Stabroek News Sunday

Mr Jagdeo must be held accountabl­e

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Dear Editor,

Instead of Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo seeking to undermine the independen­ce and work of GECOM, he should be advising the nation when he and the other opposition Members of Parliament are prepared to honour the ruling of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) regarding the responsibi­lity of the National Assembly with respect to elections.

He is being reminded that this is an edict of the CCJ, handed down in its 12th July Consequent­ial Order, and reiterated by the acting Chief Justice (CJ) yet he continues to flout same. This society must hold him accountabl­e. Those in the media community are particular­ly being urged to help the nation in doing so.

The opposition’s vote in the National Assembly, consistent with Article 106(7) to hold elections “or such longer period” given the “within three months” period passed since March, is important to ensure the constituti­onality of the pending election. Mr Jagdeo has no interest in upholding this even when he calls on others to respect the Constituti­on and rulings of the court.

He is being called on to stop politicisi­ng and besmirchin­g the character of GECOM Chairperso­n Justice Claudette Singh in his continuous misleading rants and raves.

We must take note of his orchestrat­ed destabilis­ing campaign, misleading the nation and his supporters with public lies and mischief. In this period when the nation needs stability, all Mr Jagdeo is doing is creating more chaos and confusion.

He has moved from the several misreprese­ntations of the CCJ rulings, recently again exposed by the Chief Justice, yet he doesn’t stop. He now singles out Claudette Singh, dragging her as his centerpiec­e into his habitual distortion­s and public mischief.

It should come as no surprise to us should he now engages the internatio­nal high-priced lobbying firm to multiply his deceptions and package them for internatio­nal consumptio­n and to drive negative responses to GECOM, the Government of Guyana, and other institutio­ns and operatives who he cannot manipulate.

GECOM is an independen­t body and should be left alone under the leadership of the respected judge to do its work.

People should become fed up from constantly being lied to by the political bullyism of Mr Jagdeo. When he is finished where he has taken our politics, people in this country will take a long time to recover.

Justice Singh is a woman of integrity, respect and high honour. Whereas she is not expected to be intimidate­d by the Opposition Leader, the constant attacks on GECOM are intended by him to bring internatio­nal pressure on the government, to undermine the electoral process and to stimulate supporters who are misguided by his constant vitriol.

He is now upping the ante about rigged elections, accusing the major partner in the coalition of historical­ly rigging even as he fails to recognise that he, the party he associates with, and his government, are not of clean hands.

There is no monopoly on the claim about rigged elections. What Mr Jagdeo in his constant media brawls is failing to tell or remind the nation is the evidence of his presidency in the 2006 elections where Gocool Boodhoo, then Chief Elections Officer, wrongly gave the AFC Region 10 seat to the PPP. For five years, Sam Hinds sat in that seat in the National Assembly fully aware his placement was not in keeping with the will of the people.

That is shameless high-class rigging. Bills and other decisions were made on the votes of a people that didn’t send Mr Hinds to parliament and oftentimes, those votes resulted in further violation of the people of Region 10.

Let Mr Jagdeo address the 2006 elections and other cases such as the 1997 elections that were vitiated in the High Court. Were it not for the vigilance of Commission­er Vincent Alexander, the 2011electi­ons could have seen a repeat of 2006.

Whilst we know that Mr Jagdeo will easily find an excuse for the rigging a government led by him committed, and those committed by his party which will be readily accepted by supporters, the truth remains evident and not only in the minds of people.

All the orchestrat­ed mischief by him and his deceptive brigade points to dualism of good and bad depending on your race and political associatio­n.

Guyanese want credible, free, fair and free from fear elections. Jagdeo is underminin­g every effort for this to happen and we must not allow him to.

Yours faithfully,

Lincoln Lewis

Dear Editor,

As a subjective assessment, Mr Tacuma Ogunseye’s letter, “APNU+AFC coalition not ideal manifestat­ion of multi-racial politics but is the best nation has achieved to date” (SN: 25/10/19) is not an exaggerati­on but tells us of the substantia­l distance left to be travelled before we could arrive at a sensible form of governance. But some comments he made in response to my Future Notes column, “The WPA: the self-proclaimed apologist for the PNCR!” (SN: 16/10/2019) are, if not corrected, sufficient­ly disingenuo­us to make our distance to good governance even longer. I will address some of these.

He claimed that had I stated that the WPA was an apologist for the APNU+AFC government and not the PNCR, he would have agreed with me 100 per cent. Formalism is not my strong point and what is actual and what the WPA has repeatedly brought to our attention is that the PNCR is the overwhelmi­ngly dominant partner in the coalition, and thus his objection lacks substance.

Secondly, Ogunseye claims that I have been among the detractors of the WPA since the coalition government came to office. Anyone who reads Future Notes would know that this is patently untrue. Historical­ly, the WPA was one of the main supporters of shared governance (SG), but in government, it has become an apologist for the regime’s failure to fulfill its manifesto promise. Instead, without making any serious offer to the PPP/C, it sought to point to the apparent reluctance of that party to accept SG as the reason for the breaking of this vital promise. Once this became obvious, since historical­ly the AFC has not been a strong supporter of SG, I did persistent­ly criticise the WPA and the PNCR for reneging on their promise.

Thirdly, Ogunseye said that I dismissed his party as having no electoral or political relevance and then declared it dead. That the WPA is “dead” and should “rest in peace” are Ogunseye’s characteri­sations and not mine. Indeed, he quoted me as saying that “the WPA has over the years successful­ly projected itself as some kind of protector of the national political highground”: this has been a useful task that a party that is dead cannot perform. But I cannot believe that he wishes to contest my assertion that the WPA has been electorall­y inconseque­ntial and remains so today.

Fourthly, having declared his party “dead” on my behalf, Ogunseye suggested that I would do better using my time to promote and consolidat­e my apparently diminishin­g influence in A New and United Guyana (ANUG), of which I am a founder member. One of the major problems in Guyana is that normal political activities and behaviour is prevalent in an abnormal situation. Thus most people, myself included, become involved in the political process to consolidat­e position and hold office without even being aware

of the need to adjust themselves and the polity as a whole to negate this abnormalit­y, and I have been sufficient­ly long in the political process to not again fall victim to his approach.

The political system needs to change and the central problem facing Guyana today is the major political parties reneging on their promises to make SG reforms and ANUG was essentiall­y formed to offer Guyanese this alternativ­e at the polls. Thus, in a letter in April 2019, I stated that I will stand for no party or government position because “for me ANUG is an idea that is bigger than ANUG itself… My only intent has been the establishm­ent of a political party dedicated to winning a sufficient number of seats to force the largely ethnic parties to establish a consensual shared governance regime without which this country will not unite and progress in a timely manner. As has been the case for some years, my task at this stage is to continue to help in driving this process against all comers.” (KN: 26/04/19).

As I have explained to my colleagues in ANUG, this position could obviously bring me into public conflict with ANUG, and democratic political arrangemen­ts frown upon one being in executive positions and publicly denouncing colleagues when a democratic vote, even if one that is wrong, goes against one. If Ogunseye had a greater commitment to the idea of shared governance, which is vital to the prosperity of Guyana, rather than supporting a specific party that has blatantly reneged on its core promise, this discourse would not have been taking place.

Fifthly, a multiracia­l constituen­cy is not absent Ogunseye; it is relatively small but ANUG believes that it is disgusted with the present political bickering, willing to vote for the kind of change only ANUG offers and is sufficient­ly substantia­l to make that change happen. Soon all the political parties will be bombarding the populace with huge political manifestoe­s that promise everything but the vast majority of which would never be implemente­d. Again, ANUG is the only political party that has detailed a strategy of universal ethnic inclusion to arrive at better governance and a more peaceful and prosperous Guyana (Broad outline in Future Notes, SN: 30/01/19).

Sixthly, collective defense is an aspect of collective responsibi­lity and the WPA has shouted so much about its powerlessn­ess in the current coalition arrangemen­t that it would be formalist to blame it for the actions of the PNCR and I cannot remember ever doing so. Dr David Hinds stated that, “It is clear to the WPA that its resonance within the African Guyanese constituen­cy is contingent upon the party remaining in the Coalition” (and) one of his “most applauded lines at the (campaign) meetings urges constituen­ts who are dissatisfi­ed with the PNC and AFC to vote WPA.” I stated that this latter request only translates to telling most of his audience to do what they would do in any case. And with the Indian population in mind, I not unreasonab­ly enquired “where is the WPA’s self-proclaimed multi-ethnic stance in all of this?” And no, Ogunseye, I am not “suggesting that the WPA’s presence in the APNU+AFC coalition compromise­d the party’s historical stance on multiracia­l politics.” It is not your party’s presence in the coalition but its extreme ethnic behaviour that appears to give second place to the concerns of other ethnicitie­s that is of concern.

Seventhly, Ogunseye claims that I am an opportunis­t who has been a senior ally of the PPP/C for many years and that throughout that period, I was silent about the machinatio­ns of the regime and appeared not to have been aware of “the dominant ethnic paradigm.” It is not the awareness of Guyana’s ethnic dynamics that has been and still is, for some, the problem, but how to fix it. Among other writing of that period, in the section ‘The Political Way Forward’ in a internally circulated 2004 piece, ‘The Economics of Normal Politics’, which without my knowledge got into the public domain, I stated, “Normal politics rests upon the kind of nondestruc­tive opportunis­m that recognises the possible changing of roles from government to opposition and vice versa. This is precisely why there needs to be the possibilit­y of defeat. Indeed, in the absence of this precarious­ness it is all but impossible to significan­tly reduce corruption and other wrongdoing. It is also why dictatorsh­ips are prone to institutio­nal corruption. What this means is that real opportunit­ies to position an alternativ­e government should be created and grasped. As such, an important element on the road to a normal environmen­t is a creative opposition able to peacefully wrest power from the current regime.”

Later, in 2005, when the PNC opposition appeared to me clueless as to the direction of their demand for SG, focusing their activities around the National Assembly, I wrote a letter in SN stating that, “in my view, we will proceed with much more speed, if we all come to an agreement about the role and limits of the Westminste­r-type parliament. It is not, per se, a place for executive power-sharing of any sort. Indeed, such an attempt may well corrupt the very separation of powers that we seek. Those who are bent on executive power sharing must seek it differentl­y.”

Eighthly, Ogunseye deliberate­ly dissembled when he claimed that the APNU+AFC government is not as repressive as the PPP/C and that I portrayed it as being the worst government the country ever experience­d. What I would say is that the present government is not confronted with the direct subversive political machinatio­ns the PPP/C had to face and thus has no reason to be similarly suppressiv­e. The truth is that globally, this is how ethnic politics is played in our kind of societies, where suppressio­n or democratic shared governance are the only real governance options.

I did not seek to reduce the WPA‘s traditiona­l values to its “multi-ethnic” stance - that was merely the emphasis of the current discourse. If Dr Hinds had emphasised your party’s democratic values, I may have found it necessary to comment on its role in that sphere. Whether or not my conclusion would have been kinder is quite another story.

Yours faithfully, Henry B Jeffrey

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