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Former Member

Freddie Kissoon – The last words of Joseph O’Lall

MAY 15, 2008 | BY  | FILED UNDER FREDDIE KISSOON 

I sat for four hours in Joseph O’Lall’s Prashad Nagar home interviewing him. Part of our exchange I did for one of these columns. A huge section of that conversation Mr. O’Lall restricted from being published. He cited two reasons. He didn’t want to aggravate the tensions with the President because he intended to return to Government service and didn’t want to give the President an excuse for permanently banishing him from the public sector.

Secondly, he indicated to me that he wanted me to keep his toxic condemnation of the ruling PPP confidential because the party had promised him that it would help to exonerate him in his unfair (that was the word he used) dismissal by President Jagdeo. He also pointed out that any break with the PPP would have to occur after the organisation’s Congress later this year, the reason being that he wanted to table a motion for the party to name its 2011 presidential candidate at that event.

Joseph O’Lall died and was buried last week. It was indeed a sad occasion against the background of his sudden employment termination. I am old enough and experienced enough to see angst, permanent pessimism and Shakespearian tragedy in the eyes of someone who speaks to me about their problems.
And I saw those throes in the eyes and on the visage of Joseph O’Lall. He struck me as a man who was no longer interested in life. In psychology there is the concept of “psychosomatic effect” meaning the unhappiness in the mind affects the body. Is it possible his death could be seen in that context?
Mr. O’Lall is dead. His family consists of one son, a step-daughter and a reputed wife. I believe Mr. O’Lall would have wanted me to publish the information he asked me to hold back on. Here are snippets of the entire interview.

First, Mr. O’Lall desired the PPP to remove Mr. Jagdeo as President. It was the first time in the interview that I felt he was becoming too emotional and too irrational. His eyes were wild, gesticulations canine, body language intemperate. He raised his voice so loudly that two young persons who were in the house upstairs ran down the steps to see if I was murdering him.

He looked at me with the visage of a mad man and said: “Jagdeo has to be stopped because he is going to destroy this country; he has already destroyed the PPP.”

I was cynical. Even though I was sympathetic to him because he proved with documentary evidence that he was fired without just cause, I was not impressed with his exclamations.

I fired back. I asked how come he arrived at that judgement only after a negative entanglement with the President. He responded: “I was working for my party; Comrade Cheddi put me in charge of energy.”
I went further: “So why didn’t you utilize your crucial role in the Georgetown arm of the party to pressure the PPP into regulating Mr. Jagdeo’s behaviour and policies.” It was that question that got Mr. O’Lall more worked up. Then he opened up to me.

Joseph O’Lall asserted that he didn’t think the PPP would be successful in securing his job back or any other form of public sector employment. You could have heard/seen the anger and chagrin in his voice and eyes as he spoke of being let down by the PPP. He gave the number of years he spent with the PPP and to be humiliated the way he was by President Jagdeo was heart-breaking.

I pursued him on the subject of the political bankruptcy of the PPP that dates back to the sixties and why someone like him that saw the mountain of evidence of backwardness remained inside. He would have none of it. He loved Cheddi Jagan and the PPP. Then he revealed why he was and will always be a PPP.
He said: “Freddie, I am a communist.”
He concluded that the PPP is a spent force, devastated by the Machiavellian politics of Mr. Jagdeo. For him, the game was over. He hinted that he was leaving for Trinidad to take up an appointment. There were more questions from me. He offered more fascinating answers. I probed him as to why he thinks the PPP is a spent force. His answer needs careful contemplation by the Guyanese people for its implications are frightening when you think of them.

Joseph O’Lall believed that there is no one holding the PPP together and that the vision and energy of those that Jagan left behind have run out. He said that these post-Jagan leaders have virtually given up and lacked the will to reshape the PPP. According to him, Jagan’s protÉgÉs have given the PPP to Mr. Jagdeo.
I enquired about Mrs. Jagan’s role. He was livid. He was completely finished with Mrs. Jagan. This is how he put it: “You know Freddie, I went to that woman after the President dismissed me. You know what she told me, Freddie? It was a government matter and not a party decision.”

I then asked what happens when Jagdeo goes. He thinks once there is a credible opposition with a good Indian name, the PPP will lose in 2011. As I was leaving, he put his hand on my shoulder, smiled for once and said, “Be careful, Freddie.”

I don’t know what he meant. I will never know; he’s dead.

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Sinking ship leaves rats

JUNE 23, 2013 | BY  | FILED UNDER APNU COLUMNFEATURES / COLUMNISTS 

Khemraj Ramjattan– a former chairman of the Progressive Youth Organisation and Member of the Central Committee–was among the first to desert the People’s Progressive Party’s sinking ship. Then came the veteran Boyo Ramsaroop. Next was Moses Nagamootoo. Then came Hari Narayen ‘Ralph’ Ramkarran. Other veterans–Harry Ramdass, Cecil Ramsingh, Fazal Khan and Joseph O’Lall– disembarked quietly.
Thousands of ordinary supporters, sensing that the ship was sinking, also began deserting the People’s Progressive Party in droves. More than 27,000 persons who voted for the PPP in the 2001 general and regional elections did not do so in 2006. More than 17,000 who voted for the PPP in 2006 jumped ship to vote for A Partnership for National Unity and the Alliance for Change in 2011. The PPP lost over 45,000 votes during Bharrat Jagdeo’s wild 1999-2011 presidency. The sinking trend is clear to the party’s membership if not to its leadership.
The People’s Progressive Party over the last sixty-three years indoctrinated its members with the mythology of Jaganite cultism, Marxism-Leninism, democratic centralism and the saga of its imagined solitary struggle against colonialism and capitalism. These articles of faith rallied generations of believers and created a mystique which helped it to remain a formidable force in local politics.  But change has come. Ancient myths, unknown to the present generation, can no longer distort the actuality of two decades of decadence.
The PPP’s 27th Congress in July 2002 at the J. C. Chandisingh Secondary School at Port Mourant in the East Berbice-Corentyne Region, was an early indication of an impending mutiny on board. Khemraj Ramjattan launched a rebellious resolution that threatened to shake the party’s four sacred tenets all at once.
The ‘Ramjattan Resolution’ called for the removal of references to Marxism-Leninism from the Constitution and ‘direct elections’ for the top executives. He proposed also that the party congress closest to a general election should provide a forum at which persons willing to become candidates for the presidency would be selected ‘democratically’ by all the delegates. Ramjattan’s Resolution was anathema to the party’s ruling cabal and was rejected. For other reasons, he too was eventually expelled.
The PPP’s 28th Congress was held in August 2005 at the Cotton Field Secondary School, in the Pomeroon-Supenaam Region under the theme, “Strengthen National Unity, Expand Democracy and Social Progress.” The congress allowed the cabal to consolidate its grip on the Central Committee, restrict democracy and retard progress. The result was that, in general elections the next year, 2006, the PPP lost a greater number of votes.
The PPP’s 29th Congress was held in August 2008 at the Diamond Secondary School in the Demerara-Mahaica Region. The knives were out by this time. All eyes were set on the prize of the party’s presidential candidacy in the general elections constitutionally due to be held in 2011. The congress became an arena for a shadow war between two factions –led by Ramotar, and Jagdeo, respectively. Reepu Daman Persaud struck the first blow by raising the bogus issue of a ‘third term’ for Jagdeo who was then still president. Ramotar had to sidestep the challenge.
The Jagdeo faction then surreptitiously started their campaign for him to be allowed to run for another presidential term, even though it was prohibited by the Constitution. The Jagdeo group calling itself the ‘Guyanese Coalition for Jagdeo Third Term’ launched a glitzy publicity campaign involving the erection of a billboard, the distribution of posters, flyers and buttons and the publication of dubious opinion polls suggesting that Jagdeo would be re-elected.
The Ramotar faction responded. A shadowy group of supporters” giving their names as “Ganga Kawal, Basdeo Singh and 11 other PPP Diehards” “ suddenly emerged. The group published a full-page “Open Appeal to Leaders and Members of the PPP” in a daily newspaper in January 2010. The “Appeal’ alleged, among other things, “…that the PPP hard core is being marginalized in the government and a new band, termed by one commentator as  “the new private sector,” is becoming dominant and all-powerful.” Ramotar was eventually able to win the nomination as the PPP’s presidential candidate.
The PPP’s 30th Congress is now scheduled to be held on 2nd-4th August at the J.C. Chandisingh Secondary School at Port Mourant. The problem is that factionalism is tearing the Party apart. Rifts have reopened; rivalries have been rekindled. The central and executive committees control the party organisation between congresses. Whoever controls those committees will control the state apparatus and the country. The state and its resources have come to be seen as a plaything in the hands of the PPP Central Committee and this is what makes the forthcoming congress so vital to the survival of the cabal.
The public should not expect change from the PPP’s 30th Congress. As the ship continues to sink, it will leave on board many of the same central Committee members who have dominated the Party and the State for the last two decades.

FM

SKIN UP TIME!

 

Where was Ramotar when all of this was happening?

APRIL 19, 2011 | BY  | FILED UNDER LETTERS 

Dear Editor,
I was amused but not surprised that Mr. Donald Ramotar had indicated that he would approach Mr. Moses Nagamotoo to hit the campaign trail on behalf of the PPP for after all Moses is a PPP and a member of the PPP family. How convenient!
Mr. Ramotar stood in silence whilst stalwarts like Moses Nagamootoo was marginalised and called “a joker”, Navin Chandarpal was kicked out and called a “rumshop inhabitant” and O’Lall was also kicked out.
The poor fellow died shortly after.
Mr. Ramotar, the General Secretary of the Party did not raise his voice once, in defence of the comrades.
Now he is asking Moses Nagamootoo to campaign with him for a Jagdeo third term, as I feel Ramotar is a ‘front’ for Jagdeo. Even if he is his own man, where was he all along whilst the comrades were being abused and humiliated?
Moses will be foolish, after being used by Jagdeo, to allow himself to be used by Ramotar.
I also ask, on whose hands is O’Lall’s blood, Jagdeo or Ramotar?
Vicky Singh

FM

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