August 15 2018
In the wake of the killing of a miner at Puruni, allegedly by a policeman, the Guyana Gold and Diamond Miner’s Association has issued a strong condemnation and also severely criticised the government on its stance over the industry.
It also said that more than three years later, President David Granger is still refusing to meet with the largest private sector employer in the country. Several months ago the National Toshaos Council also complained about the President’s refusal to meet it. The President has also been accused of refusing to hold press conferences.
An edited version of the GGDMA statement follows:
The Guyana Gold and Diamond Miner’s Association (GGDMA) condemns in the strongest possible way the (alleged) extra-judicial killing, by the Guyana Police Force, of a miner in the Puruni Area. This is the latest in a series of contemptuous actions being meted out by the Government of Guyana against the mining industry, starting even at the highest level.
The GGDMA calls for an immediate investigation into the execution of a miner who was working legally on a legal claim. The GGDMA calls on President Granger to establish a commission of inquiry into the ongoing neglect, corruption, shakedown and extortion and now murder of miners at the hands of the security forces and appointed government officers.
The GGDMA notes the current level of impunity in which brutality and neglect is allowed to be meted out to members of the mining industry. The ongoing neglect of the backbone of the Guyanese economy has not gone unnoticed. When the Minister of Finance takes to the media to bemoan and lament the dismal performance of the Guyanese economy, he must address the outstanding issues under his portfolio that are negatively impacting the industry and then look squarely in the face of his colleagues who, for the last four years, have mismanaged and neglected the industry which carried Guyana on its back. No one in the Government is doing anything to help miners, they are just applying pressure. We are demanding our respect.
There seems to be no one in charge of the mining sector and the government is yet to articulate its policy on continued mining in Guyana. There is an increasing level of bullyism taking place and public officers are clearly operating outside the law without consequence. The most recent murder of a miner and the recent detention of a dredge sailing in the Demerara River (not dredging) by an unauthorised regional authority officer demonstrates clearly to all miners that Government does not care about Miners or their families. Death, corruption and frustration are now the pillars on which the current government seems to be moulding the industry.
For more than three years now no major mining roads have been constructed and many of existing ones have been allowed to disintegrate to a state of impenetrability. Mining is surely on the downturn and the blame for this lies squarely at the feet of the current government. More than three years later, the President of Guyana is still refusing to meet with the largest private sector employer in Guyana. We will not take it anymore.