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Komal Chand passes away - Stabroek News

Komal Chand

July 25 ,2020

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The body of the late president of the Guyana Agricultural and General Workers’ Union (GAWU), Komal Chand returned to Guyana yesterday on a flight from Cuba.

Chand’s body was transported on Caribbean Airlines flight BW3414. Also on the flight was his widow, who was stranded in the Latin country for over three months following his passing on April 8. 

The veteran trade unionist and long-time People’s Progressive Party (PPP) executive had left for Cuba on February 22 to obtain treatment for a longtime illness. Since Chand’s passing, his family has been working assiduously to get his widow and his body home, but owing to the shuttered airports, a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, they were forced, like so many others, to play the waiting game.

Over the course of the past several months, this newspaper has stayed in touch with the family as they tried on numerous occasions to get permission from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) for Chan’s body to be brought back to Guyana on one of the chartered flights.

Initially, the family had reached out to the ministry to assist in expenses for a chartered flight direct from Cuba to Guyana at the cost of US$15,000, but the MoFA said they could not afford to share the financial burden.

The family again reached out to the ministry for permission to use another Caribbean Airlines flight to Trinidad from Havana, Cuba, at the cost of US$7,000 but the MoFA said it was not aware of such a flight and so did not grant them permission. 

Following this, GAWU contacted the protocol officer at the MoFA informing them that the airlines was offering a charter from Kingston to Havana to Guyana. The flight was expected to bring 42 repatriated Guyanese from the two countries. The transport of Chand’s body would cost the family US$1,300 or less if more persons had booked the flight. However, the protocol officer, it was said, told GAWU that they were working on another plan to bringing home more Guyanese from other islands. Permission was again not granted.

When this newspaper reached out to the family this past week, Chand’s son, Nishal, said they were expecting a flight yesterday but were unsure whether their father’s transportation would be confirmed.

Thursday morning when Nishal arrived at Caribbean Airlines to pay for his mother’s airfare, it was not yet confirmed whether they would be able to board the flight. He recalled having sat at the airlines office from morning until 2.30pm awaiting word from the MoFA. Nishal noted that even after he had paid for his mother’s airfare, a government official told him to keep his fingers crossed as there were a lot of procedures that needed to happen to make the flight a success. Nishal told this publication that it was not until yesterday morning when the flight arrived in Havana, that the family was able to breathe a sigh of relief. However, due to a delay, the flight made it into Guyana after its 5.30pm scheduled arrival time. 

Flight BW3414 originated in Kingston with stops in Havana and Bridgetown before culminating in Georgetown. Sources disclosed that the airfare for the deceased’s wife was around US$800 plus an additional US $1,300 to transport Chand’s remains, all of which was covered by the family.

“We’re overwhelmed. It has finally hit home. Hearing about my father’s passing and now seeing him coming home in a casket. My mother is happy to be on her way home,” a relieved Nishal said yesterday afternoon as he was preparing to leave for the airport.

Nishal also expressed his gratitude to all those who were part of the effort. “I would like to thank all those influential persons – the Guyana Ambassador to Cuba, the Cuban Ambassador to Guyana, GAWU for their continued efforts, the MoFA and the MoPH, the Guyana Civil Aviation Authority, the collective help of the COVID Taskforce and certainly Caribbean Airlines, and last but not least all our family and friends who have been calling and have been supportive throughout.”

A date has not been set for Chand’s funeral but it will be decided on once the family has been able to sort out the necessary paperwork.

The late Chand joined GAWU in 1975 as the union’s organizing secretary and later became the president of the union. He fought for the rights of thousands of sugar workers who toiled in the fields and factories of the sugar estates. 

Replies sorted oldest to newest

@Django posted:

Know Komal ,in the mid 70's ,was the tech to fix his electronics ,same with N.Gopal.

Both Komal and NK Gopaul attended my wedding reception at Uitvlugt in 1985. NK brought a big icebox with ice from the Weiting & Richter Ice Factory in Water Street GT. 

FM
@Former Member posted:

Both Komal and NK Gopaul attended my wedding reception at Uitvlugt in 1985. NK brought a big icebox with ice from the Weiting & Richter Ice Factory in Water Street GT. 

As a sidebar, Moses asked me for a sheep head to make mulagatani soup. 😁

FM
@Former Member posted:

Both Komal and NK Gopaul attended my wedding reception at Uitvlugt in 1985. NK brought a big icebox with ice from the Weiting & Richter Ice Factory in Water Street GT. 

Sir Gilly got a Stirling Silver knife and fork set from the Jagans. Must be worth a pretty penny now.

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad
@Former Member posted:

Both Komal and NK Gopaul attended my wedding reception at Uitvlugt in 1985. NK brought a big icebox with ice from the Weiting & Richter Ice Factory in Water Street GT. 

Do you know a girl named Leila Persaud?  She is about my age. She got married and went to live in Annandale, ECD.

R
@Former Member posted:

Both Komal and NK Gopaul attended my wedding reception at Uitvlugt in 1985. NK brought a big icebox with ice from the Weiting & Richter Ice Factory in Water Street GT. 

@Former Member posted:

As a sidebar, Moses asked me for a sheep head to make mulagatani soup. 😁

Nanda: nice guy. Enjoy your trips down memory lane, you should write a book.  ///////

FM
@Former Member posted:

Nanda: nice guy. Enjoy your trips down memory lane, you should write a book.  ///////

Thanks. You know something? Despite my heart attack and strokes my memory is still sharp like a cane cutter's #22.

My memory goes back to 1954 when I was 3 years old. There was a visiting circus called Circus Romano. It had pitched a large tent where the Cuffy monument now stands. My maternal grandparents travelled with me from Canal #2 Polder WBD to see the circus. I can still picture it in my mind.

FM
@Former Member posted:

Thanks. You know something? Despite my heart attack and strokes my memory is still sharp like a cane cutter's #22.

My memory goes back to 1954 when I was 3 years old. There was a visiting circus called Circus Romano. It had pitched a large tent where the Cuffy monument now stands. My maternal grandparents travelled with me from Canal #2 Polder WBD to see the circus. I can still picture it in my mind.

One of them foreign visiting circuses visiting in the 1960s' had a German strong man. He got my Portuguese neighbor young daughter pregnant. The German strong man disappear. The girl had to quit school and go to work to support the child.

Prashad
@Former Member posted:

Walk good, comrade Komal. Tribute by Allan Fenty.

https://www.stabroeknews.com/2...-good-comrade-komal/

Walk good comrade Komal

Dear Editor,

Thanks for allowing me to share this brief tribute-oriented correspondence with others. As Komal Chand – “Comrade Komal”- has beaten me to an early departure, I’m obliged to wish his working-class, and socialist- inclined soul all the rest it now deserves. I so do, via this.

Just recently I make a startling, pleasant but very belated discovery. It had to do with my visiting, as a younger teenager in the early sixties the Cheongs at Vauxhall in Canal Number

One, WBD. One of the lovely Cheong girls, Yvonne, was married to a shop-owner right there named Dalchand. That one-name gentleman Dalchand was/ is Comrade Komal’s elder brother.

For the decades I knew and interacted with Komal I never realized that. So we never discussed the fact that as a youngster I would be in Dalchand’s grocery occasionally.

Pardon me for finding some oblique “spiritual connection” with Komal there.

Komal was a PPP Jaganite to the bone but when somehow I “connected” with him more closely,after 1997, he never would display or flaunt his PPP-ness. Though he would tantalise me subtly about my PNC past, he was gracious, soft-spoken and primarily a dedicated Trade-Union

Leader. (I would tantalise in return that he was “GAWU President-for-life”- like Patrick Yarde (GPSU).

Never given to any racism I could detect, Komal’s GAWU, after a mighty struggle replaced the MPCA Company Union and won the right to represent the interests of some 20,000 sugar  workers at one time. But GAWU also represented robustly Afro-workers at Barama Forestry undertakings and all Fisheries Companies. (How I enjoy many May Days for that latter reason!)

As all leaders would, he attracted criticism from some columnists and fellow labour leaders alike. How could he represent his workers interests whilst representing the PPP government in Parliament? They asked. What better forum to be, Komal reasoned. Then he would point to Britain’s Labour Government Leaders, many West Indian Prime Ministers, Comrades Burnham and Hoyte (GLU).

Up until 2014 I used to produce some features for GAWU’s Combat newspaper and would edit some of his May 01, Labour Day presentations. Just two anecdotes from those days: he had “nothing against Viola Burnham” – the wife of the PPP’s nemesis Forbes; secondly, he would complain to me that “that young chap would really fret me, upset me yeh Fenty.” Who? Bharrat!

It also came as a mild surprise to me years ago that Komal Chand himself was never a sugar worker! Yet his life-long dedication to their cause and to the vital industry was all the more remarkable. He did have at his side, for thirty-five solid years, the equally-dedicated, faithful unionist Seepaul Narine – an actual former sugar worker from the fields who has risen under his mentor’s guidance, to even visit the labour union capitals of the world.

I close by noting my batch mate Labour Minister Keith Scott’s sincere tribute to comrade

Komal as I regret that only one President (His Excellency) returned successfully from Cuba’s health care but another (Komal) President of the largest ever trade Union, could not.

I now ask family and authorities: let there be some farewell funeral- however limited! Farewell,

walk good comrade Komal.

Yours faithfully

Allan Arthur Fenty

Django
Last edited by Django

I have a daunting question to ask. Why are Komal Chand's remains took so long to return to Guyana and why did his family was hoping the government would help? Was this based on the lack of finance or transportation, etc? 

RIP, my condolences to his family. 

FM
@Former Member posted:

I have a daunting question to ask. Why are Komal Chand's remains took so long to return to Guyana and why did his family was hoping the government would help? Was this based on the lack of finance or transportation, etc? 

RIP, my condolences to his family. 

Komal was Jagan's Albert Speer. Probably that is why.

Prashad
@Prashad posted:

Komal was Jagan's Albert Speer. Probably that is why.

I don't care what Komal was. Why was Komal Chand's remain took so long to return to his homeland for burial/cremation? Is the family bankrupt or is it due to COVID-19? 

FM
@Prashad posted:

The family was attacked by bandits not very long ago. His son was badly injured in the attack. So this was an added issue for them.

Buddy, if you don't know the correct answer, please let someone else take a shot. I don't play guessing games and facts don't rely on some unfortunate situation. I am asking this question to know exactly why Mr. Chand's body stayed in Cuba this long. (simple doesn't get simpler than this). Thank you for trying.

FM
@Prashad posted:

Listen here. Read the article. The family had to come up with the money not GAWU. Are you trying to make a Political statement?

Hey you little patakake, did I made any political statement to you? Stop trying and stop guessing if you can't handle rejection. Let me make this simple. if the family had to come up with the money, is that a good or bad thing? Why they couldn't have done it a long time and avoid the delay? Let me assume for a moment that the family wanted the government to foot the bill while Konal Chand was sleeping in ice for months, is that it? So, the family got the money but playing games with the government? That's real love for a husband and father. So who was paying for his wife's expense to stay in Cuba that long?

FM
@Former Member posted:

Both Komal and NK Gopaul attended my wedding reception at Uitvlugt in 1985. NK brought a big icebox with ice from the Weiting & Richter Ice Factory in Water Street GT. 

Your wedding gift was a box of ice?

Bibi Haniffa
@Former Member posted:

I don't care what Komal was. Why was Komal Chand's remain took so long to return to his homeland for burial/cremation? Is the family bankrupt or is it due to COVID-19? 

Didn’t Leonora/Lennox/Casablanca say she had connections and would contact her people to get the body flown to Guyana?

Bibi Haniffa
Last edited by Bibi Haniffa

Didn’t Leonora/Lennox/Casablanca say she had connections and would contact her people to get the body flown to Guyana?

Madame, I don't know much of Konal Chand other than he was the president of GAWU. I ask a simple question and if you read further above, you will know why I am asking. If you have the answer you may answer my question. Thank you. BTW, I know nothing about the highlighted. 

FM
@Prashad posted:

Listen here. Read the article. The family had to come up with the money not GAWU. Are you trying to make a Political statement?

@Former Member posted:

Hey you little patakake,

Haa haa haa haaaaaa ....

Looks like Petal is stating that

-- Prashad is a little patacake; and

-- Petal has a huge patacake.    

FM

Your wedding gift was a box of ice?

Actually I knew in advance that there wasn't enough ice in all Uitvlugt to supply my guests. NK Gopaul volunteered to supply the ice free of charge. I got lots of gifts in cash and in kind from my wedding guests.

FM
@Former Member posted:

Hey you little patakake, did I made any political statement to you? Stop trying and stop guessing if you can't handle rejection. Let me make this simple. if the family had to come up with the money, is that a good or bad thing? Why they couldn't have done it a long time and avoid the delay? Let me assume for a moment that the family wanted the government to foot the bill while Konal Chand was sleeping in ice for months, is that it? So, the family got the money but playing games with the government? That's real love for a husband and father. So who was paying for his wife's expense to stay in Cuba that long?

Sorry about that. I was thinking that you were trying to frame the narrative to make the political statement that "Komal was a Jaganite so Jagdeo and PNC left him in Cuba".

Prashad

"Up until 2014 I used to produce some features for GAWU’s Combat newspaper and would edit some of his May 01, Labour Day presentations. Just two anecdotes from those days: he had “nothing against Viola Burnham” – the wife of the PPP’s nemesis Forbes; secondly, he would complain to me that “that young chap would really fret me, upset me yeh Fenty.” Who? Bharrat!"    This is a quote from Allan Fenty's tribute.  Jagdeo would "really fret" Komal.  "Upset me yeh Fenty".  Jagdeo threatened to have GAWU derecognized.  Yes, GAWU that stood for the sugar workers that some of you shed tears for, your leader wanted derecognized because Komal was fighting for the workers.  I posit that your support for Jagdeo and the PPP has nothing to do with ideology, a working class ideology, but has everything to do with race.  If the PPP was a principled organization the membership would have ousted Jagdeo and his crooked cabal a long time ago.  

T
@Former Member posted:

Actually I knew in advance that there wasn't enough ice in all Uitvlugt to supply my guests. NK Gopaul volunteered to supply the ice free of charge. I got lots of gifts in cash and in kind from my wedding guests.

Although in those days ice would have been a scarce commodity given the constant blackouts during those PNC dysfunctional days.

FM
@Former Member posted:

Thanks. You know something? Despite my heart attack and strokes my memory is still sharp like a cane cutter's #22.

My memory goes back to 1954 when I was 3 years old. There was a visiting circus called Circus Romano. It had pitched a large tent where the Cuffy monument now stands. My maternal grandparents travelled with me from Canal #2 Polder WBD to see the circus. I can still picture it in my mind.

I remember that circus, Gilly, wasn't it actually called Circo Romano? It was around also in what I remember was the sixties. I sneaked in and on the way home got lost,then I saw a guy (Hazlewood was his name) who lived down the street from my family around Charlotte St, so I ran behind his bicycle. Banna, when I finally got to my home I got a sound cutass.

There was another huge fair (Coney Island) and was told after leaving Guyana the ship transporting the rides etc. sank in the Atlantic.

cain
Last edited by cain
@Totaram posted:

"Up until 2014 I used to produce some features for GAWU’s Combat newspaper and would edit some of his May 01, Labour Day presentations. Just two anecdotes from those days: he had “nothing against Viola Burnham” – the wife of the PPP’s nemesis Forbes; secondly, he would complain to me that “that young chap would really fret me, upset me yeh Fenty.” Who? Bharrat!"    This is a quote from Allan Fenty's tribute.  Jagdeo would "really fret" Komal.  "Upset me yeh Fenty".  Jagdeo threatened to have GAWU derecognized.  Yes, GAWU that stood for the sugar workers that some of you shed tears for, your leader wanted derecognized because Komal was fighting for the workers.  I posit that your support for Jagdeo and the PPP has nothing to do with ideology, a working class ideology, but has everything to do with race.  If the PPP was a principled organization the membership would have ousted Jagdeo and his crooked cabal a long time ago.  

Totaram has gone back to drinking two Russian beers with Jagan daddy days.

Prashad
@cain posted:

I remember that circus, Gilly, wasn't it actually called Circo Romano? It was around also in what I remember was the sixties. I sneaked in and on the way home got lost,then I saw a guy (Hazlewood was his name) who lived down the street from my family around Charlotte St, so I ran behind his bicycle. Banna, when I finally got to my home I got a sound cutass.

There was another huge fair (Coney Island) and was told after leaving Guyana the ship transporting the rides etc. sank in the Atlantic.

Circo Romano is correct name. I remember Coney Island too, both the old 1950s-60s shows and the 1990s return shows. In 1995 Coney Island was held on Homestretch Avenue, between the Cuffy monument and the National Cultural Centre. In 1996 it moved to Uitvlugt Community Centre ground. A few days before leaving Guyana for Canada, I took my wife and 4-year-old son there. I still have print photos of that visit.

FM

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