Guyana Resource Center
Set like a gem in the crown of South America, nestled on the North-Eastern shoulder, defying the raging Atlantic Ocean, Guyana's many waterways reflect the source of it's name "The Land of Many Waters"
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Sunday, April 30, 2006

By Felicia Persaud

Hardbeatnews, NEW YORK, N.Y., Fri. Apr. 28, 2006: “I grieve … Your land is vast, full of plenty and your people hope. What tragic fate has betook you and left you barren. Of love, of the beauty and the freedom of existence.”

Those words from renown Guyanese poet James C. Richmond came back to me on Saturday April 22 as I woke like many to the horrific news that four more nationals – including a government minister – were senselessly slaughtered in the South American nation. The news came on the heels of the many other killings in recent weeks, that has put the spotlight on this country of less than a million people.

Murders like the Ronald Waddell execution, the Gazz Shermohamed killing and the bloodbath of February that took eight lives in one night in a tiny village on the outskirts of Georgetown, the country’s capital, have all stunned the nation.

But the Satyadeow Sawh, Rajpat Rai, Phulmattie Persaud and Curtis Robinson murders left many especially bewildered, since for the ruling Peoples Progressive Party/Civic, it hit so close to home.

I never knew Sawh, Waddell or Shermohamed, or the many more whose lives have all been taken coldly and callously by bullets. But for me, the reports of the horrific killings took my mind back to a dark period in my life in Guyana, prior to the Desmond Hoyte rule, where many lived in fear of ‘kick-down the door’ bandits, that robbed, raped and killed often.

I especially remember the infamous leader of the bandits, ‘Eyelash,’ who brought terror to the East Coast of Demerara and of the many vigilante groups that were formed in many communities by residents to help protect their families. I can still see the many steel doors that popped up all around houses to prevent such attacks and I can still hear my father detailing to me in military-like precision, the plan of assault and my role should our home be attacked by the terror squad.

Luckily we never were, but I know countless others who were; many of whom left Guyana almost immediately after, vowing never to return.

So contrary to the many comments and emails I’ve seen flashing around this past week, terror in Guyana is nothing new. What is new, however, is the sophisticated weaponry and tactics of the criminals, boosted no doubt by the lucrative drug trade that’s spilling over from neighboring South American countries.

And the economic plight of many in the country is providing the fuel for to rapidly make its way across the country. With many in the civil service and tactical services units so vastly underpaid, fast, easy money is no doubt tempting and it’s causing many to dismiss a human life as coldly as they would a chicken that they rear for a meal.

So what should be done? First off, the government and the opposition must desist from using these killings as a political ploy. There is no time for selfish politicking. This is a national crisis of enormous proportions that can only be solved by bringing in international help, especially to neighboring Brazil and Venezuela, while working together to devise a national strategy.

And targeting one specific area of the country while the government and the police throw around wild theories of a political terror plot is not a solution. The rising crime rate in Guyana is a social scourge of enormous proportion not some air brain scheme to steal the government. If that were the case, the entire cabinet would have been taken out already.

When Hoyte took over the government in 1985, he reinstated the death penalty and took a significant bite out of crime. Similar radical steps must be taken to send a strong message to those who take innocent lives without care but it must be substantially boosted by international firepower and aid.

Once these criminals are found, the death penalty that’s on the books in Guyana must be implemented to send a clear message that such cold-blooded assassinations will not be tolerated. Let’s get real please, identify the problem and not continue to be blinded by race and politics.

EDITOR’S NOTE: The writer is publisher of The Caribbean World News Network (caribworldnews.com), the only daily Caribbean Diaspora newswire.

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By Ambassador Odeen Ishmael

Hardbeatnews, CARACAS, Venezuela, Fri. Apr. 28, 2006: The brutal assassination of Guyana’s agriculture minister Satyadeo Sawh on April 22 marks a dangerous turning point against political democracy in the country.

The state is being destabilized by violent crime, which has shown strong signs of being politicized. What the Anglophone Caribbean sees as not being unusual in some Latin American countries seems to be taking root in the Guyanese society. As the Caricom foreign ministers stated on April 24 in their condemnation of the assassination, “Such acts of violence have no place in the democratic culture of the region and undermine the political, economic and social stability of the countries of the community.”

Growing violent crime has become a most dangerous menace to the democracies in this hemisphere. It is chasing away people, discouraging investments and driving fear in people, many of who now openly clamor for iron-fisted governments to deal with this situation. Democratic governments are too “soft” they say.

Interestingly, a 2004 UN survey of democracy in 18 Latin American countries showed that a majority of people would willingly support an authoritarian regime in exchange for economic progress and better security. In the introduction to that report, Dante Caputo, a former Argentine foreign minister wrote: “We have witnessed the deepest and broadest advance of democracy since the independence of our nations. But what has been won is by no means secure. Democracy appears to be losing its vitality. If it becomes irrelevant to Latin Americans, will it be able to resist the new dangers?”

The leaders of Latin American and Caribbean democracies have to take heed of this situation. Many of their citizens feel that representative democracy has been disappointing. They are becoming disenchanted because they think the current political system is failing to generate widespread prosperity, reduce crime or close the wide gap between rich and poor.

The Secretary General of the Organization of American States, Jose Miguel Insulza, recognizing this problem, stated recently: “We have democratic governments. What we don't have are government institutions able to deliver what the people really want. That is why democracy is in doubt today in Latin America.”

In Latin America and the Caribbean, broad political freedoms exist side by side with widespread poverty. Crime is now cancerous and corruption is wreaking havoc on the social fabric. Millions are unemployed and nearly half of the people live on less than US$2 a day. But democratic changes have enabled people to protest actively on the streets against their governments, which failed to solve their social and economic problems. These protests forced 11 elected presidents out of office in the past 15 years.

Clearly, more and more Latin Americans feel that free-market polices such as reducing trade barriers, cutting budget deficits and selling off state-run industries – all elements of the “Washington consensus” – are not propelling their countries’ economies forward fast enough. A paper produced last month by the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, shows that between 1960 and 1980, when military rulers largely held sway, the region's per capita income jumped by 82 percent. By contrast, in the next 20 years, when Latin Americans turned to democracy and free markets, per capita income grew by just 9 percent. Between 2000 and 2004, it grew by only 1 percent.

It is therefore no surprise that the voters in the region, after assessing the political choices, are abandoning the centre-right political parties and choosing leftist leaders who do not follow the “Washington consensus”, but who, generally want to maintain economic links with the developed world.

But even in making choices in elections, apathy is growing. Overall, people have participated well in fair elections, which show a 70 percent average turnout. While in some countries, voting is compulsory, in others increasing numbers of disillusioned voters stay away. In the February 5 presidential election, Costa Rica experienced its lowest turnout with only 65 percent of the voters casting their ballots. And in the recent Peruvian parliamentary elections, the blank ballots accounted for the largest proportion (29 percent) of the “votes.”

With the advance of democracy, political violence, except in Colombia, has waned. But drug trafficking across the northern South America, Central America and the Caribbean has bred another dangerous brand of violent criminals, some of whom are now connected to forces determined to undermine democratic governments.

Across the region, armies have become smaller and they are now less openly involved in politics. Yet, with the escalating violent crime, many of the “re-organized” armies and police forces often are unable or unwilling to enforce the law. As a result, murders, kidnappings and drug-related crimes have multiplied, leaving citizens living in fear. Currently, with 25.1 murders per 100,000 inhabitants, the Latin America and the Caribbean region has the highest murder rate in the world.

The UN 2004 report confidently states: "The deficits and pitfalls of democracy should not make us forget that we have left behind the fears of assassination, forced disappearances and torture." With the assassination of the Guyanese minister, the authors may have to re-assess their views since at least one of these dangers has reared its ugly head again.

EDITOR’s NOTE: The writer is Guyana’s ambassador to Venezuela. – Hardbeatnews.com

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By Felicia Persaud

Hardbeatnews, NEW YORK, N.Y., Fri. Apr. 28, 2006: “I grieve … Your land is vast, full of plenty and your people hope. What tragic fate has betook you and left you barren. Of love, of the beauty and the freedom of existence.”

Those words from Guyanese poet James Richmond came back to me on Saturday April 22 as I woke like many to the horrific news that four more nationals – including a government minister – were senselessly slaughtered in the South American nation. The news came on the heels of the many other killings in recent weeks, that has put the spotlight on this country of less than a million people.

Murders like the Ronald Waddell execution, the Gazz Shermohamed killing and the bloodbath of February that took eight lives in one night in a tiny village on the outskirts of Georgetown, the country’s capital, have all stunned the nation.

But the Satyadeow Sawh, Rajpat Rai, Phulmattie Persaud and Curtis Robinson murders left many especially bewildered, since for the ruling Peoples Progressive Party/Civic, it hit so close to home.

I never knew Sawh, Waddell or Shermohamed, or the many more whose lives have all been taken coldly and callously by bullets. But for me, the reports of the horrific killings took my mind back to a dark period in my life in Guyana, prior to the Desmond Hoyte rule, where many lived in fear of ‘kick-down the door’ bandits, that robbed, raped and killed often.

I especially remember the infamous leader of the bandits, ‘Eyelash,’ who brought terror to the East Coast of Demerara and of the many vigilante groups that were formed in many communities by residents to help protect their families. I can still see the many steel doors that popped up all around houses to prevent such attacks and I can still hear my father detailing to me in military-like precision, the plan of assault and my role should our home be attacked by the terror squad.

Luckily we never were, but I know countless others who were; many of whom left Guyana almost immediately after, vowing never to return.

So contrary to the many comments and emails I’ve seen flashing around this past week, terror in Guyana is nothing new. What is new, however, is the sophisticated weaponry and tactics of the criminals, boosted no doubt by the lucrative drug trade that’s spilling over from neighboring South American countries.

And the economic plight of many in the country is providing the fuel for to rapidly make its way across the country. With many in the civil service and tactical services units so vastly underpaid, fast, easy money is no doubt tempting and it’s causing many to dismiss a human life as coldly as they would a chicken that they rear for a meal.

So what should be done? First off, the government and the opposition must desist from using these killings as a political ploy. There is no time for selfish politicking. This is a national crisis of enormous proportions that can only be solved by bringing in international help, especially to neighboring Brazil and Venezuela, while working together to devise a national strategy.

And targeting one specific area of the country while the government and the police throw around wild theories of a political terror plot is not a solution. The rising crime rate in Guyana is a social scourge of enormous proportion not some air brain scheme to steal the government. If that were the case, the entire cabinet would have been taken out already.

When Hoyte took over the government in 1985, he reinstated the death penalty and took a significant bite out of crime. Similar radical steps must be taken to send a strong message to those who take innocent lives without care but it must be substantially boosted by international firepower and aid.

Once these criminals are found, the death penalty that’s on the books in Guyana must be implemented to send a clear message that such cold-blooded assassinations will not be tolerated. Let’s get real please, identify the problem and not continue to be blinded by race and politics.

EDITOR’S NOTE: The writer is publisher of The Caribbean World News Network (caribworldnews.com), the only daily Caribbean Diaspora newswire.

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Born: Plaisance, Guyana, June 18, 1967
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Clubs: Hamilton Steelers 1987-90, Toronto Blizzard 1990, Montreal Supra 1991, West Ham United 1992-93, Maritimo 1993 - 1999, Kansas City Spurs 1999-2000. A graduate of Rosemount High School in Montreal, he first played soccer at the age of 12 with St. Leonard and was a member of the Quebec Selects team in 1980. This led to his selection for the national U-16 team in 1982 and the national U-19 team in 1984. In total he represented Canada in 21 youth internationals, including the FIFA World Youth Championship in the Soviet Union in 1985. He made his full international debut in August of 1986 against Singapore in the Merlion Cup and went on to play 65 full internationals for Canada. In the Canadian Soccer League Alex played 76 games in for the Hamilton Steelers in four seasons, and scored 28 goals before being traded to the Toronto Blizzard in 1990. Alex moved on to the Montreal Supra in 1991 and then to West Ham United in England for the 1992/93 season. In December of 1993 he was transferred to the Portuguese First Division club Maritimo, who play on the island of Madeira and was named Portugal's best foreign player in the 1994/95 season when he scored 12 goals. Alex moved to the United States in 1999 to play in Major League Soccer for the Kansas City Wizards and in his two seasons with the club appeared in 24 games and scored four goals.


http://www.thesoccerhalloffame.ca/
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Alex Bunbury can easily point to the moment he knew he fit in with some of the world's soccer elite.

"The greatest honour I got playing professionally in Portugal is that I was Alex, a football player for Maritimo," Bunbury said. "There was no need for a reference to me being a Canadian player.

"We are renowned for our hockey here in Canada, but once they saw my calibre of play, it was no longer that."

Last night Bunbury joined eight others as 2006 inductees into the Canadian Soccer Hall of Fame and Museum in Vaughan.

The native of Guyana developed his skills in Montreal, where his family emigrated when Alex was a child. Bunbury then went on to become a fixture for Canada's national team, participating in 65 international matches.

In 1993, the talented striker moved to Portugal where he was a star scoring a club record 59 goals for CS Maritimo.

"I think there is a stigma for a lot of Canadian players," said Bunbury, who now lives in Minnesota. "I think the only way you can get rid of it is by going and playing the game at a high level and playing it with passion, which is what I did.

"This is a great honour. Very humbling. You never start out even thinking of being in a hall of fame some day."

Brian Robinson, David Stothard and Randy Samuel, a defender who represented Canada 82 times, joined Bunbury as players inducted at last night's ceremony.

In the builders category, Toronto Sun Corporate Sports editor George Gross went in alongside Sylvie Beliveau and John Buchanon, as well as the late Bob Bearpark and Fred Stambrook.

Victoria native Robinson represented Canada in two World Cup qualifiers and scored a memorable goal at Azteca Stadium in Mexico City in 1972.

"I felt that it was frustrating at times," Robinson said of representing Canada against world powers. "We were amateurs. We had families and jobs and we'd get together for two or three weeks then have to go play against countries that were together for much longer periods of time.

"People here in Canada would see (the results) and think we just lost again without understanding what we were up against."

Toronto Sun
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This address by Rodney was made in September 1979, at a street corner in Georgetown. It says something of the crisis of neocolonial rule in Guyana then, and of Rodney and the Working People's Alliance (W.P.A.) struggle against such rule. Rodney would be assassinated in less than a year.



Brothers and sisters!
Many persons are coming forward and are bringing evidence and information about what is going on. They tell about their own particular experiences — as housewives, as taxi drivers and so on. They all come and give information with the necessary details, so that we can get a total picture of what the social, economic and political life is like in this country today.
And there is not a group without some fundamental grievance. What we would like to do in the Working People's Alliance is to share with you some analysis of the facts before us. We will concentrate on information as the basis of our analysis of where we are, and more important still, of where we are going. It is essential to carry out such a sober analysis. The idea being not simply to rally our supporters, but to convince all Guyanese, because we respect their intelligence. When you put sensible things before the Guyanese population, they will respond; and that is our task today.
I want to begin my reference to events by asking you to think about some of the more recent statements which have emerged from the ruling government since the murder of Father Darke — for that murder was an important political event in the event history of this country. Father Darke fell as the first martyr of the present stage of the Guyanese revolution. (Applause) We must understand the significance of his murder. The W.P.A. has already publicly accused the P.N.C., as a party and as the government of this country, of complicity in that murder. And we have said that in any decent and civilised country, investigations would have proceeded to find out who were the real authors and instigators of the murder of Father Darke. (Someone shouts, "Rabbi".) More than just the Rabbi. We must not be confused into thinking that the Rabbi is an independent entity! The Rabbi is not independent. The Rabbi himself is a stooge of other forces. (Laughter) We must identify his masters — his paymasters. We must not be afraid to say openly that the People's National Congress has been officially involved in thuggery. Eventually it had to lead to murder as it did on July the fourteenth. And what has occurred since convinces us that the government, having got itself in that murder, is now concentrating on the cover-up.
First they came out with ridiculous stories about 'scuffling' that went on; then they refused to tell the Guyanese and the international public that Father Darke was killed while doing his duty as a journalist.
They never published any photographs of July 14 in the Chronicle. That was not because the Chronicle photographer was not there. He was right there on the scene. He had the time and the opportunity to photograph us when we were brought on a ridiculous charge of arson, but they would not publish any photographs of the violence. Photographs do exist. If you go to 'Freedom House' in Robb Street, you will see the display of these photographs. (Applause and comments). The brother says the photographs should be carried to court. I agree, that's a logical statement. In a normal, civilised, healthy country, it would have gone to the courts. Instead, The Minister of Labour, Health and Housing, a Minister who actually had the temerity to turn up at the funeral of Father Darke, (derisive laughter), has now gone on record as fabricating yet another dimension to the lie — coming up with remarkable interpretation that the murder of Father Darke was another Catholic priest whose name he cannot pronounce. (Shouts of "Shame".)

The Chronicle of Lies
In one sense, we can dismiss this as nonsensical. In another sense, however, it is a reminder of to all of us how much contempt the government of this country has heaped upon the people of this country.
You have to be absolutely contemptuous of the people whom you are addressing to tell them such foolishness and expect them to believe. It is a total insult to anyone's intelligence to be given such an interpretation when most Guyanese today and certainly those of us who live in Georgetown, have by now gotten a clear picture of what happened on that day. But the ruling class is continually trying to tell us that whatever they say is the truth — no matter what you see, no matter what you experience. Even if you saw it with your own eyes and they print the opposite in the Chronicle, you are supposed to say to yourself, "I must have been dreaming when I thought I saw it that way." (Laughter) They continually insult our intelligence and our capacity to make independent decisions.
The Chronicle, of course as you realise, has sunk to a new low. Part of their recent propaganda has to do with the Bauxite strike, and it is not the first time that they have concocted propaganda about the bauxite strike. I believe that they work on the assumption that because Linden is separated from Georgetown, or Kwakwani is separated from Georgetown, they can tell us here in Georgetown and tell the people in Corentyne and Essequibo anything about Linden, and people will believe. But they publish so many contradictions in their own newspapers that even the most uninformed reader must come to the conclusion that they are reading a tissue of lies. A few days ago the Editorial comment on page one of the Chronicle proved itself a most remarkable document. I read it four or five times and still find it difficult to understand. In an editorial which dealt with the question of truth — they said they were searching for truth — they themselves wanted to know where to find it. One day we hear the strike is crumbling and the next day we hear the strike is firm. One day we hear how everybody turned out to work. Next day we understand it is only one man. (Laughter). And then they ask the question in the end, "Where is the truth amidst all of these confusing statements?"
The thing about that editorial is that the contradictory statements to which they refer are all published in their own newspaper. They were not taking these statements elsewhere — they were using the information from the Chronicle to write an editorial saying that "We ain't know wha is truth, because every day we does print a different story." (Laughter). And yet, spectators continue to buy it, and to read it, while the P.N.C. expect us to believe anything that they present to us. It is ultimately, as I said, apart from comedy, an insult to the Guyanese people, and we have to say that we will put an end to those in power who have such a low estimation of our abilities. (Applause). Not only are they insulting us. but in the real sense, it seems as if they have taken leave of all sanity.

With Burnham, Lunacy Prevails
The W.P.A. has asked people to comment on this before, and I want to put it forward very seriously because when you accuse people of acting as if they were mad or acting as madmen or madwomen you're making a serious accusation. It should not be put forward lightly as though it were a mere joke, because in normal circumstances, the mentally ill person is just like any one else who is physically ill and we should be sympathetic. But when the ruling class is characterized by elements of insanity, it is another matter altogether, because those who are insane must be given proper medical treatment. They must be removed from normal processes of work while that treatment is going on. (Laughter). So we don't expect our rulers to be plagued by insanity, and yet it is difficult sometimes to find any explanation of their conduct which can be given in normal terms of an individual or individuals who are sane. Time and again you come up against the only possible conclusion — that we are ruled by people who have departed from their insanity in the literal sense of the word, because you have become insane when you have lost touch with reality. If you move down the road shadowboxing, someone might imagine you are a boxer practising. 'So you alright — you practising.' But if you do this every day and people realize that you are not really shadowboxing, 'you genuinely believe you fightin' somebody else, then they say you mad.' (Laughter). Because you have departed from reality; you've lost touch with reality. They seem to think that they are all-powerful.
Whoever accumulated power to themselves in such a way that they want to make every single decision in the state a personal decision, is being taken over by insanity, and it is not surprising, because no one man or handful of men even in their own interests should conduct the affairs of state as their personal business. So that when some sister 'have to get wuk as a washer-woman, he gat to intervene to decide whether or not she gon' get dat wuk.' And when so-and-so got to get a promotion or a scholarship, 'all a' dis thing gat to be done by certain telephones." Now when you reduce yourself to government by telephones, it means you've got to jump everytime the telephone rings. (Laughter). So they're very jumpy. More than that, they can't sleep because when you dedicate yourself to oppressing others, you cannot sleep. You have to spend all night planning how you will oppress the next day and then you've got to spend all the next day oppressing. You have no sleep day or night. So that is why this ruling class is being plagued now by symptoms of lunacy — losing touch with reality — they haven't a clue what is going on. They're living in a world of their own and they're trying to reduce the rest of us to the same condition of losing touch with reality.
What is it when the news media continually comes out to tell you that you did not see what you saw. (Laughter). They tell you that they saw what you didn't see — this is a way of making you lose touch with reality. (Laughter).
(Sound of a helicopter overhead). Brother and Sisters, I am aware of the preferred mode of transportation of King Kong. (Laughter). Nevertheless, we have to proceed with what is going on down there and we want to show that the ruling class has clearly lost touch with reality in a way that is absolutely frightening. Think about the story of the palace that they were about to build. In the midst of the most desperate economic crisis that has ever hit this nation, (let us forget for a moment who brought on the crisis, we know they brought it on, but forget that for a moment), any sane government would not think about building a palace. But you see King Kong had decided he wanted to build a palace to his ego (laughter), and a monument to his own stupidity — so that he could sit inside and be a monument inside a monument. (Laughter and applause).
One of the brothers in the audience, when we were at Grove yesterday, suggested to us that what was required was to extend the zoo to take in the Residence (laughter) and then we would have one of the most prized exhibits of any zoo in the world. (Laughter). People would come from all over the world and pay to see King Kong.

The Burnham Touch
When one is searching for words to describe what is going on, it is very difficult to find the appropriate terms. Personally as the days go by, I find it difficult to describe the reality around us. Although I would modestly say that my vocabulary is not limited, I find my choice of words limited to those which describe excrement, words which have to do with the faeces and defecation. One has to come down to speak of it in a way that reflects and captures the reality of the time and the mood of the people. The other evening, speaking at another site, I had to draw the analogy, to say what if there ever was such a thing called the Midas touch, which was the touch that made everything turn into gold, then we will have a new creation in this society — the Burnham touch where everything he touches turns to shit. (Prolonged laughter). One has to put it in these brutal terms because the situation in which we are is a brutal situation. One has to put it in even these crude terms because they have reduced us in such a way that even those terms do not fully capture reality. Whatever they touch, even if they touch a policeman in uniform — that is the Burnham touch. (Laughter). And that is why we speak to our brothers in uniform and we have to greet them roughly, not because we do not understand they are brothers and sisters in uniform, but because we have to point out to them the way in which they have been touched, and that they're covered with filth because of this regime. (Laughter). They continually have to go out and do all manner of dirty work.
Now I will give you a typical example: In recent searchings in the country, one of the persons who has just been searched in Linden is Brother Yearwood, better known as Brother Jomo. Now Jomo is an individual who, during the referendum, personally walked the whole distance from Linden to Georgetown as a mark of his own moral and political protest. (Applause). Brother Jomo was in the crowd on Saturday July 14, when he was attacked by the Rabbi's men and very seriously injured his arm so that he lost control of certain fingers. It will take considerable time, if ever, for him to recover full control of those fingers — he was seriously wounded. And the moment he was let out of the hospital, his attackers were, of course, rushed through the traffic court at five o'clock in the afternoon to be released back into the street on merely nominal fines. So far as the law was concerned , as far as the particular magistrate NORMA JACKSON or JACKMAN or whatever her name is was concerned, they were free to go back on the streets. Another one who was touched. (Laughter). Let me complete the story about brother Jomo. Jomo went back to Linden after his attackers had been freed to go on the road, and the police turned up to search his house for arms and ammunition. I suppose the next thing that they will do is to arrest him and say, "We are charging you with unlawfully throwing yourself on a bayonet and causing the bayonet to get blood." That is the only thing left for them to do. Then the victim becomes a double and triple victim.

Black Skin, Fascist Mask
This is the society in which we live and we are not talking about 'long-time story'. We're talking about what's going on right now. And we have to expose this ruthlessly. One of the things that the regime does not like is to be exposed and uncovered. They have lived for these many years by putting on certain masks, by trying to fool the outside world — and even some Guyanese who live right here, with the mask of democratic government because they have a joke institution called a Parliament. In this mask they have something called a free press, free judiciary etc., but we know that when we lost the right to choose our own government in free elections, we lost all other rights. It is just a matter of time — they take when they want to take, they give when they want to give — until that time when the people intervene. Unmask them and show them that the power belongs to the people! (Applause)
If you notice in the media, whether it be Action Line, or the New Nation, or the Chronicle, one of the things they're very hurt about is the so-called attacks on their leader. How come their leader can be attacked? King Kong is supposed to be beyond criticism. (Laughter). They have seriously promoted him as the ultimate in wisdom, all-knowing, all powerful, next to God — a man whose face adorns the exercise books of our children, and who is probably responsible for their high failure rate in the schools. (Laughter). Do not believe it was a mere accident that it was necessary to promote the cult of the personality around him, to make it appear as though all intelligence in Guyana was concentrated in one man and no intelligence was outside. All virtue, all political acumen, all commitment was concentrated in one man. It even reached the stage, (and you will check this out for yourself, you will check it out in terms of your experience and your memory of what has been going on) when it was popular in P.N.C. circles when something went wrong for the person to say, "Well, maybe you're right, it did go wrong, but the Comrade Leader didn't know anything about it." You have to put the Comrade Leader above all wrong doing, although in another context he himself has said that nothing goes on that he doesn't know about. But whenever something went wrong, it is claimed he didn't know about it. It is a way of isolating him from the people, putting him way above the people, and therefore it is equally important that in the context of our present struggle we unmask that attempt to wrap this individual up, romanticize him and present him to the Guyanese people as the 'ultimate.'
On the contrary, we will judge him on the basis of his performance, and on that basis we can we can say that he has been the initiator of a period of a total lack of democracy in this society; that he has supervised over bringing the society to the lowest ebb it has ever been in its history; that he has reduced Guyanese to a position where he can only say "we shame" wherever we go, "we shame". We have said this before, and one could always ask Guyanese as individuals to check this amongst themselves. They can check with their relatives abroad because we are a people who travel the world, and there is hardly anyone in touch without some relative or a friend in Canada, the United States, etc.
Write them and ask them how you felt as Guyanese at the time of the Jonestown tragedy. Many of them actually went around denying that they were Guyanese. Somebody would come up to you and say, 'tell us something about Jonestown. I know you're from Guyana", and the person would explain, "no, you get it wrong, is Ghana, you get it wrong". (Laughter).

Burnham's Shame Is On Our Backs!
Nobody want to own up to being Guyanese abroad. You had better not go to Trinidad or Surinam or any place and let it be known that you come from Guyana because the police will pick you up, all kinds of things will happen to you because you are Guyanese. In other words, although it is the shame of the ruling class, they have brought that shame upon us.
All Guyanese will have to bear that burden and therefore it is time that we make sure we throw that burden off our backs. And we have the capacity. It is only the ruling clique who imagine in their fantasy, in their lunacy and lack of touch with reality, that the people do not have the capacity.
The maximum leader finds or found in the past that the things he had to do was to surround himself with mediocrity, surround himself with persons of no stature; surround himself with persons unknown to the people, with persons who had compromised loyalty to the supreme leader. All of those tendencies we have to arrest, and before the time runs out on us we will have to try and work out some steps for the programme by which we will effect the removal of the P.N.C.; the removal of the illegal clique, or what is left of the P.N.C., because it is hardly a political party anymore. (Applause).
Many a rank and file member of that party has quit its ranks, many who years ago honestly felt that they could work with that P.N.C. have now given up in disgust. And when you check it out, you find those former members of the P.N.C. or the Y.S.M. — they too know the Burnham touch because he put it on them. They realize with even greater confidence, with even greater certainty that the task at hand is the removal of that clique because they have firsthand experience of working in those frustrating conditions. And it is precisely at this point in time we have to mobilize all forces, not only those who were opponents yesterday, but those of our brothers and sisters who today can realize that they must join our ranks — and we will make way for them. We will welcome any Guyanese who recognizes what is going on and who is prepared to make progress on a different path. (Applause). That is why our programme as a party involves actively the people of Guyana. Ideologically as Brother Roopnarine was explaining in all circumstances we will pursue a principled line for the building of genuine socialism.

The W.P.A. And Our Struggle
Let us make it clear that we are not asking persons to enter because of support for our ideology. We are asking for an active effort of the people people for national reconstruction and national unity on the basis of common sense, patriotism, decency and honesty. We are committed to building a Guyana for the future of the Guyanese children. (applause). We are prepared to enter into a dialogue with groups such as businessmen, the various professionals like lawyers and doctors, engineers and architects and so on. We are challenging them to take a stand now against what is going on at the political level. We are challenging them to recognize that the workers in the society, in all sectors have a common cause, to realize that they have to participate in a future government if they want to be able to claim that they are patriotic Guyanese who are prepared to contribute to the well-being of the nation (applause).
These groups may well ask you what is our programme for them. Where do businessmen and professionals fit into our programme? And we can answer that question as best we can from our printed programme and our exchange with them verbally. There is more than that; it is not simply that we should promise any given group that after the revolution they will get certain rewards. We want to say to these groups, "participate in the process of change, participate in what is now the true Guyanese revolution, and by virtue of participating, you will not have to ask anybody what is the policy, because you will help in the making of that policy." (Applause). That is why we are challenging everyone to get involved now because it is only by being involved now in the process of change at this very beginning that the individual goes around and says "We also have power, we're also involved in the process of power, we also can make decisions in our society of the national level, of the local level, within our communities, and so on."
The W.P.A. has been very careful, as those who know over the years will testify, to warn against demagogues. We have been careful to warn you against people who come to you and say, "we are the new deliverers, we are the new messiahs and the new prophets." this is because it is the old set who stressed precisely that, and delivered to you — to what? That which we know about. They delivered you into the Burnham touch. (Laughter). As a consequence, we are not simply saying that we will come forward and take hold of the reins. of power as they are, because we are not interestedin those trifles. We are saying that in the interests of Guyanese as a whole we have to build a new political system in the long run — one that offers stability, security and justice for all Guyanese; and if we are to do that and if we are to solve the immediate pressing problems of the economy, we have to have the participation of all, all sorts and types so that we can pool our collective wisdom and our collective intelligence. It is only a fool who believes that he or she alone has the wisdom to make decisions particularly in a situation as desperate as ours. One would have thought that anyone in this situation would be only too happy to get aid from somebody else, to hear other people participate in making the decisions in the present crisis. So we challenge the businessmen, we challenge the professionals to come forward and identify themselves with the idea of a government of national reconstruction and national unity.

On Being A Professional
I want to say some words in particular about the professionals who are a group who normally have a lot of respect in Guyanese society. And to be professional, really means that once you have chosen that field of work and you have certain standards which you would like to maintain as a professional, whether you be a future professional or whether is be what we traditionally call a 'trade'. As a professional, you try to follow professional standards. You try to follow standards that are correct and laid down. Even if you are an undertaker, you have professional standards. You don't just throw the body into the earth, because that would be against your professional standards which dictate that when you bury people you do so with a certain standard. So professionalism is an important element of social life because if people do not uphold proper professional standards, the entire society tends to collapse. What we find in Guyana today is that the conditions which prevail make it impossible for professionals to conduct their professional life was they would like. You are not allowed to do the job you want to do. Many persons are frustrated not just by the economic conditions but by lack of job satisfaction — a lack of an opportunity to develop a talent, to show their creativity, to advance in their chosen field of work and activity.
We just have to look around and we realize this at once. We talk about the media — which means in Guyana the newspaper and the radio. Now the persons who work there are journalists, and in the past we have had a tradition of fighting journalism in Guyana. More than one hundred years ago, there were independent fighting journalists in this country and we do have a tradition of fighting journalism. We had, even in the colonial days, journalists who fought to make journalism a genuine profession. Even the former editor of the Chronicle who resigned recently, in the old days, before he got the touch, would have been known as a journalist of repute. (laughter). That is the tragedy of Guyanese life, the man went around touching so many people on their head and their shoulders that that was the end for them after he touched them. (laughter). What we have to realise is that a profession such as journalism is a profession which in other parts of the world commands maximum respect. In the United States today, I am assured that the most popular course for enrollment in the universities is journalism because students have come to associate journalism with a capacity to speak and write. These journalists saw the exposure of those who planned the Vietnam War; they saw the exposure of Nixon — all that was done by journalists. And nowadays, in the U.S.A. and Canada and Britain, when a minister of government receives a 'phone call that such and such a journalist wants to see him,' they immediately get straight; they get under 'heavy manners' because when a journalist is talking to you, you have to be serious. But what have they reduced journalists to in this country? They're not even scribes because they cannot write down what is happening, so they're not even notetakers.
In the old days, the journalists used to move around with their notepads and write down notes, but now it is not even worthwhile writing down notes. The brothers will not be published if it is serious material — certainly not in the form in which the journalist intended. They cannon investigate independently. They cannot ascertain what facts are there. They cannot cross-question a Minister to hear what is the truth and what is not. They had the biggest news story in the history of journalism—JONESTOWN—bigger than any other single news story — and not a single Guyanese journalist could get into the act. Do we understand the extent to which they have been deprofessionalized? A professional journalist is living ina country which has the biggest news story in the profession on the history of journalism — not just in this country but in the world, and he never wrote a line about it because the nature of the system under which he lives has reduced him to such a low level! It is an abomination to the spirit, really. Wherever you turn (I'm just using one example) one can multiply this a thousand times. The Government of Guyana has reduced us to the lowest possible leve, whther as workers, housewives, or professionals.

The People Make A Revolution!
There is no way out under the present system. So we have got to make up our minds what we are deciding now within the Working People's Alliance. It is not simply that the government 'do bad' and they must do better, it is not simply that they must do part good and part bad and they must remedy it. It is not that they must reform. It is not that they must hold another election and rig it all up. We 'finish' we all of that. THEY MUST GO! (Loud applause). THE P.N.C. MUST GO!(Loud applause and cheering). And they must go by any means necessary. (Loud cheering).
They have been accusing us of fermenting violence. They have even had the temerity to say that we are working up hit-lists — assassination lists in which the names of the Prime Minister and Hammy Green and so on appear. Someone who heard that was speaking to me the other day and said, "Well if all you really intend to to assassinate dem fellas, ah tell you something — you gat to join the queue." (Laughter). The guy was asserting his right. He was saying that people were standing up in line before us and that many Guyanese were standing in line. Their 'hit-list' then is ridiculous on many grounds and the people understand it to be ridiculous. We have said that we are not for assassination because politically and ideologically, an assassination is of no value to us. We do not want to replace one individual with another individual of the same type, whether it be for better or worse. I remember when the King Kong was ill, reportedly seriously ill. And many Guyanese, including Christian Guyanese, were praying for the best. (Laughter). And even in those days, we in the W.P.A. used to say that that would not solve any problems. We would not want to concentrate our analysis into thinking that if one man went, then the whole system would be cleaned up. What we wanted was to make the whole system go, and we repeat that now.
And we say further that we do not want those who have been responsible for crimes against Guyanese people assassinated; so if any of you brothers and sisters were thinking along these lines, we ask you to hold your hand because WE WANT THEM ALIVE!(Applause). The time has come when they will have to face the Guyanese people and be brought into account for the many years they thought they were beyond any kind of control on the part of the people. (Applause).
And there is another reason why assassination is not within our political textbook. And that is because assassination is the act of one man — any one man can assassinate a leader. But only the people can make a revolution! (Applause). And the day has to come when the real revolution will begin — the revolution in the economy, the revolution in the society, the revolution to bring us back to a level where we can hold our heads up high. And it is that day that we need the participation of the people. As for the assassination — we are not worried about that. That is something that they are inventing because they have plans for assassination; because they have not only the Rabbi's squad as their death squad, but they have the assassins that they have been training at Low Creek. They have been training them to be snipers, training them to come amongst people with silent weapons while they guard the kingdom of the real assassins. These have been produced by the P.N.C. government — produced by the clique in power, because it is necessary for them to find some excuse in order for them to carry out their orders and their plans.

Violence: The Guyanese Struggle
They are now trying to distort the fact through their media. Let me tell you what the fascists did in Germany. They created the conditions, set up the situation, and then afterwards removed the 'undesirables'. So we want the people to understand that very clearly. It is not that we are afraid of the concept of violence because ultimately we would not let them bully us into thinking that violence is not the necessary political step under certain circumstances. If we felt that way we would not be able to understand what is going on in South Africa; we would not be able to understand what is going on in Zimbabwe. We would not be able to understand the reasons for the happenings in Grenada or Nicaragua.
In the Long run the people must free themselves by any means necessary and they will receive recruits from the people at the point at which violence is the only alternative; then violence becomes the supreme political weapon. (Applause). and note that, the very famous Mahatma Gandhi, famous for his peacefulness, famous for peace and nonviolence, is a man who once explained the difference between nonviolence and cowardice. He said that nonviolence has its applications. But he once wrote, "I do believe that where there is a choice between violence and cowardice, I would advise violence." That is Mahatma Gandhi, a peace loving man. (applause).
So what I am trying to drive at is a certain understanding, not for the present but merely for the future. We are attempting to try and create at this stage, political change without violence. In fact, if the Guyanese people cannot see this possibility we are likely to arrive at political change with violence. This is not because I say so or the W.P.A. said so or anybody else said so. It is because that is the very nature of society and it is in the nature of man. Man pushed to this level will degenerate into a violent society, so we don't have to push violence. The violence underlines the society because we are ruled by a violent and illegal government and if they are not removed now there will be violence. (Applause).
They have been guilty of the real violence. The very nature of this illegal regime is defined by violence — note the $70 million that they spend on the armed forces. That is the violence that we have to overcome. And if it is not removed at the present time by the combined will of the people, then unfortunately probably our children will be saddled with this oppression of the spirit. WE must show some responsibility even if it requires taking to arms to remove certain oppressive regimes. So right now we have our task — finding the way to unleash the energy of the people and removing the clique in power before they bring violence to bear on the vast majority of the population. (Applause).
We would like to list several ways in which this process must proceed. Brother Roopnarine spoke about your physical presence at these gatherings. The W.P.A. considers this extremely important and it is obvious that the P.N.C. clique also thinks that this is important. People are already winning victories. Imagine, we have brought the P.N.C. back to the streets to hold public meetings. That is a victory in itself. Of course, the meetings will collapse and they will go back into their seats and will try other techniques that are much more fearful and repressive. But initially we can show them that we have come to the streets.
We have to let the police force know and we have to let the Police Commissioner know that we will insist on our rights under the constitution and our rights as human beings to meet and discuss at the highest level. We are not going to allow ourselves to be threatened, abused and kept off the streets. If they have to deal with only a handful of the Working People's Alliance, then they know that they can bring down a mass of police. But when they have to deal with the Guyanese people in thousands; when they have to deal with persons of all ages, both sexes, both major races, various occupations, professions and the like, they know it would not be possible to unleash the forces of repression because the very police and armed forces are drawn from amongst people.
They will not, therefore, in the circumstances of massive popular uprising, massive shows of our indignation and frustration against the government in power bring out real everyday policemen. They will bring out their thugs and dress them in uniform. But it is the right of the Guyanese people to assemble peacefully and this is a peaceful assembly. The only time the peace is broken is when they introduce their thug element and we must also drive those thug elements from off the streets. They will not come back once the people are resolved. They will not dare to come into this kind of gathering! (Applause). So we have to make it clear that we will count ourselves here, we will draw strength from each other. We will look over our shoulders. We will see Africans and Indians standing side by side and we will know that this regime will not trick us back into another 1962. (Applause).

On the Need to Organise The Working Class Into A Fighting Force
Then we have to go further, we are going to work out programmes in which we refuse to co-operate with the elements in power because people have it within their rights to find various ways of refusing to cooperate because the state requires your cooperation in order to survive. Just a while ago someone put to us a proposal which in fact is not a new proposal. He said when they close down the Mirror by refusing to offer newsprint, when they practise various forms of discrimination which do not allow freedom of expression and freedom in the press, one of the things that people can do is boycott their press. Boycott their newspaper. (Applause). Now that this is the kind of suggestion coming from within the people themselves and if we sit down as we should to work out these proposals, we can find ways and means to stop this illegal government — to remove them. What we have to understand then is the need to develop programmes of our non cooperation. The W.P.A. has said on previous occasions, that individuals should set out to isolate the agents of the regime. Now this government has spent a great deal of money setting up what they call security forces. Apart from the uniformed security forces, they have all kinds of messengers and pimps who go around spying on other persons. They have all kinds of wire-tapping, mail-opening, and so on in this society. Quite apart from those who follow us around, we know that there are others reduced to that kind of job of professional Peeping Toms in order to report on other persons. This must surely be one of the most undignified ways in which you can ever live.
One day we caught one of them up at Linden and when we accosted him we said, "My friend, when you go home tonight and you have children and they ask you, "Daddy what were you doing all day?" You've got to say, "Well children, I was out spying on the W.P.A.."" That is the level to which one is reduced. You have to tell your children that you are a spy, and that this is your work — to go around spying on other people.
We believe that those who are paid and those who are not, are carrying out this activity of spying, harassing, telling tales, etc. on others. They should be isolated within the community and when you know them you must point them out. You must be able to say, "Look, one she is going there." or "Look, she there she is another one!" We must make sure that these people are brought out into the light of day and let us see whether they will operate when they know that the Guyanese people look down on such type of behavior.
We also say, and we know that the regime is very anxious about this point, that in the final analysis, the working people have one commodity which is all-powerful, and that is their own labour power. This is the ability to work or the ability to say "we will no longer work under these conditions." It is interesting to find that now is the time when the working class is under the greatest pressure. They therefore have to consider the strike weapon as a weapon in their own interest and which can help to perfect their living standards. The government is today terrified at the thought that workers should go on strike and they are raising all manner of bogies, bogies and jumbies to threaten people when they consider the possibilities of strikes. Every strike that has taken place under the P.N.C. has been called a political strike. It is nothing new to them to call a bauxite strike a political strike. What persons have to realise is whatever they call it, it does not matter, the working people have the moral right to withdraw their labour to alter the conditions under which they live. More than that, they have the right to say if we live under such oppressive conditions that even asking for increments from this present set of managers and political rulers is forbidden, then strike is not enough. If they say in order to get the increments we have to move the present rulers, then they have to make sure that the strike has teeth, they have to make sure that when they act to withdraw they do not bend until they get the results of their strike. They do not bend until they can see that the conditions are being altered in a way guarantees them that they as workers would share in the fruits of their labour and if it means that the program must go, and our interpretation is that it does mean that the government must go, then they must go.
It is critical that at this juncture that the Guyanese working people realize the need to seriously, soberly but effectively utilize their rights to strike. (Applause). Earlier their tribute was made to the bauxite workers and we must repeat it. Kwakwani has been on strike for the longest while. They led the strike. Now the Linden workers are also on strike. We know that that means. We know that is the single largest industrial working class section in this country. we know that it represents a group which racially and politically was misled, confused and conned by the regime many years ago and what these workers are telling the rest of Guyana is that their eyes are completely opened and that they understand their own interest. Even the leadership of the Guyana Mine Workers' Union which was put there by the party has abandoned the party because even it has to realize, that when it comes to the interest of the workers, the P.N.C. has deceived us all, and the time has come to tell them that there is no line to be drawn between industrial and political action that will stop workers from going on strike on the basis of their own self interest.
So we have to salute the Linden workers and the Kwakwani workers. That is why we have asked for that contribution, and persons are still going around collecting and at the end we will announce what the Guyanese people assembled here have contributed at a W.P.A. meeting. Though we are a new political party, we will not use one cent of that money four our own purposes; we will hand it over to the bauxite workers. (Applause).
There are many people who believe that a revolution is about blood. It is true that at times in a revolution blood flows. Very often innocent blood, very often the blood of the best amongst us. But one must be prepared to take a stand against evil and injustice in the society. We will have to realise that the time is now to make precisely that stand. For too long our nature has been overcome by fear; a justified fear. It is true that there is a fear of losing jobs; the fear of not getting promotion; the fear that your children might be victimised and so on. But there must be a point at which people realize, that even that fear has to be overcome. It has to be overcome by a new resolution because in the long run it is not simply that you and I are fighting in individual battles. Far more important is the sense in which we can fight in a collective battle. They can't fire everybody, they can't victimise everybody; on the contrary, they have given us the vast majority whom they have treated with contempt, whom they have insulted everyday for 14 or 15 years. When we act together, we will make this little paltry gang of petty dictators go on their way. And we will bring them to task. Because it is obvious that in the end they depend upon the power of the people.
The people put them in power, they now spit upon the people. The people put them into power in the sense that the P.N.C. used the electoral machinery to rig it. They got some support internally; they got some support outside from the C.I.A. Once they got that they parked the dictatorship in a one-way road; they took a one-way ticket to dictatorship, day by day reducing the rights we had. The supporters who helped put them into power back in the '60s, had no power by the time we reached the '70s — even the P.N.C. rank and file.

Our Youth & Our Liberation Struggle
The note on which I will end is the question of our youth. The tragedy of Guyanese youth, and it is areal tragedy, is that they have been shut out from politics. Even during the period of the Vietnam War, it was only the P.Y.O., the youth arm of the P.P.P. that used to make propaganda on that issue. Our youth could not even understand what was going on in as fundamental struggle as Vietnam. In the early days, it was the P.N.C. that shut them off from that. Our youth have been kept politically uneducated. This is as the time when in the world at large, young people are setting forth new political directions in every nation.
In South Africa for example, you have heard of the Soweto uprising. Do you believe that those were adults alone in Soweto? School children, 14, 15, and 16 years old made the Soweto revolution. And I remember certain incidents of that Soweto struggle. When the young people of Soweto were meeting, many of their elders came and said, "We do not want to rock the boat; the White man is too strong. Apartheid is too strong. Apartheid is too powerful. Take it easy." That is what the older people were telling the youngsters. And one person from Soweto, a young man who has now left and is now in Europe explained to me that there was a meeting in which they had to actually throw out their own parents — their own elders were thrown out of the meeting for standing in the way.
Now that was a serious development. When the elders have to be cursed by the younger people in a sense. And that is the real threat in this country today. That in the next generation some young people will ask the older people, "Daddy" or "Mummy", as the case might be, "Where were you when all that was going down?" And if you don't have an answer it's no better than a young slave asking an older slave why he or she never rebelled. (Applause).
So we want our young people to understand that all over the world people are taking political steps. Out of that same Soweto uprising I saw a girl from that same Soweto uprising, a young woman fourteen years of age. She went to fight for Soweto with nothing in her hands except for a handful of stones to throw against the government with all its guns and tanks. She had one leg shot off. When she was introduced by a reporter and she was speaking to him she said, "Yes, my leg has been shot off. But I went there to fight for dignity and for rights and for justice when I had two legs. Now I will go there and I will hop about on one leg and I will continue to fight," That;s a fourteen year old sister. (Applause).
I believe that all young people too would have that capacity. I believe that they're now beginning to be re-politicised, in other words, they're coming back to thinking out things for themselves because so long we were hiding from thinking. Hiding because we have certain fears that somebody else might get in or we might rock the boat and so on. But there is no boat left to rock. Just a sinking ship.
So we have to recognize today the importance of the elder persons who know of the 1960's, and those who know of 1953 too who will realise that we are at a new political awakening. And the younger persons will participate for the first time in trying to build a society of their own choice; a society where they will speak to themselves, because right now look around at the leadership of the P.N.C. They were not put there by any young person, they were not even put there by any person. Youngsters do not know them and they don't know the youngsters.
And they don't care, they insist that they are secure while our young people, in the very best years of their lives, when they have much physical and mental energy, are wasted. We can all allow your youth to build. When did we ever build? Our youth are under the most severe pressure. They are being kept in a state of ignorance and darkness. And we have to pay for that at the present moment of the struggle here in Guyana.
Brothers and sisters, we are coming to the end of our allotted time and and we are going to close the programme soon. There are a couple of announcements. But what we are saying to you, we say totally. The regime considers us a mob when we come together in big numbers. They call us a mob. We say, come together to draw strength from the traditions of resistance which have come down from the tradition of slavery and indentureship and anti-colonialism to the present time. And there is no force that has stopped it in any other part of the world. And there is no reason to imagine that this handful, because they control the military power, can hold the entire Guyanese people to ransom. But the change will come, and what it will emphasize is people's power. That will continually be our emphasis. All power to the people! (Prolonged applause!)

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Street Speech

by Walter Rodney


Note: It is important to understand that the following comments were made specifically in the context of the Guyanese situation.

You see, we have had too much of this foolishness of race. I'm not going to attempt to allocate the blame one way or another. I think more than one political party has been responsible for the crisis of race relations in this country. I think our leadership has failed us on that score. I think external intervention was important in bringing the races against each other from the fifties and particularly in the early sixties. But I'm concerned with the present. If we made that mistake once, we cannot afford to be misled on that score today. No ordinary Afro-Guyanese, no ordinary Indo-Guyanese can today afford to be misled by the myth of race. Time and time again it has been our undoing.

Does it have anything to do with race that the cost of living far outstrips the increase in wages? Does it have anything to do with race that there are no goods in the shops? Does it have anything to do with race when the original lack of democracy as exemplified in the national elections is reproduced at the level of local government elections? Does it have anything to do with race when the bauxite workers cannot elect their own union leadership? Does it have anything to do with race when, day after day, whether one is Indian or African, without the appropriate party credentials, one either gets no employment, loses one's employment, or is subject to lack of promotion?

It is clear that we must get beyond that red herring and recognise that it is intended to divide, that it is not intended in the interest of the common African and Indian people in this country. Those who manipulated in the 1960s, on both sides, were not the sufferers. There were not the losers. The losers were those who participated, who shared blows and who got blows. And they are the losers today.

It is time that we understand that those in power are still attempting to maintain us in that mentality - maintain us captive in that mentality where we are afraid to act or we act injudiciously because we believe that our racial interests are at stake. Surely we have to transcend the racial problems? Surely we have to find ways and means of ensuring that there is racial justice in this society? But it certainly will not be done by a handful of so-called Black men monopolising the power, squeezing the life out of all sections of the working class, and turning around and expecting that they will manipulate an issue such as the Arnold Rampersaud affair and get the support of ordinary black people because we will say, 'After all; is only an Indian. We could hang him. No sweat.'

Because, as I said before, you start with one thing, you end with another. The system doesn't stop at racial discrimination. Because it is a system of class oppression, it only camouflages its class nature under a racial cover. And in the end, it will move against anyone irrespective of colour. In the end, they will move even against their own. Because, don't believe if you are a member of that party today, that you will be protected tomorrow from the injustices. Because when a monster grows, it grows out of control. It eats up even those who created the monster. And it's time that our people understood that.



"What I am trying to say is simply this: The revolution is made by ordinary people, not by angels, made by people from all walks of life, and more particularly by the working class who are in the majority."
- Walter Rodney

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April 29, 2006, 2:45 AM EDT

PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad (AP) _ Five men accused in the kidnapping and killing of a New York man will be extradited to the United States, according to a government spokesman.

Attorney General John Jeremie has signed off on the U.S. extradition request in the slaying of Balram Bachu Maharaj, said Maxie Cuffie, a spokesman for the attorney general, who couldn't say when the papers were signed or when the men will be extradited. Three gunmen snatched Maharaj, 62, of Mount Vernon, N.Y., from a bar on the outskirts of Port-of-Spain in April 2005 and held him for ransom. Maharaj's remains were found cut up and buried in two holes in a forest in January.

A grand jury in Washington indicted the five _ two of whom are soldiers _ on Wednesday with conspiracy to commit hostage-taking, Cuffie said.

The decision to extradite the men follows a meeting between Jeremie and the U.S. attorney general at a conference in the Dominican Republic earlier this week. Six other people also have been charged by Trinidadian authorities in Maharaj's killing and will likely be sent to the U.S. to stand trial, Cuffie said.

Authorities in the twin-island nation of Trinidad and Tobago reported a record 389 killings and more than 60 kidnappings for ransom in 2005. Five, including Maharaj, were killed.

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Son tries to deal with the death of his mother and uncles in Guyana

By MICHELE HENRY, TORONTO SUN

Drawn as if by force to the room where his mother lay dead, Ian Persaud fell atop her body the moment he found her.

"She was lying in the corner behind the bedroom door," the 25-year-old Toronto resident said, recalling the hours after his mother and two uncles were found slain last week in a guarded compound in Guyana.

"I started crying and asking God why?"

The moments following his discovery of the bodies is a blur to Persaud, who returned from Guyana this weekend, after a funeral for his mother Phulmattie "Julie" Persaud of Mississauga, and uncles Rajpat Rai Sawh and Satyadeo Sawh, who was the agriculture minister of the Caribbean country.

The three Canadian citizens were killed along with a security guard April 21 after seven gunmen burst into Sawh's compound, demanded jewelry and opened fire.

Phulmattie, Rajpat Rai and other relatives, including Ian Persaud, were visiting from the GTA.

Surrounded this weekend in their Mississauga home by family and friends, who stopped by to pray, Persaud said the reality that his mother will not return has not yet sunk in.

"It doesn't seem real," said Persaud, who wants the Canadian government to play an active role in bringing the killers to justice.

Members of Persaud and Sawh's immediate families flew to Guyana last week and participated in a Hindu ceremony. The three siblings were cremated, Persaud said, and their ashes spread in a creek in Maichony, the town where they were born.

Mani Singh, president of the Association of Concerned Guyanese, said Canadian officials were in contact with the families over the last week.

Toronto Sun
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The United Force has complained to the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) over the distribution of the preliminary voters' list, saying that it has not received a hard copy version.

In a statement issued yesterday, the party noted that political parties, especially those in Parliament, have been provided with the list during the last four decades of elections. In this respect, the party criticised Chief Election Officer Gocool Boodoo, saying that when GECOM Chairman Dr Steve Surujbally asked him, he claimed he could not remember.

The TUF said after several attempts, it finally received an electronic copy of the list late on Friday. It added that both the Chairman and the CEO said they would look at costs associated with providing a hard copy.

The TUF noted that the government had said costs should not be an issue. Additionally, it noted that only recently the government had provided $7M to GECOM to acquire 20 computers. It said providing each party with a hard copy of the list would cost under $6M.

TUF leader Manzoor Nadir told Stabroek News that printing the list, which was around 13,000 pages, was simply too much for small parties that don't have a lot of money.

The lists are distributed to party activists for Claims and Objections.

But the TUF said it was upset that GECOM was treating the elections as a matter exclusive only to the PNCR and the PPP/C (it noted its concern at the nonchalant manner it is treated by the GECOM Secretariat). It said only these two parties have scrutineers who are paid by GECOM and the taking away of equal treatment from all parties is unfair. As a result, it called for equal treatment of contesting parties.

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'
Shondell Browne

There is a saying that when a mother loses a child a part of her dies and from there on she is crippled. So it is for Shondell Browne who suffered in silence while gunmen killed her 12-year-old son during a brazen attack at her McDoom home earlier this month that also left her fighting to stay alive.

Her recollection of the day is as sharp as if the incident happened yesterday and her pain, fury and shock are the same. But most of what she remembers that day Shondell is trying to forget. She wants to forget because the image of her smiling son Kevin Browne on his way to the bedroom after taking a bath still haunts her.

That moment was the last she shared with Kevin and had she known of the events which were to follow, Shondell said, she would have asked him to just stand there and she would have stared at him for a few seconds more.

Two weeks after she was discharged from hospital, the young woman who also received life-threatening gunshot wounds, agreed to do this interview. Though she professed to be okay, one could sense that everything was not quite all right. She was seated in a chair outside her mother's home on the East Bank Demerara and her right hand, which is in a cast, was resting on the ledge of the concrete porch.

Shondell Browne has had two surgeries since the shooting and had been hospitalised for a considerable period of time. She took three bullets and as a result suffered damage to the liver and intestines and lost a kidney.

With the morning sun on her face and her other son, a busybody toddler, rubbing against her leg she flashed a smile and said, "I can do this just ask me the questions." She was convincing, so it was put to her that she could start from wherever she wished.

Hesitating just a little as tears filled her eyes, the grieving mother, victim and survivor began to relive the day it all happened.

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Saturday, April 29, 2006


From Lenny Armogum


LYNEAR JOHNSON, in front with balloons, with her mom Vanessa Bellamy and Dr. John Mitchell, behind her, leaving hospital yesterday.

LYNEAR Johnson, the Guyanese skin cancer patient being treated in New York, was discharged at 11:30 h yesterday and was very excited about going home after spending five weeks at the Brooklyn Hospital Center.

Dr. John Mitchell, Director of the Surgical Intensive Care Unit at the Brooklyn Hospital Center was her primary care physician.

Dr. Moo Young Jun performed the head and neck surgery while Dr. Nadeem Choudry did the reconstructive surgery. They were assisted by Dr. Jean Bismuth and Dr. Dino Martinez.

Lynear also had to undergo chemotherapy treatment for the skin cancer.

Ms. Hutchikson, a nurse who is the Patient Care Manager of the surgical floor, also took a special interest in Lynear's condition. There were also nurses from the Utilisation Review and Discharge Planning Department to bid Lynear goodbye.


DR. NADEEM CHOUDRY, Plastic and Reconstructive surgeon.

The mood was festive as Lynear was leaving the hospital. The nurses were hugging and wishing her good luck. The official photographer of the Brooklyn Hospital Center was taking photographs. A videographer was also present.

Her mother, Ms. Vanessa Bellamy, said the nurses were very good when treating her daughter.

Nineteen-year-old Lynear experienced months of agony as the cancer resulted in painful abscesses on her face and parts of her neck.

She is an albino and her skin has no protection from the sun and she went with her mother to the U.S. for surgery after funds were raised in Guyana following appeals in the media.

Her trip was sponsored by the Health and Education Reform for Guyana group based in New York.

IICA hails Sawh’s vision
THE Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA) has pledged to continue its support to the government and people of Guyana to ensure that late Minister Satyadeow Sawh’s vision for the development of the agricultural and rural sectors will continue and the objectives ultimately achieved.

Sawh’s “capable management” saw significant achievements in Guyana’s agricultural diversification thrust, resulting in increased production and export of non-traditional commodities to Europe, the United States of America and the Caribbean,” IICA stated.

Director General of IICA, Dr. Chelston W.D. Brathwaite, said the organisation “is deeply shocked and saddened by the tragic and untimely death of the Honourable Satyadeow Sawh, other members of his family and his security staff.”

Minister Sawh, his siblings Rajpat Rai Sawh and Pulmattie Persaud, together with security guard Curtis Robertson were executed last Saturday morning.

“We commend his leadership for the successes achieved during the Caribbean Week of Agriculture held in Guyana in 2003. This has set the standard for all future events of this nature in the region,” IICA stated.

The organisation said his leadership capabilities in the areas of agriculture and rural development were well noted by his ministerial colleagues in the wider Caribbean and the hemisphere.

“His able chairmanship of the most recent session of the Special Agriculture COTED resulted in several critical decisions being taken, including the adoption of measures for the implementation of the ‘Jagdeo Initiative’ for the repositioning of Caribbean agriculture,” IICA stated.

"The late minister will also be remembered as a very active member of the Inter-American Board of Agriculture. His incisive and forthright interventions won the admiration of counterparts throughout the Americas,” it added.

The organisation said Sawh will be sorely missed in the IICA family.

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Felicia Juanita Persaud is a Guyanese-born journalist who since migrating to New York City seven years ago has continued her work in this field, with primary emphasis on the burgeoning immigrant and Caribbean American population in the U.S. Persaud has served in the capacity of managing editor and assistant editor at several local ethnic publications throughout the city including, The New York Trend, The Caribbean American, The Queens Chronicle, The New York Voice and The Caribbean Times.

In 2000, due to the persuasion of several media colleagues, Persaud formed Hard Beat Communications, Inc., an ethnic news service to provide news of importance to this particular ethnic community. In April 2002, she expanded Hardbeat into a full service public relations and special events firm in collaboration with partner Sentient Information Systems, Inc.

Her writings appear constantly in The Daily News Caribbeat Magazine, Kip Business Report, Black Elegance magazine, the Caribbean Life, the Caribbean Voice and the Caribbean-American Business Journal. In the past, she has also contributed to InnerCityNews, The Jamaica Gleaner, The African Sun Times, Cricket International, Sky Writings and NOU magazine in the Caribbean region. Her column ‘Immigration Korner,’ in the African Times earned her tremendous acclaim in the African circles along with her investigative pieces on the plights of various immigrants throughout the city. ‘Immigration Korner,’ now also appears in the Caribbeat Daily News, The Haitian Times, The Caribbean Voice, The Caribbean Business Journal, and in the Caribbean, the Guyana Chronicle and the Cayman Net News.

Persaud also moonlighted in the broadcast medium, presenting news packages on various Caribbean programs including CIS Talk, formerly of Link Up Radio 93.5FM and other programs on WNWK, WWRL and WGBB. Her venture into radio was basically an effort to continue her broadcasting career, which she had begun in her homeland of Guyana. She also served as the entertainment news anchor on the program, Caribbean Billboard Television.

Additionally, Persaud has worked in politics, serving as communications coordinator on the committee to elect Bangladeshi immigrant Morshed Alam to the State Senate and recently, the City Council. In Guyana, she was the parliamentary assistant to Dr. Rupert Roopnarine of the opposition Working Peoples Alliance Party.

Persaud is a mass communications graduate from the University of Guyana and an alumnus of the country’s top high school, Queens College.

She is the recipient of a New York Association of Black Journalists and the Independent Press Association awards for excellence in writing as well as several local community and civic awards.

Persaud hopes that small companies and organizations will take advantage of the services of Hard Beat and get professional publicity at a price they can comfortably afford.

She sees it as a way of giving back to their community. The dynamic duo also hope Hard Beat Communications, Inc. will be able to serve as a conduit for larger companies interested in tapping into the burgeoning ethnic markets, whether it be the Caribbean-American, African-American or African.

http://www.immigrationkorner.com/

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Thanks to James for this wonderful article !!

By Felicia Persaud

Hardbeatnews, NEW YORK, N.Y., Fri. Apr. 28, 2006: “I grieve … Your land is vast, full of plenty and your people hope. What tragic fate has betook you and left you barren. Of love, of the beauty and the freedom of existence.”

Those words from renown Guyanese poet Martin Cater came back to me on Saturday April 22 as I woke like many to the horrific news that four more nationals – including a government minister – were senselessly slaughtered in the South American nation. The news came on the heels of the many other killings in recent weeks, that has put the spotlight on this country of less than a million people.

Murders like the Ronald Waddell execution, the Gazz Shermohamed killing and the bloodbath of February that took eight lives in one night in a tiny village on the outskirts of Georgetown, the country’s capital, have all stunned the nation.

But the Satyadeow Sawh, Rajpat Rai, Phulmattie Persaud and Curtis Robinson murders left many especially bewildered, since for the ruling Peoples Progressive Party/Civic, it hit so close to home.

I never knew Sawh, Waddell or Shermohamed, or the many more whose lives have all been taken coldly and callously by bullets. But for me, the reports of the horrific killings took my mind back to a dark period in my life in Guyana, prior to the Desmond Hoyte rule, where many lived in fear of ‘kick-down the door’ bandits, that robbed, raped and killed often.

I especially remember the infamous leader of the bandits, ‘Eyelash,’ who brought terror to the East Coast of Demerara and of the many vigilante groups that were formed in many communities by residents to help protect their families. I can still see the many steel doors that popped up all around houses to prevent such attacks and I can still hear my father detailing to me in military-like precision, the plan of assault and my role should our home be attacked by the terror squad.

Luckily we never were, but I know countless others who were; many of whom left Guyana almost immediately after, vowing never to return.

So contrary to the many comments and emails I’ve seen flashing around this past week, terror in Guyana is nothing new. What is new, however, is the sophisticated weaponry and tactics of the criminals, boosted no doubt by the lucrative drug trade that’s spilling over from neighboring South American countries.

And the economic plight of many in the country is providing the fuel for to rapidly make its way across the country. With many in the civil service and tactical services units so vastly underpaid, fast, easy money is no doubt tempting and it’s causing many to dismiss a human life as coldly as they would a chicken that they rear for a meal.

So what should be done? First off, the government and the opposition must desist from using these killings as a political ploy. There is no time for selfish politicking. This is a national crisis of enormous proportions that can only be solved by bringing in international help, especially to neighboring Brazil and Venezuela, while working together to devise a national strategy.

And targeting one specific area of the country while the government and the police throw around wild theories of a political terror plot is not a solution. The rising crime rate in Guyana is a social scourge of enormous proportion not some air brain scheme to steal the government. If that were the case, the entire cabinet would have been taken out already.

When Hoyte took over the government in 1985, he reinstated the death penalty and took a significant bite out of crime. Similar radical steps must be taken to send a strong message to those who take innocent lives without care but it must be substantially boosted by international firepower and aid.

Once these criminals are found, the death penalty that’s on the books in Guyana must be implemented to send a clear message that such cold-blooded assassinations will not be tolerated. Let’s get real please, identify the problem and not continue to be blinded by race and politics.

EDITOR’S NOTE: The writer is publisher of The Caribbean World News Network (caribworldnews.com), the only daily Caribbean Diaspora newswire.

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Interview by the Guyana Media Critic.


Photos shamelessly ripped from ColeFacts.com
and around the internet.

Ulex Atwell is a name that has become familiar to most Guyanese. In our humble estimation Ulex is the epitome of a 'classic beauty', sort of like Dorothy Danridge meets Julia Roberts.

The soon-to-be 24 year old has a devilishly wicked combination of irresistible flair and irrepressible elegance causing her to always be in the top bracket of the many pageants she has been involved with over recent years. If your eyes have not yet been blessed in the flesh you might get a chance this, or any other Sunday, at the Georgetown seawall. It is where she tends to be, a signal that she is simple girl at the soul perhaps causing her to struggle to cope with the ravishing beauty which meets the galvanized public eye.

You’ll see her sporting some snazzy outfit, probably plucked from the rack of a local designer, with whom she continues to work closely. Be warned though, once she dishes out the zing in that generally warm country smile and winks those seduction-laced eyes you’ll be hooked.

Wipe away the drool and move along you desperate bastard, she revealed that she’s firmly hitched and is dying to say ‘yes' officially but - get this! - the fool won’t present the bling bling! It's known that things are bad in Guyana boss but for heaven's sake do something, anything! Take a loan, rob a cambio, become a hitman for hire, do whatever you must! Desperate times demand desperate actions. If caught, Justice Claudette La Bennett will surely be lenient.

If you do not want to stoop with the rock, you should move aside, there are legions of men with knee pads on who won't mind doing some business with Mr. King.

On one knee, but with little favourable result, I caught up with the dazzling dame recently and force fed her 22 questions. 21 of the 22 questions, with complete answers are presented below for your enlightenment. For the record, the 22nd was purely personal and totally embarrassing.

Guyana Media Critic: You came second runner up in Miss Guyana World 2001 and first runner up in 2005. You also came first runner up in Miss Guyana Universe 2002. Is one of those or all put together the highlight of your pageant career?
Ulex Atwell
: They are the highlights of my pageant career, although I didn’t win, each one of those was a learning experience. They have helped in my transformation from an introvert to an outgoing, friendly, confident person.

GMC: Have you experienced anything else in life that supersedes the thrill of participating and excelling in pageants?
Ulex
: For me, pageantry is a hobby… I love competing and I love the glamour that comes with pageantry but graduating a doctor with honors supersedes the thrill of any pageant I’ve been in. That goal I long for and presently I’m working towards.

GMC: Which pageant was the most competitive?
Ulex
: The most competitive was the miss Caraibes Hibiscus (Caribbean Hibiscus). This was a pageant I did in December 2004 in St Martin.

GMC: Which pageant was simply the most fun and enjoyable one for you?
Ulex
: The most competitive and enjoyable at the same time was, the Miss Caraibes Hibiscus… I spent two incredible weeks touring St Maarten and networking with 19 young, smart and competitive young ladies like myself. I am very thankful for being chosen by Simpli Royal to represent my country and also it was wonderful being placed 2nd runner up. I was a little disappointed at first but our Guyanese contingent living in St Maarten were very pleased and amazed; and that joy they gave to me I can never explain in words. It was the first time our country had placed at one of the major pageants in the world. The 1st runner up of Miss Universe 2005 and Miss France 2005 along with very important people from around the world judged that pageant. Miss Peru won and Miss Colombia was placed 1st runner up, so for me being the only English girl chosen is something I’m very proud of.

GMC: Was winning Miss Talented Teen comparable with your performance in the Miss World and Miss Universe pageants?
Ulex
: Talented Teen doesn’t compare, that was my very first pageant, first time learning pageant politics, learning the dos and don’ts, facing a huge Cultural Centre crowd (and that is a crowd that once you handle them, you can definitely go outside and represent) that is very tough on some girls (smile). Talented Teen was a lot more work compared to any of the other local pageants, I believe that Simpli Royal truly tries to groom young ladies and present them flawlessly to society and not just think about the event as a money making arena. I am very happy I chose to start my pageant career with Miss Guyana Talented Teen, that experience has helped me through the rest of pageants I competed in afterwards.



GMC: Do you think there is one reason that caused you to not go on to take the crown? Or are there different reasons in the different pageants?
Ulex
: For each pageant it must be a different reason, I’m glad if I knew what the reasons are. But I wish the judges we choose would be experienced enough and people who would select a girl who can truly ‘represent’, and also, think about our country and the seriousness; and not take instructions from the Franchise holder as to who he prefers to win.

GMC: Are you disappointed or philosophical about not winning the Miss Guyana World or Miss Guyana Universe titles?
Ulex
: Disappointed, but at the same time I’m very even tempered and I guess that has helped me to handle disappointments really well.

GMC: Have you come to the end of your pageant career or will you be giving it another shot in future?
Ulex
: I just might!

GMC: You've done a lot of modeling on the local scene for all the top local designers, is modeling something you'd like to pursue as a fulltime career? Or are you still focused on becoming a doctor?
Ulex
: I’m definitely focusing on being a Doctor in the near future, I’ll teach young aspiring models in the mean time, and my two daughters (when they come by God’s mercy).

GMC: What area of medicine do you prefer and why?
Ulex
: I like physiotherapy, that’s the area I want to work in.

GMC: What do you think is your greatest asset as a model?
Ulex
: My inner beauty is very important to me so I nourish and develop that and try keep it always intact.

GMC: You're from Lima on the Essequibo Coast. When was the last time you went back?
Ulex
: I went back Last August, we usually go back during the August holidays.

GMC: Do you go back to Lima often? Do you still have any attachments there or are you now a full-blooded city girl?
Ulex
: I have my roots there; we still have a house and farmlands in Essequibo… Full-blooded city girl-never!

GMC: What are your fondest memories of your childhood in Lima?
Ulex
: My most beautiful memories as a little girl are from visits to Essequibo because I was only born there. My mom actually went back to Essequibo just to give birth. They were already living in Georgetown. I can remember learning how to throw cast nets and rod fishing all day, or going to the back dam, and being scared to death by my first experience of ‘Bat Cow’…and spending almost the entire day in a whitey tree. It’s a totally different life compared to the city and that’s what I love about the place. Gosh, I have so many memories of life in Essequibo. I love them all!

GMC: You're doing a degree in Medical Technology at UG, how is that going?
Ulex
: That’s going very well. I’m almost done with this semester. Up to last semester I was in line for a credit but I have been working harder and studying a lot more so I pray I get the distinction I deserve.

GMC: How is your song writing coming along? Any Grammy hits in the making?
Ulex
: (Laughs out loud) Not as yet, I did music with my dad, its his songs I was helping him to write, none for me. I’ll stick to the studying for now.

GMC: What's life like on the personal relationship front? Plans to get married soon?
Ulex
: I have a boyfriend whom I love very much. He is an incredible person he asked me to marry him (no ring as yet) but I have decided I am ready-whenever he is! (Smile).



GMC: You seem to have a passion for literacy was that just for pageantry purposes or are you still involved with that?
Ulex
: I am very much involved in literacy, I volunteer once a week at the children’s convalescent home in the areas of teaching how to read and childcare. For me, knowing how to read and write is a building block of life itself, being literate is a requirement just like food and safety. I understand how important it is to have literate children, it means automatically we’ll have literate people and a literate country, I believe all this help in our country’s development.

GMC: Who is the one person who you would say has been most instrumental in your life?
Ulex
: That’s a hard question because for me, there are a number of people who have been my role models and who have also been instrumental in molding and shaping me. Like my parents for instance, they are my foundation; they’ve taught me ethics and moralities, which have always helped to keep me on the right track. My older sister, I’ve always admired her for her persistence and perseverance and her close connection with positivity- she became a lawyer at the tender age of 23 and to me that is an accomplishment for her and my family and that helps me to stay focused on my goal of being a doctor.

My best friend Pam Dillon, she’s always been there for me through whatever phase my life took and (I don’t think she knows this) but I believe that she is wonderful being and I love her attitude towards life and people.

My Church, it has had a great and amazing influence on my life in a time when I was not doing so well, spiritually and emotionally. I was on an emotional roller coaster, my hardest time ever, a time when my faith was failing. I found myself reading a book I always had, Black Pearls by Eric Copage this has helped me to take my troubles to my heavenly father and rely on him for faith and strength. I’m happy with my relationship today with God and life, and the people who have been positively influencing me.

GMC: What was the most challenging period of your life and how did you get over it?
Ulex
: It was a sad time for me, I’ve grown from it, still not ready to talk about it though.

GMC: In 2016 will you be Dr. Ulex, married with kids or will you be Ulex, the accomplished model, in a skimpy Versace dress on a Paris catwalk?
Ulex
: I’ll definitely be Dr Ulex Atwell married with kids, maybe 2 or 10!

http://livinguyana.blogspot.com/
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Leader of the PNCR Robert Corbin has described as "irresponsible, inflammatory and provocative' statements made on Thursday by Cabinet Secretary, Roger Luncheon at his fortnightly press briefing.

Speaking with Stabroek News in New Amsterdam yesterday the party leader said Dr. Luncheon's accusations will only serve to create tensions in the society and incite some supporters of the PNCR. He is calling on the police and the Government to take the necessary steps to arrest those whom they say were responsible for the killing of Agriculture Minister Satyadeow Sawh, his brother, sister and a security guard at the Minister's LBI home last Saturday morning.

The Head of the Presidential Secretariat told reporters that members of Parliament and representatives of the PNCR have been in contact with bandits in Buxton. He was reported as saying that in the past the explanation given was that a constituency allows for PNC/R parliamentarians and supporters to visit the area. This, he said, was extended to contacts with the gunmen. According to Luncheon it is now for the opposition party to respond to these concerns. The police he added have confirmed that the killings at LBI last Saturday were politically motivated.

According to the Government Information Agency (GINA), Luncheon added that the "question as to who is connected with the gang in Buxton, I think the administration and the police and the army intelligence community have all been able to verify that there has been contact, on and off, between the representatives of the People's National Congress Reform … and the bandits in Buxton.

"So the question of with whom are they linked I think can safely be addressed among the political, the body politic, the entire spectrum by pointing unerringly to the PNCR. One would then have to draw conclusion as to the nature of the engagement, the purpose of the engagement and allow the PNCR, if no one else, to respond to those concerns".

The police had issued a release following the Minister's killing suggesting that persons who were involved in the massacre at Agricola/Eccles were involved in the execution of the Minister. They had also said that ballistics tests had traced some of the weapons used at Agricola/Eccles to those used by gunmen in Buxton. Dr. Luncheon was also quoted as saying on Thursday that "identifying the killers as part of the Buxton gang and identifying political parties and individuals who have been in contact with that gang should not be presumed to constitute linkages between the killing of the Minister and members of the PNCR."

However Corbin views Luncheon' statements as an attempt to breed confrontation and urged the Government not to jeopardize the gains the country has achieved over the years. "If Dr. Luncheon, the police or the Government has any information on the perpetrators of the murders at LBI they should move to arrest those persons. It is very unfortunate that while President (Bharrat) Jagdeo is calling for national unity and cohesion at this time, Dr. Luncheon is expressing such inflammatory statements" he noted. He reiterated his call earlier this week for all political leaders to meet as a matter of urgency to find a way out of the present crisis facing the country. According to Corbin he has not yet received a reply from President Jagdeo to a letter sent to him last Saturday seeking an urgent meeting to discuss the security situation in the country.

Referring to Luncheon's statements as "a dangerous path" the attorney-at-law said "the attack on Minister Sawh and his family is not an attack on any one party or group but an attack on the functioning of the state.

All parliamentarians, politicians and senior functionaries are at risk and as a result the situation requires a national not partisan approach."

Such assertions as those made by the Cabinet Secretary, the party leader said, could lead to serious divisions and conflict among Guyanese and should be condemned by all peace loving citizens. "I hope that sanity and good judgement would prevail. This is a time for sane reflection and good judgement" he told this newspaper. "It is also my hope that the Government has learnt from our historical elections experiences and does nothing to infuriate or inflame an already tense situation."

Some Berbicians with whom this newspaper spoke yesterday also called on the police to explore and investigate all possible angles to the killings on Saturday including the alleged Buxton link. According to some sources the fact that the police have already deemed the Minister's murder a political assassination without anyone being arrested and/or charged is indeed food for thought.

This claim, however, should not be manipulated by politicians the sources say for their own agendas and purposes when the nation stands on the edge of a serious security and constitutional crisis. Corbin was expected to speak at a public meeting late yesterday afternoon at Belladrum on the West Coast of Berbice.

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The Berbice Bridge Company Inc (BBCI) said in a press release yesterday that ninety per cent of the financing has been secured from four shareholders and commencement of the Berbice Bridge contract is expected by the end of May.

The BBCI indicated that receipts from investors of Final Commitments and tangible Expressions of Interest amounting to ninety per cent of the total cost of the project have come in.

The cost for constructing the bridge is US$34M while the total cost for the project is US$38M.

The press release said that BBCI currently has four shareholders: CLICO, Hand in Hand, the National Insurance Scheme (NIS) and Secure International, a subsidiary of the Beharry Group of Companies. The release said that the final shareholder is expected to be announced shortly.

The bridge company said that the companies which have committed to invest in the project include most major insurance companies and commercial banks as well as trust companies and other financial intermediaries.

BBCI said that all of the technical preparatory work which utilised most of the time in the lead up to the construction start was completed on schedule. Preparations for the project included a 2004 feasibility study by international project construction specialists, the Louis Berger Group, which analysed the economic, financial, technical and environmental feasibility of the project and its developmental impacts.

The Canadian firm ND LEA completed the draft Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) in October of 2005 which resulted in the issuance of an Environmental Permit in April 2006. The EIA included a Hydrology and Sedimentation study undertaken by Northwest Hy-draulics of Canada. Additionally soil tests of the riverbed and the abutment sites were completed by an engineering firm.

BBCI expects to have signatures for the design/build contract with the selected contractor by early May. The company that has been selected as the contractor is the European Consortium comprising Dutch firm Bosch-Rexroth and the internationally renowned British bridge-building company Mabey Johnson.

Bosch-Rexroth is a subsidiary of the Robert Bosch GmbH and currently operates in 41 countries globally. Mabey Johnson currently owns the licence to the technology that was utilised in the construction of Guyana's first floating bridge. This company currently builds 1,500 bridges around the world each year.

The Berbice Bridge will be built to a design similar to the Demerara Harbour Bridge but will utilise technology which is far superior to that which was available 30 years ago when the first floating bridge was constructed.

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OUR page one photo and our editorial yesterday on the plight of the wife and seven sons of the security guard, Curtis Robertson, slain in the murderous attack on acting Agriculture Minister Satyadeow Sawh last Saturday morning, stirred the hearts of many readers here and overseas.

In response to the e-mails and in our little way to help the family in this great hour of need, the Guyana National Newspapers Limited, publishers of the Guyana and Sunday Chronicle, will launch an appeal for funds next week.

Details of how we plan to help with your support will be in tomorrow’s issue.

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-- Government
THE government has indicated that the People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR) must withdraw preconditions which it says clearly interfere with and usurp the constitutional mandate of the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM).

“These preconditions were set by the PNCR as the basis for discussions on constitutional means and possibilities to deal with the status of government, post August 4,” the Government Information Agency (GINA) stated last night.

Following the meeting of President Bharrat Jagdeo and Leader of the PNCR Robert Corbin at the Office of the President on April 19, nominees of the government, Attorney General Doodnauth Singh and Senior Counsel Ralph Ramkarran and Opposition nominees, PNCR Chairman Winston Murray and Senior Counsel Rex McKay, were tasked with examining the constitutional means and possibilities following GECOM’s failure to hold elections before August 4.

GINA said the President’s Information Liaison, Robert Persaud, reported that Cabinet, at its Wednesday meeting, was presented with the PNCR’s response to address the constitutional means/possibilities to deal with the government’s post-August 4 status.

“In essence, preconditions were set by the PNCR for any agreement on constitutional means. Cabinet found those constitutional conditionalities will interfere and usurp the constitutional functions of GECOM,” Persaud was quoted by GINA as saying.

He said Cabinet was informed by Attorney General Singh that the PNCR nominees clearly outlined that the government would have to first agree to the conditionalities, if talks on constitutional possibilities post-August 4 were to be entertained.

“The Information Liaison said it should be recalled that the need for GECOM’s constitutional mandate not to be infringed by any political party, was explicitly made known to the main Opposition Leader and captured in the joint-statement issued on April 21, 2006,” GINA stated.

Persaud said Cabinet in its discussion concluded that the preconditions set by the PNCR for the talks ought to be removed so that these discussions on the constitutional issues could proceed.

The Joint Opposition Parliamentary Parties on Thursday issued a press statement at Le Meridien Pegasus Hotel, stating that talks were quashed by the administration, a claim which is contrary to the discussion and conclusion of Cabinet, GINA said.

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By Neil Marks


THE Government has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Crab Island Refinery Incorporated (CIRI), a company with Guyanese Romeo Cipriani as President, to set up an oil refinery at Crab Island in the Berbice River, which would see an eventual investment of US$500M.

Prime Minister Samuel Hinds, in a press release yesterday, said the refinery is projected to be built in stages with an initial capacity of about 20,000 barrels a day of crude rising to 100,000 barrels a day by five years.

It is envisaged that construction could start within nine months with eventual employment of 1,000 persons. First production could start within a further 15 months, the Prime Minister said.

“There is a need for such a refinery in Guyana. Energy is a lifeline of any country and this could be better if you have cheap energy, reasonably priced energy,” Mr. Cipriani told the Guyana Chronicle of his decision to get involved in the project.

A Berbician, Cipriani is the sponsor and developer of the project and his financial partners are Israelis based in the USA and Americans as well. An engineer, he comes from long years of involvement in oil refineries and construction.

“Guyana has still not hit the jackpot, in terms of finding oil. The misconception is sometimes that you can’t have a refinery if you don’t have crude. There are a lot of places in the world there are refineries where crude doesn’t exist,” he said.

Cipriani’s refinery would purchase crude petroleum on the world market and sell its products on the world market.

“The refinery will be a commercial operation: purchase of any crude petroleum that might be produced by anyone in Guyana is neither required nor excluded; similarly, sales of products into Guyana are neither required nor excluded. However, any sale into Guyana must satisfy all taxes in Guyana,” the Prime Minister noted.

Cipriani told the Guyana Chronicle sales to Guyana would be competitive and marketing CIRI’s products would not be an issue, with a potential buyer already barrelled.

The Government, having some 12 years ago assisted the bauxite industry in the Berbice River in establishing the first stage of a deep water harbour in the mouth of the Berbice River (the Berbice deep water shipping facility), and noting the availability of a large area of undeveloped land on the right bank north of the Canje Creek, has been conscious of and has been pursuing possibilities of developing a deep water harbour and export processing zone there.

“One could imagine the development of storage areas for the large quantities of goods, solids and liquids and containers, to be passed across the docks. In addition, there are areas for constructing plants to process imported and local materials like crude petroleum or bauxite, for export.

“More particularly, the Government noting the often expressed need for the establishment of new petroleum refineries in the Western hemisphere, has been promoting this area as an area to be considered for locating new petroleum refineries,” the Prime Minister said.

CIRI expressed such interest since 2003 and recently brought a likely principal investor and refinery operator to meet the Guyana Office for Investment and the Prime Minister.

The MOU memorialises the representations of CIRI, the concessions available in law which CIRI will enjoy, and a commitment from the Government to make land available.

Mr. Hinds noted that other interests have been expressed in establishing petroleum refineries in that location “and the Government continues to welcome all interests.”

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Friday, April 28, 2006
Birth a Garden Of Peace by James C. Richmond



Birth a Garden Of Peace




(Guyana’s Fortieth Anniversary Realities)

(10) Spare me now from this dark dreary Anniversary; my lovely El Dorado

From the frightening night that rapes your innocence

From the tears of your nameless children -

Scattered bones of your loins

Spare me now the cathedral of murder

And the pain of your inheritance

Broken - crushed in racial chains

Stagnated by greed and lust

Come, come, come inside of her -

Dripping flood of the Potaro

Birth a garden of Peace

(20) Spare me now from the language of death; my lovely El Dorado

And the weary night of callous men

Spare me from the Mashramani of storms

And the Carnival of bones

Come, come, come inside of her –

Dripping flood of the Potaro

Birth a garden of Peace

(30) Rain down from Pakarima’s Peak; my lovely El Dorado

Bury your seed deep inside of her ravagedness

To recreate Anniversaries sweet

Deep into the cesspool of political/racial whore-mongering

Deep into the cesspool of political/racial fornication

Deep into the cesspool of political/racial adultering

Wash across the brazen Sea Wall of her shore

Plant a flower in her womb

Come, come, come inside of her –

Dripping flood of the Potaro

Birth a garden of Peace

(40) Carnival of death, Carnival of death

Cathedral of murder, Cathedral of murder

Mashramani of storms, Mashramani of storms

Anniversary of bitter sweat, Anniversary of bitter tears

Anniversary of squandered hopes, Anniversary of squandered hopes

Anniversary of squandered dreams, Anniversary of squandered dreams

Dripping flood of the Potaro

Birth a garden of Peace!



Poem by: James C. Richmond

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Contents


Editorial

Guest Editor: Victor J. Ramraj


Monica Bungaro University of Birmingham

(In)Appropriate Others: Black Youth Female Identities in Andrea Levy’s Novels


Nancy Ellen Batty Red Deer College

From "Miss Lou" to Star Trek's Zulu : The Multiple Communities of Nalo Hopkinson



Corey Coates University of Calgary

Nothing Everywhere”: Naming Self and Society in the Poetry of Lorna Goodison

and Derek Walcott


Camille Isaacs University of Calgary/Toronto

History Turned “Upside Dung”: The English as Underdog in Zadie Smith’s

White Teeth


Andrea Medovarski York University

Tessa McWatt’s Out of My Skin: “Belonging is what you give yourself”


Pamela mccallum & chris olbey University of Calgary & University of California

Standing in the Middle of the World Cracking”: Class, Cultural Memory, and Collectivity in Dionne Brand’s At the Full and Change of the Moon


Melanie Otto Trinity College, Dublin

The Shallow Grave of the Text: African Narratives in Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea and Pauline Melville’s “Erzulie”


Jordan Stouck University of Lethbridge

A Garden of Her Own”: Caribbean Canadian Spaces and Identities in Shani Mootoo’s Fiction


POEMS


KWAME DAWES, University of South Carolina

The Habits of Love” and “The Things She Knows”



REVIEW ARTICLES


David Granger University of Guyana

Clem Seecharan Sweetening Bitter Sugar


Hyacinth Simpson, Ryerson University

Conference Report “Caribbean Migrations: Negotiating Borders”




BOOK REVIEWS


Frank Birbalsingh York University

Ramabai Espinet The Swinging Bridge


Mark Troy Umea University, Sweden

David Dabydeen Our Lady of Demerara


Harald Leusmann Ball State University

Fred D’Aguiar Bethany Bettany


Mariam Pirbhai Wilfrid Laurier University

Cyril Dabydeen Imaginary Origins: Selected Poems 1970-2002.


Jan Shinebourne London

Mark Mc Watt Suspended Sentences

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The Freddie Kissoon column


A successful business couple I know is migrating with their children to the US . They left this morning. The wife told me that the Sash Sawh murder was the last straw. Here were two genuine Guyanese investors who started from scratch and achieved prodigious commercial success. I didn't say a word as she spoke because I read her mind and I went inside her head. I know what she was thinking. Fear was the factor. Then she told me of a well established Guyanese family that will be leaving billions behind to go to Florida . Yes billions. Their investments in Guyana are very, very huge.

I can't name these people but if I did, you would become depressed because if they can migrate, then the whole of Guyana will be leaving. The Sash Sawh murder has sent the adrenalin rush to countless business people in Guyana , and the exodus will be given a large push. But would there have been more optimistic prospects if this exit route did not exist? Suppose there was no way to go, would the business class have flexed its muscles and dictate to the ruling political class that it should seek a new approach to governance?

For me the answer is yes. If Canada and the US weren't there, out of sheer survival instinct, the business community would have been forced to confront the obduracy of the PPP Government. Sadly, very few Guyanese entrepreneurs will stay and organise for a change in government. Once North America is there, they will leave. And they will leave behind those who have no option or choice but to stay in Guyana . It is with these people, the hope for changes lies.

The Sash Sawh murder should galvanize every supporter of the PPP to confront the PPP on their style of governance. On Monday, I will devote my column to the intended law to abolish any form of industrial protest in a number of areas of occupation in Guyana , suffice it to say that this vexatious imposition hit the press one day after Sash Sawh was cremated. Are the PPP supporters blind? Can't they see the PPP is leading them down the road to perdition?

The Sash Sawh assassination has taken Guyana into dangerous waters that the PPP and their supporters never expected. For the first time in the modern history of CARICOM nations, a serving minister of the cabinet was physically attacked and killed by a self-styled group of urban gunmen who have an anti-government plan. No government official was ever killed in the seventies in Trinidad when the National Union of Freedom Fighters (NUFF) embarked on guerrilla warfare. The state annihilated them. Then the Muslimeen group took the Trinidadian Parliament hostage. In Guyana , the WPA had an agenda to remove the PNC regime, but as someone who was close to that movement, there was absolutely no conspiracy to kill members of the government.

Those days are different from the circumstances that surround the Sash Sawh killing. What Guyana may be witnessing is the rebirth of the NUFF in Guyana but with a completely different methodology. NUFF patterned itself after Latin American urban guerrilla groups and its ideology was Castroite. It was also Black Power oriented. We don't know what is the ideology of the Agricola and Buxton based carriers of the AK-47s. Vaguely, we know that they see the police as a group that must be tamed because they kill African youths with impunity. But that era is gone. The Guyana Police Force has shifted to a more responsible and accountable modus operandi.

Secondly, their teachers have indoctrinated them with the theory of African marginalisation. The sordid aspect of this proposal is that the other side of that coin is anti-Indian feelings. If the government is bent on marginalizing African Guyanese, then it logically follows that Indians are the beneficiaries. I believe this is a flawed theory.

The sociology of Guyana is much more complicated than the teachers of these gunmen make it out to be. Here is the essential difference between NUFF and the people Ronald Waddell and Tacuma Ogunseye refer to as the “resistance movement.” NUFF was Black Power oriented indeed. But it had its indigenous roots. It was hardly related to Stokley Carmichael (later Kwame Toure)'s model of Black Power as it obtained in the US in the late sixties and very early seventies.

Thirdly, these gunmen are anti-government. They see the police as an agent of the state and they see the state as having an ideology of ethnic domination. One of the crucial mistakes in the teachings of the people who mystify the young attackers of Buxton is the emphasis they place on race politics. Had they studied the nature of the Burnham regime, it would have shown them that African Guyanese were hardly the beneficiaries of Burnham's “great socialist thrust.”

Under Burnham some African constituencies gained. But not the African working class. The same movie is playing with the PPP in power. It is a ruling clique with beneficiaries that come from a limited Indian constituency. But how much has the lot of the Indian working class improved? Indians are on a massive migration campaign. The most misleading aspect of this resistance group is its deformed ideology. But however contorted is its philosophical approach to Guyanese politics, it exists. We return to the role of PPP supporters.

The trouble with Indian people in this country is that they are so gullible to the lying propaganda of PPP leaders. We have a volatile situation in Guyana that does not lead to any conspiratorial room belonging to the PNC. But this is what PPP supporters will be told when they demand inclusive governance. And inclusive governance is the only game in town after Sash Sawh's assassination. Those Guyanese who have stayed with the PPP must come to the realisation that Guyana is no longer the Guyana they knew when Papa Cheddi won in 1992. The crime spree that is killing this country is bound up with a political solution. Do PPP fans really believe that President Jagdeo didn't have time to respond to a letter from Mr. Corbin after Sash Sawh was killed? As I go about my business in Georgetown , all I meet are fearful people. There can still be a way out of this madness. It lies with Freedom House and those who prop up and bankroll the PPP.


Kaieteur News

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Stabroek News

It is well known that in the developed Western world populations are greying. But with the old major epidemic diseases under control, improved medical care and better nutrition, people are living longer in the developing world as well. Even a 'young' country like Indonesia, say the reports, will see its population ageing, while China - although hardly a developing country in the ordinary sense - will have 30% of its people in the over-60s bracket not so long from now. It might be noted that in some African countries in particular further demographic distortion occurs because of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, which particularly affects people in the working-age bracket, leaving mostly the very old and the very young in certain communities.

Nations like the UK are beginning to try and respond to these demographic changes, not least because there will shortly be an insufficient number of people of working age to sustain the public pension system. Everyone knows that the retirement age will have to be increased, although the civil service last year managed to get the government to back down from its original proposals where its employees were concerned. Nevertheless, the general trend is accepted: working lives will have to be extended.

In the United States, in fact, an American scientist from Stanford University has suggested that given current life expectancy trends, by 2050 the retirement age should reach 85. Among other things, he says, 50-75 year mortgages might not be unreasonable. Of course, life expectancy in the developing world will not rise at the same rate as in the developed world, but countries badly affected by HIV/AIDS excepted, it will continue to rise.

The initial British response has been to introduce age discrimination legislation, which will come into effect later this year. The law will ban direct and indirect discrimination in recruitment, promotion and training. Employers will be prohibited from forcing workers to retire before the age of 65, and will have to give six months notice of the date of their retirement. In addition, workers will be able to remain on the job after 65 if the employer so agrees.

Commentators have said that UK employers have not yet got the message that the pool of young workers on which they have traditionally depended is shrinking rapidly, and that they really will have to come to terms with offering employment to much older applicants. It might be observed, however, that the reality of the situation which will eventually make itself felt, will force an adjustment in their employment practices far faster than any legislation.

As far as older workers themselves are concerned, a recent survey in the UK found that this generation of elderly people want to work longer in old age than did the previous ones. In fact, 70% expressed a wish to be working in retirement, although many of them preferred part-time or flexi-hours. There were others, however, who saw themselves taking up an entirely new career.

Guyana too is in tandem with the international demographic trends, although in our case the situation is probably exacerbated by the emigration of so many of our people of working age. As things stand we still have retirement ages which bear no relationship to life expectancy, and we reported on the case of a North West teacher a couple of years ago who was forced to retire at 55 in a situation where his services were desperately needed in the secondary school in his region.

Like the developed countries, we too could be facing a public pensions crisis in due course, in addition to which we can ill afford to lose the skills of those over the ages of 55 or 60.

While this is not a problem very high on the government's list of priorities at the moment, any administration coming to office after the election will have to give the issue of the retirement age some attention.

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The restored building (TUF photo)

Last Thursday, Unity House, headquarters of The United Force (TUF) was rededicated in a ceremony held at its New Garden Street location.

At the ceremony, remarks were made by Manzoor Nadir, Member of Parliament and leader of the party, Michael Abraham, deputy leader, Ismail Muhammad, chairman, Errol Van Nooten, vice-chairman, Dennis Lee, treasurer and project chairman and others. The feature address was delivered by Ganga Singh of Trinidad's United National Congress.

Lee, master of ceremonies at the event, said renovations to the historic building, which started just two weeks before, had been long in coming. He praised executive member and manager of the renovation programme Ron Persaud as a master mobiliser "with seemingly limitless energy" and contractor Colin Thompson's skill in restoring the building.

Lee also said the resident executive housing was dismantled and the annex renovated for more comfortable accommodation. Unity House's secretariat has also been equipped with modern technology and satellite internet access along with fashionable furnishings.

Abraham recounted the history of the party; from its founding by Peter Stanislaus D'Aguiar in 1960, to the seven seats gained in the general elections of 1964 and the contesting of three general elections, since then, under the leadership of Nadir.

He declared that this was no time for political acrimony and the TUF sees it as a time for "stretching forth of the healing hand across the political chasm. We must grasp this opportunity with both hands and do so quickly if we are to get on top of this frightening crime situation. The security of our 40 years of Independence is right now under grave threat even as we speak".

Former chairpersons of the party include Hari Prashad, the late Dr Makepeace Richmond, attorney-at-law Fielden Singh, Elinor Da Silva, Dorothy Humphrey, Agnes Mew and Fred Fredricks.

A song by Dawn Edwards and an Amerindian song, sung by an Amerindian group along with a dance performed by the Classique Dance troupe complemented the ceremony. Williams sung the party's battle song and Maria Nadir, wife of the leader of the party, cut the ribbon to mark the re-commissioning.

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-Commonwealth Special Envoy

The Commonwealth Secret-ary-General's Special Envoy to Guyana, Sir Paul Reeves says the murders of Agriculture Minister Satyadeow Sawh and three others last weekend constitute an attack on the future of all Guyanese.

And noting that Guyana stands at a critical moment in its history, Sir Paul asserted that "it will take unity to face down those responsible for this atrocity and the violent crimes that threaten to rob Guyana of a strong, vibrant and democratic future."

"I am profoundly distressed and outraged by the killing of Minister Satyadeow Sawh and three others last Saturday. I must extend my deepest condolences to the family and the friends of those killed, but also to the people of Guyana who have lost a dedicated public servant," the statement said.

Sir Paul echoed the joint statement made by the international diplomatic missions in Georgetown and also supported the call for all citizens to assist the police investigations. He said further that as someone who "has met with the people of Guyana many times and who considers himself a close friend of Guyana, I am concerned by violent crime and recent alarming incidents."

The Commonwealth Special Envoy also pointed out that violence cannot be tolerated and he vigorously condemned it in all instances. As others have commented this week, he observed, "violence only leads to division and undermines the foundations for a prosperous democratic Guyana, something which the Guyanese people have struggled too hard and too long to build."

However, he said he was heartened by the unity in which the voices from all areas of leadership in Guyana have come together to condemn this attack and all forms of violence.

Sir Paul expressed his belief that the Guyanese people possess the strength and maturity necessary to come together and overcome these most fundamental challenges. "I stand by to support you in whatever way I can," he offered.

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Food for the Poor (Guyana) Inc plans to move its housing drive to Linden, Bartica and Leguan this year.

Since it embarked on its housing drive two years ago, Food for the Poor (FFTP) has built 450 homes at $570,000 each, countrywide. The organization noted that the need for housing was great, adding that it had received numerous applications for assistance. Articles like stoves and mattresses are also provided with these homes.

Food for the Poor Executive Director Leon Davis said 40 homes were to be built in Bartica and Linden as a start. The amount of homes to be built in Leguan is yet to be decided.

Davis, at a media briefing on Wednesday afternoon at FFTP headquarters on Blue Mountain Road, Festival City, said currently 40 homes were being built at Wauna in Region One as well as a community centre. These homes are to be occupied by Amerindians who lived in the swamps at Sumato.

Davis explained that these homes contribute to a better family relationship and added that FFTP felt food was not the answer to poverty and so has contributed to sports, education, the medical field and training.

In the education sector, items like books, furniture, stoves, first aid kits, pots and pans were given. FFTP has also sponsored school feeding programmes. It was noted that as a result of the school feeding programmes school attendance has increased.

More support is to be given to schools, Davis said, adding that a New Jersey company, New Horizon Corporation, is to send hundreds of packaged meals for senior citizens and the orphanages. Training programmes in sewing and typing are also held in some regions and to this end sewing machines are donated.

As regards medical supplies, hospital beds, paediatric equipment valued at $71M, blankets, sheets, wheelchairs, medicine and gifts to the maternity ward of $600,000 were distributed. The hospitals that have benefited include Suddie, Skeldon, New Amsterdam, Linden and the West Demerara Regional Hospital.

For the agriculture sector, different kinds of seeds, farming tools and equipment were distributed. Food for the Poor also collaborated with the National Agricultural Research Institute and has assisted the New Amsterdam women's prison to build a chicken farm. Apart from this prison, others gain support in the form of farming equipment and seeds.

And with regard to sports, rural clubs were given footballs, volleyballs and indoor games.

Food for the Poor Chairman Paul Chan-A-Sue said last year the institution received US$31M compared to the US$14.5M in 2004 and has done a considerable amount of work in aid of the poor, though much of it is not reported in the press.

Chan-A-Sue said FFTP was not in Regions One, Eight and Nine but supplies from the organisation reached these communities. However, be-cause of the transportation cost involved, persons in those communities would take the items in. These persons work closely with the organisation and distribute the items.

At Christmas and Easter, the organisation paid the fines for some persons who were incarcerated as a result of not being able to afford to pay fines imposed by the courts. "We try to look after the prisons as best as we can," Chan-A-Sue said.

Addressing the concerns of expired goods coming from Food for the Poor, Davis said this was a rarity.

He noted that at times some items in a box of goods may have expired and been distributed unknowingly.

In addition, it was explained that FFTP items were sometimes sold on the street and while the organization tries hard to clamp down on this, it could not be eliminated 100%.

Food for the Poor (Guyana) has a staff of 55 and was started in 1991. (Nicosia Smith)

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Bi-partisan talks to extend the life of parliament have collapsed after one exploratory meeting and the government is moving for a simple-majority amendment to the Constitution which will enable elections to be held no later than September 4.

With under a week before the National Assembly is due to be dissolved on May 3, the joint opposition parliamentary parties yesterday announced that government had rejected the measures put forward by its representatives to avert the predicament that will result from the dissolution of the National Assembly before the announcement of a polling date.

"After a single meeting, our representatives were informed of the cabinet's decision to reject all of the proposals they had floated, at what was a preliminary and exploratory meeting," WPA co-leader Dr Rupert Roopnaraine told reporters at a joint opposition press conference. Along with Opposition Leader Robert Corbin, and GAP-ROAR spokesman Ravi Dev, he urged that the cabinet reconsider its decision and reopen negotiations to settle outstanding issues.

"Guyana cannot afford to miss another opportunity to close ranks and heal wounds," he said.

The government, through Head of the Presidential Secretariat Dr Roger Luncheon, said the talks could not go forward since the issues raised by the opposition were outside of the remit of the nominated representatives.

Following a meeting between President Bharrat Jagdeo and Corbin last week, the two sides set up a team to work out the constitutional arrangements necessary for the extension of the government's term in office. The four-person team was to have done an immediate assessment of the constitutional implications of the inability of the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) to hold elections by the August 4 constitutional deadline. The team was to have also made recommendations on how to best resolve the situation in the national interest. Attorney General Doodnauth Singh, SC, and Speaker of the House Ralph Ramkarran, SC, represented the government on the team, while PNCR Chairman Winston Murray and Rex McKay, SC represented the joint opposition parties.

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Seventy-four persons were arrested yesterday during a joint operation by the army and the police in the villages of Agricola on the East Bank and Bareroot on the East Coast as the security services scale up their response to rampant crime.

However, Stabroek News has not been able to ascertain why the arrests were made as neither the police nor the army was available for comment.

Stabroek News understands that the ranks launched the operations early yesterday morning and arrested 49 men from Bareroot, and 18 males and seven females from Agricola. On Wednesday morning, 18 persons were arrested in Buxton.

It is not clear where the persons are being held or whether any of them were released last evening. Nothing illegal was found according to reports.

The ranks set off from the camp that has been set up at the back of Buxton by the army and the police and according to Lt Colonel Fraser the operation is a continuation of Operation Centipede.

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Thursday, April 27, 2006
Playwright and Dramatist

Playwright and Dramatist

Micheal Abbensetts was born in Guyana in 1938. He began his writing career with short stories, but decided to turn to playwriting after seeing a performance of John Osborne's Look Back In Anger. He was further inspired when he went to England and visited the Royal Court Theatre, Britain's premier theatre of new writing, where he was soon to become resident dramatist.

Michael Abbensetts is considered by many as the best Black playwright to emerge from his generation. He has been presented with many awards for his life-time achievements in the area of television drama writing, and in 1979, received an award for an "Outstanding Contribution To Literature" by a Black writer resident in England. His work emerged alongside and as part of the larger development of black British television drama.

Abbensetts was born in Guyana in 1938. He began his writing career with short stories, but decided to turn to playwriting after seeing a performance of John Osborne's Look Back In Anger. He was further inspired when he went to England and visited the Royal Court Theatre, Britain's premier theatre of new writing, where he was soon to become resident dramatist. Sweet Talk, Abbensett's first play, was performed there in 1973.

In the same year, The Museum Attendant, his first television play was broadcast on BBC2. Directed by Stephen Frears, the drama was, Abbensetts says, based on his own early experiences as a security guard at the Tower of London. After these two early successes Abbensetts, unlike most Black writers in Britain at the time, was being offered more and more work. He wrote Black Christmas which was broadcast on the BBC in 1977 and featured Carmen Munroe and Norman Beaton. Like The Museum Attendant, Black Christmas was based on actual experience and was shot on location for television.

During the 1970s and 1980s, a number of Abbensetts' plays were produced for the London theater. Alterations appeared in 1978, followed by Samba (1980), In The Mood (1981), Outlaw (1983) and Eldorado (1983). Inner City Blues, Crime and Passion, Roadrunner and Fallen Angel were produced on television.

Abbensetts' success led to participation in British television's first Black soap opera Empire Road (1978-79) for which he wrote two series. Horace Ove was brought in to direct the second series, establishing a production unit with a Black director, Black writer and Black actors. The television series was unique in that it was the first soap opera to be conceived and written by a Black writer for a Black cast, but also because it was specifically about the British-Caribbean experience. Set in Handsworth, Birmingham, it featured Norman Beaton as Everton Bennett and Corinne Skinner-Carter as his long-suffering screen wife. Although Empire Road was a landmark programme on British television, it managed to survive only two series before it was axed. The late Norman Beaton said of the programme, "It is perhaps the best TV series I have been in."

Norman Beaton continued to star in many of Abbensett's television productions including Easy Money (1981) and Big George Is Dead and Little Napoleons (1994/Channel 4). Little Napoleons is a four-part comic-drama depicting the rivalry between two solicitors, played by Saeed Jaffrey and Norman Beaton, who become Labour councillors. The work focuses on a number of themes including the price of power, the relationship between West Indian and Asian communities in Britain and the internal workings of political institutions.

Much of Abbensetts drama has focused on issues of race and power, but he has always been reluctant to be seen as restricted to issue-based drama. Certainly his dialogue is concerned with the development and growth of character and he is fundamentally aware of the methods and contexts for his actors. Abbensetts has always actively involved himself in the production process and his dramatic works have provided outstanding roles for established Black actors in Britain--Carmen Munroe, Rudolph Walker and of course Norman Beaton--giving them the chance to play interesting and realistic roles as well as creating stories about the everyday experiences of Black people. Abbensetts' work thrived at a time when there was very little drama on television which represented the lives of Black British people and his television plays have created new perspectives for all his viewers.

MICHAEL ABBENSETTS. Born in British Guiana (now Guyana), 8 June 1938; took British citizenship, 1974. Attended Queen's College, Guyana, 1952-56; Stanstead College, Quebec; Sir George Williams University, Montreal, 1960-61. Security attendant, Tower of London, 1963-67; staff member, Sir John Soane Museum, London, 1968-71; resident playwright, Royal Court Theatre, London, 1974; visiting professor of drama, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, 1981. Recipient: George Devine Award, 1973; Arts Council bursary, 1977; Afro-Caribbean Award, 1979. Address: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd, Halley Court, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8EJ, U.K.

TELEVISION SERIES
1978-79 Empire Road 1994 Little Napoleons Television Plays 1973 The Museum Attendant 1975 Inner City Blues 1976 Crime and Passion 1977 Black Christmas 1977 Roadrunner 1982 Easy Money 1987 Big George Is Dead

RADIO
Home Again, 1975; The Sunny Side of the Street, 1977; Brothers of the Sword, 1978; The Fast Lane, 1980; The Dark Horse, 1981; Summer Passions, 1985.

STAGE
Sweet Talk, 1973; Alterations, 1978; Samba, 1980; In the Mood, 1981; The Dark Horse, 1981; Outlaw, 1983; El Dorado, 1984; Living Together, 1988.

PUBLICATIONS
Sweet Talk (play). London: Eyre Methuen, 1976. Samba (play). London: Eyre Methuen, 1980. Empire Road (novel). London: Panther, 1979. Living Together (play). Oxford: Heinemann, 1988.

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Guyana 40th Anniversary Independence Festival
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History This Week No.19/2006

Introduction

A month from today we will be celebrating the 40th anniversary of our country's political independence. We shall be reflecting on, depending on your perspective, the many areas in which we have achieved much or failed to achieve anything. We shall analyse the reasons for our blatant successes and equally blatant failures and hopefully from the lessons learned chart a way forward for future generations. But the past forty years were but a continuum not only of the forty years before but also the many decades beyond that. And so before we become too self absorbed in our recent past, let's spend a while reflecting on the forty or so years before 1966.

The focus of this first article will be the political, constitutional and economic development to the end of World War II.

Political and

Constitutional

Developments

In 1928 British Guiana began to be administered under the Crown Colony system of Government when many of Britain's Caribbean possessions had already been under this system of administration. Prior to that, political and constitutional developments were influenced by the vagaries of its Dutch inherited political institutions - College of Electors, the Court of Policy and the Combined Court. However after decades of protest from the fledgling mainly black and coloured middle class, bolstered by the complaints of the planter class, the governor and the Colonial Office, there was some fiddling with the constitution in 1891 which ultimately satisfied none of the stakeholders.

Deteriorating socio economic conditions in the Caribbean have always acted as a stimulus for protest and demand for change in the existing political institutions. By 1922 the brief fillip to the economy which World War I had inspired had worn off, a sugar slump in the late 1920s and worsening industrial conditions led to strike action. The new consciousness among black and coloured nationalists stemming from the experience of returned war veterans and teachings of Marcus Garvey led to the demand by West Indians nationals for some measure of representative government. As a consequence, Major General E. Wood was dispatched to British Guiana, at the height of depression caused by the sugar slump, to assess the constitutional situation. However, in his report he did not feel there was any justification for making any substantive constitutional changes as long as the colony could balance its budget. The ferocity with which the October 1926 General Election was fought and the animosity which followed the victory of the Popular Party and led to almost every seat in the Legislature being challenged, further underscored the total dissatisfaction of all the stakeholders with the 1891 constitution.

It is against this background that the Parliamentary commission of November 1926 was appointed to examine the economic conditions of the colony. One of the main recommendations of the Snell - Wilson report was that there should be changes to the constitution which would make the "authorities finally responsible for the government of the Colony power in the last resort to carry into effect measures which they consider essential for its well being." Despite the vigorous objection of the elected members, the British Guiana, (Constitution) Order-in-Council of July 13, 1928 abolished the Court of Policy and the Combined Court and substituted a Legislative Council with 3 ex-officio members including the Governor, 8 nominated official members, 5 nominated unofficial members and 14 elected members. The members of the Executive had to be chosen from the Legislative Council. Although article 54 of the new constitution gave the governor the power "to make laws for the peace, order and good government of the country," Crown Colony government failed to deliver on its promise, though in the case of British Guiana it came into operation barely months before the 1929 crash which plunged the world into economic depression. Again the deteriorating economic conditions led to a series of strikes and riots in the entire Caribbean. This belied the contention that the governor's discretionary powers would be used "on behalf of the unrepresented classes." While the 1938 Royal Commission's main terms of reference were an investigation of the social and economic conditions of the Colony, it also took within the scope of its enquiry, constitutional and other aspects of government of the colonies.

Though the report was ready by December 1939 the exigencies of World War II delayed its official publication until mid 1945. However, its essential provisions were published in Parliament in early 1940. One of its main recommendations was the widening of the franchise. Indeed one of the main focuses of attack by Caribbean nationalists during the disturbances was the necessity of widening the franchise to wit universal adult suffrage. On May 1941 a local franchise Commission was appointed in accordance with the Moyne recommendations. The majority of the members of the franchise commission were against the introduction of universal adult suffrage but favoured a reduction in the property qualification for voters and for candidates for election to the Legislative Council. The recommendations were implemented by legislation in 1945 but new elections were not held until 1947.

Economic Developments

The above discussion helps to illustrate the extent to which British Guiana was indeed a political economy, which continued to dance or wail depending on the tune played by sugar. A good point of departure is the appointment of the 1926 Parliamentary Commission to report on the economic position of the colony in respect of the causes, which had retarded and measures which could be taken to promote its development.

The commissioners felt that the constitution should be changed so that the government and not the elected majority of the Combined Court had the last word in taxation and expenditure. More importantly, it was suggested that the future of sugar would be assured if British preference was retained to help insulate the industry from subsidised and protected world competition. As it had done in the 19th century, the sugar interests of British Guiana were able to convince the representatives of the Colonial Government that the continued existence of the colony was tied to the survival of sugar, if necessary, at the expense of other crops or industries. The industry had been given a boost when on July 6, 1925 a new Reciprocity agreement was signed with Ottawa, which, among other things, granted a preference of $1 per 100 tons, on 96% of sugar. Additionally, in 1926 the problem of labour for the sugar and rice industries seemed to be addressed with the publication of the Nunan scheme for immigration from India to British Guiana. As in the days of slavery and indentureship, sugar remained the dominant economic activity and the survival of every other form of economic activity depended on whether it complemented the sugar industry or competed with it for scarce financial and human resources. The rice industry managed to survive and prosper because it fell into the former category. On the other hand, the development of economic activity in the interior especially the gold and diamond industry, tended to receive support from the planter dominated political community only during periods of acute unemployment in the industry. However, once the sugar industry revived and the immediate threat of economic collapse of the colony was temporarily eliminated, the need to pour resources into any other facet of economic activity - such as road construction and road maintenance in the interior or on the coast was vigorously opposed.

Some other economic activity during the period was the establishment of the Department of Forestry in 1926. Also in 1926, the two principal diamond producing industries were united to create the United Diamond Fields of British Guiana with a capital of $350,000. The period of most intense dissatisfaction with economic conditions of the colony coincided with a period of record population growth between 1931 and 1946 at a time when the country, region and the world was facing a severe economic crisis. In fact, the rate of population increase in British Guiana was one of the highest in the world.

The worsening economic crisis accelerated the establishment of Trade Unions. The British Guiana Labour Union had been established in 1919. It was not until 1931 that the second Trade Union, the British Guiana Workers League was established. Between 1937 and 1938 in the midst of the riots and strikes, seven trade unions were registered and in 1939 alone another five were registered. Among the most important of these unions was the registration of the MPCA on November 5, 1937 for the purpose of organizing sugar workers especially field workers. This union was to play a significant role in trade union development and in the sugar workers' struggle for better working conditions.

The Royal Commission visited British Guiana in January and February 1939 and took evidence and memoranda from different stakeholders in the colony. Its recommendations had far reaching effects on the economic, social and political life of the colony.

In the next article, socio cultural developments and the situation of women in the period to the end of World War II will be examined



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Parents of children who attend St Agnes Primary School protested yesterday outside the Ministry of Education, 69 Brickdam, over the harassment they say their children endure from teachers from another school.

The St Agnes school building is been refurbished and in the meantime the children have been sharing classes with children of Enterprise Primary School at D'Urban Backlands. This is on a shift basis; Enterprise in the morning, St Agnes in the afternoon.

Parents said that the situation has been going on for a while, but they have only now decided to speak out. They complained yesterday that while the afternoon session starts at 1 pm, their children would still be standing outside the school gate at 1.30 pm because the school gate was locked. They said toilets were locked too, prohibiting St Agnes students from using them. "When the [St Agnes] teachers say good morning [to Enterprise teachers] they don't answer. You can't find de bell...," one parent said yesterday. "We want a word," one parent petitioned. "Me daughter is come home, mommy mommy, throw down she bag and head for the toilet," she related.

Parents also spoke of the additional expense of having to take and pick up their children from the D'Urban Backlands school. "De ministry talking about putting children in dey area...," one woman said. "Why every time de ministry got to repair a school parents got to protest?" a parent asked. Students of St Mary's school had protested also when they were moved to share classes while their school had been under repairs.

Work on the eastern section of the St Agnes building is almost complete except for a few missing windows. The windows have been ordered, a worker said. The place will need to be tidied up and organised too. The western section has not yet been tendered out for repairs, the worker said. This part is a total mess. Several windows are missing and things were tossed all over. Rain soaked a cupboard and some articles, which were on the ground.

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Robert Corbin

Opposition Leader Robert Corbin has issued a call for an emergency retreat of the country's political leaders to find a way to defuse the explosive crime situation facing the nation.

In a televised address to the nation last evening, PNCR leader Corbin said the murders of Agriculture Minister Satyadeow Sawh and three others over the last weekend were evidence that no section of the society is safe and he felt it incumbent on all parties to set aside their differences to safeguard the nation. "We must sit, all of us, together, in a reconciliatory environment that is driven by a common cause - the survival of the nation," he said. "Whatever, our various other preoccupations, whatever our differences, we must pause, reflect on our total national circumstance and act together... we must act together now; not tomorrow, but today," he added.

However, in this vein, Corbin lamented that a request for a meeting with President Bharrat Jagdeo to find a common approach to deal with the fallout of the Minister's killing has not garnered any response from the government. Up to press time last night there was no response from the Office of the President to Corbin's address.

Corbin explained that after a special emergency meeting of the PNCR's Central Executive Committee on Saturday, the party decided it should unconditionally reach out to the government/ruling party, to other political parties and to all the stakeholders in society, to be an integral part of a process aimed at confronting the common threat that resulted in the day's deadly developments.

As a result, by way of a letter on Saturday, Corbin informed the Head of State of his belief that the slaying of Minister Sawh had created dangerous conditions with the potential for political instability that could threaten national security and cohesion. As a result, he proposed an urgent meeting within 24 hours to formulate a common approach for dealing with all national security issues.

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Thursday, April 27, 2006

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (AFP): West Indies have become the last international side to institute a retainer contract system for its players.

Ken Gordon, president of the West Indies Cricket Board, announced on Wednesday at his office here that the regional governing body and the West Indies Players' Association had finally hammered out an agreement.

"The people involved in the negotiation all had one common objective when they sat down to discuss the matter," Gordon said.

"They all wanted to take West Indies out of the situation in which it now stands and take it forward. I think zeroing in on this, they were able to find the solutions and ways around whatever difficulties they had."

The WICB's negotiation team comprised directors Deryck Murray and Desmond Haynes, two former West Indies vice-captains and members of the Cricket Committee, as well as Chief Financial Officer Barry Thomas.

Under new chairman Clive Lloyd, the former West Indies captain, the reconstituted Cricket Committee has been playing the leading role in the latest round of negotiations.


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Thursday, April 27, 2006

by Shervon Alfred
Caribbean Net News St Lucia Correspondent
Email: shervon@caribbeannetnews.com

CASTRIES, St Lucia: Saint Lucia has sought the assistance of the United Kingdom government to deal with rising levels of violent crime on the island.

Governor General Dame Pearlette Louisy made the announcement Tuesday as she opened a new session of the country’s parliament.

The Governor General said the UK government will assist with recruiting seven “highly experienced” former British Police Officers to work with the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force.

Saint Lucia will become the third country in the region, after Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica, to make use of the expertise of British Police Officers within the national Police Force.

The former British officers will be responsible for crime and intelligence as well as the development of an anti-corruption program within the force, she said.

They will also provide training for the local police.

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Skipper Brian Lara
Brian Lara is the West Indies' skipper again.

Hardbeatnews, ST. JOHN’S, Antigua, Thurs. Apr. 27, 2006: Trinidadian-born star batsman, Brian Charles Lara, has been named captain of the West Indies Cricket team for a third time.

Lara’s reappointment was yesterday made official, confirming rumors that had circulated in recent days. West Indies Cricket Board President Ken Gordon made the disclosure at a press briefing just after midday yesterday. Gordon said he and board officials were impressed with Lara’s “strong desire to contribute to lifting West Indies cricket out of the doldrums and to run with this challenge.”

Lara replaces Guyanese Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who resigned earlier this month after he had himself replaced the Trini batsman last year following a contract dispute.

The Board and the players union yesterday also reached an agreement for eight of the ten players on the controversial retainer contract dispute that had dragged on from last year.

Chairman of the Caricom Sub Committee on Cricket, Grenadian Prime Minister Keith Mitchell, offered congratulations and best wishes to the West Indies Cricket Board and the West Indies Players Association on reaching the agreement on the retainer contracts issue. He added that he is pleased that good judgement has prevailed and that both parties have acted in the interest of West Indies Cricket.

Mitchell also congratulated Lara on his reappointment. Lara’s first challenge now is the upcoming seven-match One-Day International matches against Zimbabwe. The first gets underway in Antigua on Sat., April 29.

The full Windies side picked for the matches are: Chris Gayle, Runako Morton, Ramnaresh Sarwan, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Dwayne Smith, Marlon Samuels, Dwayne Bravo, Denesh Ramdin, Corey Collymore, Fidel Edwards, Jerome Taylor and Ian Bradshaw. – Hardbeatnews.com

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Head coach of the West Indies cricket squad, Bennett King
Head coach of the West Indies cricket squad, Bennett King. (WICB Image)


Hardbeatnews, ST. JOHN'S, Antigua, Tues. Apr. 25, 2006: The Aussie-born head coach of the West Indies cricket squad, Bennett King, has slammed as “inaccurate,” claims that he called former players 'dinosaurs.'

King, in a West Indies Cricket board statement yesterday denied claims by sports psychologist Dr Rudi Webster that he had used the fossil analogy to describe past West Indies cricket players.

"This is completely and totally inaccurate, it's an outright lie," the statement quoted King as saying in Antigua yesterday when the report was brought to his attention. "I've worked with former players here in the West Indies and all over the world and I have the utmost respect for their outstanding contributions to the game as players and what they can provide to players now.”

The claim was made by Webster while addressing a Thinking Sports Symposium last weekend. But King pointed to his work with legendary West Indies cricketer, Sir Garry Sobers, as well as former skipper Courtney Walsh, adding that he feels the players “have a wealth of information and we cannot afford to let that slip away.”

“(That’s) what makes this report even more farcical,” King added, noting that he “is” and “am currently actively involved in urging the greater involvement of former players."

The latest controversy erupts as the WICB and the players union continues to battle over a contract and as both the Zimbabwe and India tours loom. Another meeting between a Board representative and the players union president is set for today. – Hardbeatnews.com

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Guyanaoperation in buxton
The call comes as the joint security forces in Guyana step up the pressure on Buxton. (GINA IMAGE)

Hardbeatnews, GEORGETOWN, Guyana, Thurs. Apr. 27, 2006: Leader of Guyana’s main opposition, Robert Corbin, seems to feel only divine intervention can help the country over come its woes, especially its rising crime rates.

Corbin, in an address to the nation yesterday, proposed “an inter-faith religious ceremony to symbolize our appeal to the Almighty for divine intervention to help to rescue our nation.” His comments come in light of the recent murders of agriculture minister, Satyadeow Sawh, his brother, Rajpat Rai, sister, Phulmattie Persaud, and security guard, Curtis Robinson.

“We propose also to engage more intensely with religious leaders and non-governmental organizations in dialogue on the mutually reinforcing role that we could play either together or in our respective organizations,” stated Corbin, as he attempted to proffer solutions to curb the murder rates that have claimed the lives of almost 50 Guyanese since January 1, 2006.

He also pledged his party’s commitment “to work assiduously and unreservedly with other stakeholders towards the development of a genuine national strategy to confront the dangers that threaten to overwhelm us all.”

This as several members of the Guyana police and army staged a second joint conduct operation in Buxton, East Coast Demerara, setting up camp there. The government has long identified the area as a hotbed for criminal activity. Eighteen nationals in the village were nabbed yesterday. – Hardbeatnews.com

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Dear Mr President,

I decided to send you this open letter, hoping and praying fervently that its contents will be taken seriously, so as to allow for immediate action to follow, all in the interest of this nation you have the privilege to lead.

It is axiomatic - the situation in Guyana is fraught with many imponderables and dangers.

No one who is perceptive or those who have looked around at earlier and recent experiences will doubt that testing times are around the corner. No one can deny that immorality is eating away the fabric of our society.

As a people, for whatever reason, we distrust the ‘other' people. Globally, hate and terror are adding fuel to this.

You have, with sincerity, no doubt, put in place, a number of measures intended to steady the Ship of State and bring happiness to our people. However, some of these measures are inadequately executed and poorly managed, while others are merely cosmetic.

This is not the time to point fingers, save to accept our society is experiencing some degree of duplicity, and what was once described, with due respect to our ancestors, as political tribalism.

What we need urgently is change, a societal metamorphosis, in order to foster the spirit of brotherhood, love, understanding and tolerance.

I am proposing you set in motion a long-term plan, intended to effect these changes. It is an all-embracing programme of character education in all of our educational institutions and communities. This will be a tedious, but rewarding process. A start must be made without delay.

It is not difficult to bring together experienced persons, academics, educators, cultural and religious representatives to make proposals in the context of our circumstances.

If political leaders are serious about our welfare, then to divert our resources and energies at this junction will be a worthy investment.

Many institutions and some religious bodies abroad I know are willing to make available their experience and expertise.

We can mobilise the skills needed and perhaps begin with a fair-sized pilot project, at the same time making better use of our far from prefect mass media.

Excellency, some of our existing institutions, including those dealing with integrity, race and religion, have not made a significant difference, and the recent poor handling of security is certainly not helpful.

As the leader of this nation it will be irresponsible if you either ignore or delay implementation of this proposal. I say the same to all of our leaders. It is hardly necessary for me to say how much many like-minded citizens will be willing to help.

Further, it is a project that should earn the appreciation of every political, religious and social groupings, also of every decent and caring citizen. Indeed, it can be the catalyst and the great unifying force we need at this time.

Today, we ought not to ignore our drift to the precipice of social deceit, with sections of our population wilting under the pressure of a moral and spiritual illness.

Just in case you hesitate, please accept this – all men are endowed by the Creator with a natural tendency to seek beatitude. This tendency may lie dormant or perverted, but it cannot be eradicated.

Mayor Hamilton Green


Kaieteur News

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Guyanese couple killed in Queens fire

DEAD: JOE AND GLORIA GENT

A GUYANESE couple, who had been married for some 40 years, died after an early morning fire ripped through their home in Queens, New York, yesterday, a relative in Guyana said.

The fire burned for more than an hour, trapping and killing 63-year-old Joe Gent and his 61-year-old wife Gloria.

The man’s sister, Veeronica Whittaker, said he suffered a stroke a few years ago and a New York news network said his limited mobility may have made it difficult for him to get out in time. He died at the scene, while his wife died later at the hospital.

The Gents lived in the house on Beach 12th Street in Far Rockaway for some 20 years.

"When units arrived, they found a heavy fire in the basement but also on the first floor,” said FDNY Battalion Chief George Healy. “Shortly thereafter, two occupants were discovered on the first floor. They were removed. One occupant was taken to the hospital where they were declared deceased. The other one was declared at the scene," he was quoted by NY1 News as saying.

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OPPOSITION Leader Mr. Robert Corbin has called for an immediate retreat of political leaders “at the very highest levels” to discuss and find a way out of the security “emergency” the country faces, especially in light of the recent slaying of Minister Satyadeow Sawh and three others at his home.

“For us in the People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR) and for me as Leader of that party and as Leader of the Opposition, this is not a time for cheap politicking, hypocritical statements or reckless and inflammatory utterances, but for sober and sane leadership to give citizens hope that the major political stakeholders are determined to act in concert to restore the security of this nation,” he said in a statement.

Minister Sawh, his brother Rajpat Rai Sawh, sister Pulmattie Persaud, and security guard Curtis Robertson were gunned down early Saturday morning by a merciless gang whose motive the Police said was primarily to execute the minister and his family and any eyewitnesses.

“Whatever the motive behind this dastardly act, there can be no doubt that our country is now faced with a monster that seeks to devour us all”, Corbin said in a statement broadcast on some TV stations. “This latest incident is in effect a chilling message to the state, the government, political parties, religious and civil society organisations and all the people of Guyana, regardless of their political persuasions.”

“I pledge publicly on behalf of the People’s National Congress Reform to work assiduously and unreservedly with other stakeholders towards the development of a genuine national strategy to confront the dangers that threaten to overwhelm us all,” he affirmed.

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- High Commissioner
CANADIAN High Commissioner to Guyana, Mr. Bruno Picard, yesterday said the Guyana Government has requested help from Canada to strengthen the security forces here.

He told the Guyana Chronicle the request was not specifically on the investigations into the assassination of Minister Satyadeow Sawh, and the simultaneous triple murders of his brother, Rajpat Rai Sawh, sister Pulmattie Persaud and security guard Curtis Robertson.

Referring to the Guyana Chronicle article yesterday in which Rejean Beaulieu, a spokesman for Canada’s Department of Foreign Affairs said there was no request of the Canadian government to help in the probe, Picard said while this was true, the official omitted saying that the government had asked for help in strengthening local law enforcement in a general sense.

However, he said while help was not requested of the Canadians to specifically deal with the Saturday morning slayings at LBI, East Coast Demerara, help was offered to the Guyana Police Force.

Minister Sawh and the others were executed by an armed gang just after they had returned from an outing.

His brother and sister slain were Canadian citizens who were home for the one year death anniversary ceremony for their mother.


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EIGHTEEN persons were arrested yesterday during Joint Services patrols in Buxton, while a sizeable Joint Services camp has been established in the troubled East Coast Demerara village.

The information about the arrests was given by a high ranking Police Force officer on the scene, during a media visit to the encampment, arranged by the Guyana Defence Force.

The officer would not specify the reason or reasons for the arrests, except to confirm the assertion by GDF spokesman, Lt. Col. Claude Fraser that they were made during the Joint Services operation under way in the village.

Fraser said the encampment began Monday.

Located at the southernmost extremity of the village, the camp occupies a large, mostly vacant, plot of land bordered by Company Path and Church of God Road. The encampment is surrounded by mostly vacant shacks and smaller houses and boasts several large tents, portable toilets and several support vehicles, including an ambulance.

The Army spokesman explained that the operation was jointly headed by a GDF Major and a Police Superintendent. Patrols operate out of the base 24-hours-a-day and after each patrol the participating ranks would be debriefed. He explained that the base encampment can rapidly deploy ranks to any potential incident either within the village or along the East Coast.

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Canada says:
No request yet for help in Sawh murder probe
REJEAN Beaulieu, a spokesperson for Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs, yesterday said despite public reports that Guyana is asking other countries for help, the Canadian government has yet to receive a request from Guyana for assistance in the investigation into the murder of acting Agriculture Minister Satyadeow Sawh, two siblings and his security guard.

"If there is a request made for assistance in the criminal investigation, it will be forwarded to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police for consideration," he told The Mississauga News in Canada.

Minister Sawh’s brother Rajpat Rai Sawh and sister Pulmatie Persaud who were slain with him when a heavily-armed gang stormed his house early last Saturday morning, were Canadian citizens and there is wide interest in the Guyanese-Canadian community in the case that has sent shockwaves around Guyana and internationally.

Persaud's family in Erin Mills (a district in Mississauga), including husband Bob and two sons Adrien and Ian, all boarded a plane to Guyana Monday night to attend the funeral for her and her brothers yesterday, The Mississauga News reported.

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-- PLE being distributed to centres


THE opposition-nominated commissioners boycotted yesterday’s statutory meeting of the Guyana Elections Commission but a source said the meeting was still held with a legitimate quorum as provided under the Constitution.

Opposition-nominated Commissioners Mr. Haslyn Parris, Mr. Robert Williams and Mr. Lloyd Joseph have withdrawn from GECOM meetings, claiming dissatisfaction with the leadership style of Chairman Dr. Steve Surujbally.

The three commissioners did not, as they had indicated, show up for a statutory meeting last week which meant that, under Section 7 of the Constitution (Amendment) Act No. 2 of 2000, the Chairman would be obligated to adjourn the meeting for two calendar days, since it requires four out of six commissioners – two each appointed by the President and the opposition, respectively – to constitute a quorum under normal proceedings.

That adjourned meeting was scheduled for last Friday but according to sources, one of the opposition commissioners showed up and requested that the absence of the other two be excused.

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Georgetown Chamber says Police
Chief should be axed

-- shocked at slaying of Minister Sawh

The Georgetown Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GCCI) came out with a strongly worded statement yesterday in which it called for the resignation of Police Commissioner Winston Felix, whom the GCCI holds personally responsible for the brutal deaths of Agriculture Minister Satyadeow Sawh and his family members and security guard.

In a press release issued yesterday, GCCI extended its condolences to the wife, children and relatives of Minister Sawh and also the family of security guard Curtis Robertson.

The Minister, his brother Rajpat Sawh, sister Pulmattie Persaud and Robertson were mowed down early Saturday morning in a hail of bullets by a h