squad members for security. He reportedly pays his
low-level security personnel USD 1,600 per month — at least
eight times what they previously earned with the police force.


Phantom Squad and Bouterse Connections
————————————–
¶5. (C) Khan was a principle in the “Phantom Squad” (aka death
squad) that former Minister of Home Affairs Gajraj employed
to crack down on crime from 2002 to 2004 (Ref E).

¶6. (S) Minister of Home Affairs told us Khan regularly
travels to Suriname and Trinidad and meets with Desi
Bouterse. According to RNAS, Khan and Bouterse met at a
hotel in Suriname as recently as December 2005.

Arms Smuggling
————–
¶7. (S/NF) According to RNAS, Khan has been active in
smuggling arms into Guyana from Suriname, French Guyana, and
possibly France. He exchanges cocaine for the arms. Khan
has also established connections with FARC and has acted as a
middleman in cocaine for arms transactions. In such
instances, Khan has smuggled guns into Guyana and then
exchanged them with the FARC for cocaine. There are strong
indications that Khan was deeply involved in a December 2005
shipment of weapons to FARC in Columbia.

Money Laundering and other Economic Interests
———————————————
¶8. (S) Khan has a business relationship with Farouk Razac of
Swiss House Cambio, a big money laundering operation, to
launder his narco-trafficking proceeds. According to RNAS,
Khan’s drug proceeds have also funded mosques and sent
Muslims to study abroad.

¶9. (U) Khan acquired Kaow Island in the Essequibo River from
local entrepreneur and suspected drug dealer Harry Rambarran
in February 2005. Once owned by the now bankrupt Willems
Timber, Kaow Island has a wharf for ocean going vessels, an
airstrip, access to Guyana’s bush roads that radiate out from
Bartica, and a 136,000-acre timber concession. In September
2005, Rambarran sued Khan for defaulting on a USD 1.1 million
promissory note made in partial payment for the island.


¶10. (C) Khan is reportedly in negotiations with former
GUYSUCO Chairman Vic Oditt to purchase a 200 square mile
ranch at Pirara in the Southern Rupununi region. The ranch
has a large airstrip, and Khan is believed to be acting at
the behest of Colombian or Panamanian narco-interests.

¶11. (U) In late 2005 the Guyana Forestry Commission granted
a State Forest Exploratory Permit for a large tract of land
in Guyana’s interior to Aurelius Inc., a company controlled
by Khan (Ref C).

¶12. (U) Khan is a director of Classic Development Inc. and
Dream Works Developers, both construction concerns. Khan is
financing several real estate projects, including a 60-70
unit housing unit development in East Bank Demerara near the
new stadium under construction for the 2007 Cricket World Cup.

¶13. (C) Guyanese Bank executives tell us all this is being
done without any bank financing.

Run-ins with the Law
——————–
¶14. (U) According to LEGATT/Port of Spain, Khan is wanted in
Vermont on weapons charges. Vermont has not sought Khan’s
extradition.

¶15. (U) Khan and two other men, one an active duty policeman,
were arrested at a Guyana Defence Force roadblock in December
2002 at Good Hope, East Coast Demerara in a bulletproof
vehicle. The vehicle contained sophisticated cell phone
intercept equipment, satellite phones, and high-powered
weapons. All three were found not guilty of illegal
possession of arms and ammunition charges.

¶16. (C) A senior functionary in the Office of the President
told us that the communications equipment and weapons were
handed back over to Khan. Our interlocutor said the arrest
had been “a mistake” because Khan was “working with the
police” when the arrest was made.

¶17. (U) According to local newspapers, Khan and a colleague
appeared in court January 4, 2006 on charges of “wounding”
following an incident in which an individual was assaulted
and had a gun placed to his head. Both pled not guilty and
were released on GYD 15,000 (USD 75) bail.

Political Influence
——————-
¶18. (C) Khan has bought off countless people in Guyana.
Through this patronage he is able to operate with impunity.
It is believed that GoG is compromised to such an extent that
it will not pursue Khan, despite paying lip service to the
fight against narco-trafficking.


Comment
——-
¶19. (C) Multiple sources have expressed fears to Ambassador
that not only has Khan penetrated almost every level of
Guyanese government and society, but that he will exert ever
greater influence over the political scene beginning with
this year’s elections. Most respected commentators believe
that Guyana has already become or is well on the way to being
a narco-state. If Guyana is a narco-state, then Khan is its
leader. Ambassador has spoken with GoG to little avail about
Khan’s drug activities and unaccounted wealth. The GoG has
adopted a head-in-the-sand approach to Khan and
narco-trafficking in general. The GoG asks for hard evidence
and pretends not to know how Khan acquires his means. END
COMMENT.
BULLEN
FM
Not since the Kennedy and MLK Speeches have we heard such a GREAT speech. I believe that this Speech will be remembered more than Kennedy's in time to come. I have heard and read great speeches but this ONE IS at the TOP of the List. What a GREAT Man, What a GREAT Leader, What a selfless Humanity. GOD BLESS YOU SIR AND THANK YOU FOR THE GREAT 12 YEARS. i AM GOING TO CRY SO i WILL END HERE.
Nehru
quote:
¶19. (C) Multiple sources have expressed fears to Ambassador
that not only has Khan penetrated almost every level of
Guyanese government and society, but that he will exert ever
greater influence over the political scene beginning with
this year’s elections. Most respected commentators believe
that Guyana has already become or is well on the way to being
a narco-state. If Guyana is a narco-state, then Khan is its
leader. Ambassador has spoken with GoG to little avail about
Khan’s drug activities and unaccounted wealth. The GoG has
adopted a head-in-the-sand approach to Khan and
narco-trafficking in general. The GoG asks for hard evidence
and pretends not to know how Khan acquires his means. END
COMMENT.
BULLEN

Lest we Forget . . . Thanks, LK
FM
oH YOU ARE THAT dunce. Threatenyou??? Who the hell are you??? Let me explain SIMPLE Hinglish for you cause that is what you kno Hinglish. You will be in your grave before THE GREAT JAGDEO goes anywhere near a Prison. SAMJE???? Maybe you verse in Hindi.
quote:
Originally posted by Lion King:
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
Well wait for that but your Grave will be first.
quote:
Originally posted by Lion King:
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Cpountry to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you AA the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.


His speech that he will make before he is sentenced will be one that I will be interested in!


Do you know that the FBI can trace your IP address for threatening to kill me?



Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06GEORGETOWN112 2006-02-01 13:37 2011-08-30 01:44 SECRET Embassy Georgetown

This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 GEORGETOWN 000112

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

SOUTHCOM ALSO FOR POLAD

E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/01/2016
TAGS: SNAR PINR PINS PGOV KCRM KCOR NS GY
SUBJECT: SHAHEED “ROGER” KHAN: GUYANA’S OWN ESCOBAR?

REF: A. PARAMARIBO 39
¶B. 05 GEORGETOWN 1253
¶C. 05 GEORGETOWN 1122
¶D. 04 GEORGETOWN 426
¶E. 04 GEORGETOWN 29

Classified By: Ambassador Roland W. Bullen
for reason 1.4(b) and (d)

¶1. (S) SUMMARY. Shaheed “Roger” Khan (DOB: 13-Jan-72),
Guyana’s number one narco-criminal, threatens to exert
control over the fragile Guyanese state akin to Pablo
Escobar’s erstwhile control over Colombia. Khan is presently
active in drug trafficking, money laundering, and arms
smuggling. His so-called legitimate economic interests
include construction and forestry. Vermont has an
outstanding warrant for Khan’s arrest on weapons charges.
END SUMMARY.

Narcotics
———
¶2. (S) Khan is believed to be Guyana’s leading drug
trafficker, more powerful than other established players such
as Clay Hutson, Ricardo Rodrigues, and Brahma Nandalall. He
established connections with Colombian criminals a few years
ago and has since become a major trafficker of cocaine from
Colombia. Khan has risen to the top of Guyana’s
narco-criminal class quickly and ostentatiously. His
Colombian associates scolded him in September 2004 for his
indiscriminate activities and advised him to get out of the
spotlight.

¶3. (S) DEA developed a plan in 2004 to establish a
counternarcotics operation in Guyana. An informant leaked
details about the plan. After the leak, Khan threatened to
blow up the site of the operation and threatened the lives of
Ambassador and the then RSO (Ref D). These threats forced
the operation’s abandonment.

¶4. (S) Khan surrounds himself with a coterie of former police
tactical squad members for security. He reportedly pays his
low-level security personnel USD 1,600 per month — at least
eight times what they previously earned with the police force.


Phantom Squad and Bouterse Connections
————————————–
¶5. (C) Khan was a principle in the “Phantom Squad” (aka death
squad) that former Minister of Home Affairs Gajraj employed
to crack down on crime from 2002 to 2004 (Ref E).

¶6. (S) Minister of Home Affairs told us Khan regularly
travels to Suriname and Trinidad and meets with Desi
Bouterse. According to RNAS, Khan and Bouterse met at a
hotel in Suriname as recently as December 2005.

Arms Smuggling
————–
¶7. (S/NF) According to RNAS, Khan has been active in
smuggling arms into Guyana from Suriname, French Guyana, and
possibly France. He exchanges cocaine for the arms. Khan
has also established connections with FARC and has acted as a
middleman in cocaine for arms transactions. In such
instances, Khan has smuggled guns into Guyana and then
exchanged them with the FARC for cocaine. There are strong
indications that Khan was deeply involved in a December 2005
shipment of weapons to FARC in Columbia.

Money Laundering and other Economic Interests
———————————————
¶8. (S) Khan has a business relationship with Farouk Razac of
Swiss House Cambio, a big money laundering operation, to
launder his narco-trafficking proceeds. According to RNAS,
Khan’s drug proceeds have also funded mosques and sent
Muslims to study abroad.

¶9. (U) Khan acquired Kaow Island in the Essequibo River from
local entrepreneur and suspected drug dealer Harry Rambarran
in February 2005. Once owned by the now bankrupt Willems
Timber, Kaow Island has a wharf for ocean going vessels, an
airstrip, access to Guyana’s bush roads that radiate out from
Bartica, and a 136,000-acre timber concession. In September
2005, Rambarran sued Khan for defaulting on a USD 1.1 million
promissory note made in partial payment for the island.


¶10. (C) Khan is reportedly in negotiations with former
GUYSUCO Chairman Vic Oditt to purchase a 200 square mile
ranch at Pirara in the Southern Rupununi region. The ranch
has a large airstrip, and Khan is believed to be acting at
the behest of Colombian or Panamanian narco-interests.

¶11. (U) In late 2005 the Guyana Forestry Commission granted
a State Forest Exploratory Permit for a large tract of land
in Guyana’s interior to Aurelius Inc., a company controlled
by Khan (Ref C).

¶12. (U) Khan is a director of Classic Development Inc. and
Dream Works Developers, both construction concerns. Khan is
financing several real estate projects, including a 60-70
unit housing unit development in East Bank Demerara near the
new stadium under construction for the 2007 Cricket World Cup.

¶13. (C) Guyanese Bank executives tell us all this is being
done without any bank financing.

Run-ins with the Law
——————–
¶14. (U) According to LEGATT/Port of Spain, Khan is wanted in
Vermont on weapons charges. Vermont has not sought Khan’s
extradition.

¶15. (U) Khan and two other men, one an active duty policeman,
were arrested at a Guyana Defence Force roadblock in December
2002 at Good Hope, East Coast Demerara in a bulletproof
vehicle. The vehicle contained sophisticated cell phone
intercept equipment, satellite phones, and high-powered
weapons. All three were found not guilty of illegal
possession of arms and ammunition charges.

¶16. (C) A senior functionary in the Office of the President
told us that the communications equipment and weapons were
handed back over to Khan. Our interlocutor said the arrest
had been “a mistake” because Khan was “working with the
police” when the arrest was made.

¶17. (U) According to local newspapers, Khan and a colleague
appeared in court January 4, 2006 on charges of “wounding”
following an incident in which an individual was assaulted
and had a gun placed to his head. Both pled not guilty and
were released on GYD 15,000 (USD 75) bail.

Political Influence
——————-
¶18. (C) Khan has bought off countless people in Guyana.
Through this patronage he is able to operate with impunity.
It is believed that GoG is compromised to such an extent that
it will not pursue Khan, despite paying lip service to the
fight against narco-trafficking.


Comment
——-
¶19. (C) Multiple sources have expressed fears to Ambassador
that not only has Khan penetrated almost every level of
Guyanese government and society, but that he will exert ever
greater influence over the political scene beginning with
this year’s elections. Most respected commentators believe
that Guyana has already become or is well on the way to being
a narco-state. If Guyana is a narco-state, then Khan is its
leader. Ambassador has spoken with GoG to little avail about
Khan’s drug activities and unaccounted wealth. The GoG has
adopted a head-in-the-sand approach to Khan and
narco-trafficking in general. The GoG asks for hard evidence
and pretends not to know how Khan acquires his means. END
COMMENT.
BULLEN
Nehru
quote:
Originally posted by redux:
quote:
¶19. (C) Multiple sources have expressed fears to Ambassador
that not only has Khan penetrated almost every level of
Guyanese government and society, but that he will exert ever
greater influence over the political scene beginning with
this year’s elections. Most respected commentators believe
that Guyana has already become or is well on the way to being
a narco-state. If Guyana is a narco-state, then Khan is its
leader. Ambassador has spoken with GoG to little avail about
Khan’s drug activities and unaccounted wealth. The GoG has
adopted a head-in-the-sand approach to Khan and
narco-trafficking in general. The GoG asks for hard evidence
and pretends not to know how Khan acquires his means. END
COMMENT.
BULLEN

Lest we Forget . . . Thanks, LK


Redux, we need to plaster this on every thread so that people will not forget. That old senile man that lives on welfare in canada and in a basement is so desparate for the PPP criminal enterprise to be given new life!
FM
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Country to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you ALL the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.
When are you going to stop this shit?
You sound like a cult member who was thoroughly brainwashed.
Sheik101
Laff all yuh want but Abee gun miss abee president. Sob Sob.
quote:
Originally posted by Sheik101:
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Country to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you ALL the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.
When are you going to stop this shit?
You sound like a cult member who was thoroughly brainwashed.
Nehru
quote:
Originally posted by Sheik101:
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Country to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you ALL the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.
When are you going to stop this shit?
You sound like a cult member who was thoroughly brainwashed.

\

All the free Hennessey and Cocaine will stop when the PPP lose! Also all the strange funny fella stuff these guys indulge in! I wonder whose girl Nehru is?? Too much peanut butter for Nehru!
FM
I thought you were my Girl. partybanana partybanana
quote:
Originally posted by Lion King:
quote:
Originally posted by Sheik101:
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Country to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you ALL the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.
When are you going to stop this shit?
You sound like a cult member who was thoroughly brainwashed.

\

All the free Hennessey and Cocaine will stop when the PPP lose! Also all the strange funny fella stuff these guys indulge in! I wonder whose girl Nehru is?? Too much peanut butter for Nehru!
Nehru
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I thought you were my Girl. partybanana partybanana
quote:
Originally posted by Lion King:
quote:
Originally posted by Sheik101:
quote:
Originally posted by Nehru:
I read the GREAT President speech FIVE times and everytime I wept like a Baby. What a GREAT, COMPASSIONATE, WISE and CARING President. Your HARD WORK, SACRIFICE and DEDICATION to yor Country cannot be matched by any other in the World. The transformation of Guyana from a Backward, miserable Country to the MOST PROGRESSIVE in the Caribbean is noted SIR. WE thank you and wish you ALL the BEST in the Future. Guyana will miss you, The Caribbean will miss you and The World will miss you, your Leadership, Wisdom and Humanity. It has been a GREAT 12 years SIR. GOD BLESS.
When are you going to stop this shit?
You sound like a cult member who was thoroughly brainwashed.

\

All the free Hennessey and Cocaine will stop when the PPP lose! Also all the strange funny fella stuff these guys indulge in! I wonder whose girl Nehru is?? Too much peanut butter for Nehru!


Keep looking out your windows for the feds' black crown victoria!
FM
Just came off the phone with G\T according to what I'm being told, the atmosphere suggests that a change is very likely.
However, we must wait until monday to see what the final outcome will be.
Also, the threat of electoral violence is not expected, but then again one never knows. there are, as in almost every society a few loose ends that may want to creat some unrest. i hope this doesn't happen.
May the best party prevail.
Sheik101
quote:
Farewell Address by His Excellency President Bharrat Jagdeo



I just couldn't bring myself to read all the drivel said in this speech. This is some of the worse crap I've ever read.

We are better off reading Dr Seuss books.
cain
Guyanese President Leaves a Tattered Legacy
by COHA Research Associates Robert Cavooris & Elcin Chang

Stagnation, violence, corruption, arch-sectarianism, and unfettered crime—this is the heritage that President Bharrat Jagdeo will bequeath to his country. Now that Jagdeo has announced that he will not seek a third term in the upcoming August election, he may well ask, as a New York mayor once did, “How did I do?” The answer, in this instance, must be: “terribly.” Chosen by former President Janet Jagan to succeed her in office, and supposedly held in high esteem by Guyana’s founding father, the illustrious Cheddi Jagan, Jagdeo could only receive the lowest of marks from any independent evaluation. Through his tolerance of crime, racism, and dismal social progress, President Jagdeo has turned in a fifth-rate performance as president of one of the poorest countries in the hemisphere. As the Guyanese use every strategy, legal and illegal, to flee the dysfunctional country, Jagdeo will go down in history as a man who did almost nothing for his nation while in office.

Jagdeo in Command?

As Guyana was wrestling with ever-present ethnic and political tensions, Jagdeo ascended to the presidency in 1999, not by election but rather through the anointment of his predecessor, Janet Jagan, thus taking the helm with no popular electoral mandate. To his credit, Jagdeo has led Guyana on a path of considerable economic growth in the last ten years despite a devastating flood in 2005. The Guyanese economy, which is heavily dependent on the export of six main commodities—rice, timber, gold, bauxite, shrimp and sugar—has expanded at an average rate of 3 percent over the past decade.1Sadly however, despite this incremental improvement in the Guyanese economy, government officials have been either unwilling or unable to share this modest prosperity with average Guyanese citizens.

Indicative of this trend is the fact that the allocation for education as a percentage of government spending is significantly lower than it was ten years ago. Public spending on education dropped to 6.1 percent of total GDP in 2007, down from 8.5 percent in 2000. Because of this lack of adequate spending on public education, the percentage of primary school entrance-age children enrolled in such schools dropped from 91.8 percent to 62.0 percent.2 While it is difficult to speculate precisely what effect these substantive budget cuts on education have had on childhood literacy rates in the country (owing to a lack of data collected by Georgetown officials), there could be pernicious social consequences if education continues to take a back seat on the Guyanese agenda.

On healthcare, there have been some positive results including an increase in life expectancy and a notable decrease in infant mortality.3 Many exigencies however remain unaffected. For instance, about a fifth of the Guyanese population still lacks access to clean sanitation facilities.4 And the World Health Organization estimated that Guyana has one of the highest prevalence rates of HIV/AIDS in Latin America and the Caribbean.5

Perpetual Violence
Jagdeo’s tenure will also be remembered for the spike in violent crimes experienced throughout Guyana, an issue exacerbated by repeated extrajudicial killings on the part of state authorities. Since 2001, “Phantom” death squads with alleged connections to government agencies—also called the “Black Clothes Police”—have been linked to some 400 murders.6 7 “A clear pattern is emerging,” said a member of the opposition People’s National Congress Reform (PNC). “The Black Clothes Police have constituted themselves accusers, judge, jury and executioners, and have been gunning down people with impunity.”8

The Jagdeo administration shocked the region by rejecting a request by the United States, Britain, and Canada to do an independent probe of what amounted to repeated human rights violations. “We are very concerned about the allegations and we believe that the integrity of the government is something that is at question here,” said British High Commissioner Stephen Hiscock9

Amnesty International wrote an open letter to President Jagdeo in 2001 demanding prosecution of any officials involved in extrajudicial violence, and saying that the Guyanese government had “repeatedly failed to ensure the protection of the internationally recognized fundamental right to life—and to take measures to prevent such killings.”10 Although several officers were indicted for their participation in extrajudicial killings in 2004, none were convicted.11

Some have responded in kind to the state violence, such as in the notorious Rondell Rawlins case. Rawlins, who accused the government of kidnapping his girlfriend, waged a campaign of terror in Guyana seeking her return. This resulted in the shocking deaths of 23 people.12 Jagdeo’s tumultuous presidency was also beset by a series of fatal bombings over the past several years, including one attack on the Ministry of Health in 2009 and two additional assaults in 2011—one at the Stabroek Market and the other at the residence of Philomena Sahoye-Shury, a leading member of President Jagdeo’s People’s Progressive Party (PPP).13 As one editorial in Guyana’s Stabroek News put it, “The security situation grows murkier by the day and it is in this milieu that there has been a rash of dangerous events.”14

Ethnicity and Frustration

The violence in Guyana is all the bitterer for the ethnic undertones that color it. Guyana’s motto—‘One People, One Nation, One Destiny,’—only seems a cruel joke in the face of the stark division that has long seized the country—a division that Jagdeo has done almost nothing to address.

Party affiliation in Guyana falls almost directly along ethnic lines. Jagdeo’s PPP overwhelmingly receives the vote of the Guyanese of Indian descent, while the opposition PNC garners the support of the country’s African descendents. One study of the 2001 elections called the crossover votes between ethnic groups “insubstantial” and concluded that “[PPP] is still, for all practical purposes, an Indian-dominated party.” 15 Even after the 2006 election, Jagdeo’s efforts to diminish the trend were nowhere to be seen. One editorial in the Stabroek News in 2010 commented that the two main parties still remain within their ethnic platform. It said, “Both [the PPP and PNC] follow an unwritten rule that their leader must be from a particular ethnic group and both derive a high percentage of their support from a single ethnic group.”16

Often, crimes in Guyana take on a racial dimension, reflecting the continued perception of the longstanding Afro-Guyanese exclusion under the PPP. In 2007, Andre Douglas, an alleged murderer of African descent who was eventually killed by police after escaping from jail, placed his own crimes in the context of social marginalization and inequality. He called himself a “freedom fighter,” and said, “Look into innocent black Guyanese problems or unrest will not finish.”17 In other words, Douglas would keep terrorizing Guyana until the social problems of the Afro-Guyanese were alleviated. The large turnout at Douglas’ funeral showed that his frustration resonated with the country’s Afro-Guyanese community. Thus, ethnic division remains a challenge that disrupts quotidian life in Guyana, and that President Jagdeo has not effectively taken steps to resolve.

Conclusions
On balance, Jagdeo has failed during his presidency to advance the freedom and fairness of Guyanese public life, or the inequities of the Indo-Guyanese dominated society. Increased economic growth is futile if it does not translate into a greater sense of prosperity within the entirety of society. Jagdeo’s two-term presidency fell woefully short on that point. Social needs remain unmet due to inadequate spending on education and a lack of efforts to improve the quality of healthcare. Furthermore the perpetual presence of criminal and ethnic violence threatens the fabric of Guyanese society, and, if anything, has been aggravated by the indiscriminate violence of public security forces in response.
It is not yet clear who the candidates will be in the upcoming presidential election, but whoever inherits Jagdeo’s position must work to tackle these persistent issues, and to clear the air of hopelessness when it comes to improving life in one of the hemisphere’s poorest and most forlorn countries.
FM
quote:
Guyanese President Leaves a Tattered Legacy
by COHA Research Associates Robert Cavooris & Elcin Chang



Now you see, this is a better article, I had no problem reading the entire thing. I much prefer reading non-fiction.
cain
Man read whatever you want to read. Glad you enjoyed. My JOY will come Monday. yippie yippie
quote:
Originally posted by cain:
quote:
Guyanese President Leaves a Tattered Legacy
by COHA Research Associates Robert Cavooris & Elcin Chang



Now you see, this is a better article, I had no problem reading the entire thing. I much prefer reading non-fiction.
Nehru
Man is why you always talking wid COCKEYE People in Guyana. partybanana partybanana panman panman yippie
quote:
Originally posted by Sheik101:
Just came off the phone with G\T according to what I'm being told, the atmosphere suggests that a change is very likely.
However, we must wait until monday to see what the final outcome will be.
Also, the threat of electoral violence is not expected, but then again one never knows. there are, as in almost every society a few loose ends that may want to creat some unrest. i hope this doesn't happen.
May the best party prevail.
Nehru
quote:
Originally posted by D2:

Stagnation, violence, corruption, arch-sectarianism, and unfettered crime—this is the heritage that President Bharrat Jagdeo will bequeath to his country. Now that Jagdeo has announced that he will not seek a third term in the upcoming August election, he may well ask, as a New York mayor once did, “How did I do?” The answer, in this instance, must be: “terribly.” Chosen by former President Janet Jagan to succeed her in office, and supposedly held in high esteem by Guyana’s founding father, the illustrious Cheddi Jagan, Jagdeo could only receive the lowest of marks from any independent evaluation. Through his tolerance of crime, racism, and dismal social progress, President Jagdeo has turned in a fifth-rate performance as president of one of the poorest countries in the hemisphere. As the Guyanese use every strategy, legal and illegal, to flee the dysfunctional country, Jagdeo will go down in history as a man who did almost nothing for his nation while in office.

Conclusions
On balance, Jagdeo has failed during his presidency to advance the freedom and fairness of Guyanese public life, or the inequities of the Indo-Guyanese dominated society. Increased economic growth is futile if it does not translate into a greater sense of prosperity within the entirety of society. Jagdeo’s two-term presidency fell woefully short on that point. Social needs remain unmet due to inadequate spending on education and a lack of efforts to improve the quality of healthcare. Furthermore the perpetual presence of criminal and ethnic violence threatens the fabric of Guyanese society, and, if anything, has been aggravated by the indiscriminate violence of public security forces in response.

It is not yet clear who the candidates will be in the upcoming presidential election, but whoever inherits Jagdeo’s position must work to tackle these persistent issues, and to clear the air of hopelessness when it comes to improving life in one of the hemisphere’s poorest and most forlorn countries.


What he gonna do when dem come fuh him?
Mitwah

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