Stabroek News Sunday

Shuman says Indigenous communitie­s struggling due to COVID-19

-laments gap in delivery of education

-

Arguing that the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighte­d “systemic failures and deficienci­es” within the education sector and the government at-large, opposition Member of Parliament Lenox Shuman on Friday said the indigenous people across the country are struggling as a result.

Delivering his maiden speech during the budget debate last Friday at the Arthur Chung Conference Centre, Shuman, Leader of the Liberty and Justice Party (LJP), highlighte­d the effects on the delivery of education and the disparity between what is obtaining on the coastland as against the hinterland. He told the House that the coastland schools are at advantage during this period since they are equipped with the necessary tools for online classes, which includes internet access while the indigenous communitie­s are forced to “self-teach” in a language that is “alien” to some of them.

“Our communitie­s are struggling through COVID-19.

Schools on the coast are enjoying internet access, TV and radio broadcast learning tools, while many of our Indigenous communitie­s are expected to self-teach in a language that is somewhat alien to them, in preparatio­n for exams that are mostly void of their collective histories,” Shuman said.

Schools across the country have been closed since March 17th after Guyana recorded its first COVID-19 case. Since then, students have been learning remotely, with those who have internet access benefittin­g from online learning.

The new school year resumed virtually last week and a number of programmes were rolled out on the Guyana Learning Channel to cater for those students who do not have access to the internet.

According to Shuman, over the years, the coastland communitie­s have benefitted from number of infrastruc­tural projects to support education and the economy while the indigenous communitie­s have been forced to capitalise on whatever is available to them.

“Mr Speaker, we have seen infrastruc­ture projects such as roads, bridges, hospitals, internet and electricit­y coming to communitie­s on the coast to support education and the economy while Indigenous communitie­s are forced to deal with inadequate solar panels, sluggish and unreliable internet connection, and poorly maintained trails,” Shuman said.

This, according to the Deputy Speaker, is an “indictment” of all previous administra­tions. “.....Added to this,

not only are communitie­s dealing with this in a COVID environmen­t, they are trying to deal with this while at the same time trying to deal with land conflicts and climate change which threatens both, their personal and food security,” Shuman stated.

 ??  ?? Lenox Shuman
Lenox Shuman

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana