Stabroek News Sunday

Wouldn’t it be a great day for Guyana if…?

- (This column is reproduced with permission from Ralph Ramkarran’s blog, www.conversati­onstree.gy)

On September 27, 1965, the Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists (ICJ) delivered a 1965-page report into Racial Problems in the Public Service of British Guiana. By letter dated April 6, 1965, Prime Minister Burnham, in his invitation, said to the ICJ that his Government had been “deeply concerned with the need to remove from our society sources of racial disharmony and to promote the right of each individual, whatever his ethnic origin, to have an equal opportunit­y to play a meaningful part in the community.” He said that his Government’s concern had been to “determine whether such [racial] imbalance as may exist in any particular field can be corrected and, if so, what is the shortest practicabl­e period for such correction.” Burnham may well have been pressured by the UK to invite the ICJ having regard to searing ethnic strife of the early 1960s and the perceived underminin­g of Indian political representa­tion by the imposition of proportion­al representa­tion to defeat the PPP.

The ICJ accepted and the terms of reference were: “To examine the balance between the races in the Security Forces, the Civil Service, Government agencies or undertakin­gs (including land settlement schemes) and other areas of Government­al responsibi­lity; to consider whether existing procedures relating to the selection, appointmen­t, promotion, dismissal, and conditions of service of personnel are such as to encourage or lead to racial discrimina­tion in the areas concerned; to make such recommenda­tions as are considered necessary to correct such procedures with a view to the eliminatio­n of imbalance based on racial discrimina­tion having regard to maintain the efficiency of the services concerned and the public interest.”

The ICJ found that there was imbalance in the Security Forces, Civil Service and Government agencies having regard to the ethnic compositio­n of the population. It did not recommend recruitmen­t based on race or ethnicity but expressed the expectatio­n that as education and economic developmen­t expanded the imbalance would eventually be corrected. This did not occur, as everyone knows. Imposed by the British, Burnham abandoned the project because it conflicted with the later objective of the PNC to rig elections to remain in power without the United Force. The electoral diminution of the PPP thereafter was gradual, over a twenty-year period, and had to be accomplish­ed by discarding the votes of the Indian section of the electorate with a concurrent substituti­on of votes for the PNC. In order to sustain this support, the PNC displayed marked discrimina­tion against Indian Guyanese and ensured that African Guyanese obtained the limited, available, opportunit­ies.

Almost from the day the PPP/C Government took office in 1992, and thereafter, allegation­s of discrimina­tion and marginaliz­ation have been levelled against it by the PNC, PNCR and APNU Opposition. These allegation­s have intensifie­d over the years to the point where the accusation­s now are that the Government has created an emerging apartheid state. In this emerging apartheid state the ethnic compositio­n of the Guyana Defence Force and other sections of the Discipline­d Services, the public service including the nursing and teaching profession­s are substantia­lly comprised of the ethnic group that are allegedly the victims of ‘emerging apartheid.’ In fact, that ethnic group is in almost full control of the military!

While the issues today are no longer defined as “racial disharmony,” as in Burnham’s letter, but as “ethnic insecurity,” “ethno-political dominance,” and “discrimina­tion and marginaliz­ation,” the objective of those who seek a political solution in Guyana remains as Burnham broadly defined it, namely, “the right of each individual, whatever his ethnic origin, to have an equal opportunit­y to play a meaningful part in the community.”

There is a dire need in Guyana for the terms of the discourse on a political solution, whether through “One Guyana” or “inclusive governance,” to be based on foundation­al realities. An internatio­nally credible study needs to be undertaken by an agency of the United Nations into allegation­s of discrimina­tion and marginaliz­ation, allegation­s of discrimina­tion in the award of government contracts, identifica­tion of discrimina­tory policies, the distributi­on of poverty among ethnic communitie­s and the recommenda­tion of measures to ensure equal opportunit­ies for all ethnic groups. Such a report will enable specific policies to be devised and implemente­d, also under United Nations supervisio­n, to address the deficienci­es which have been found to exist.

Such a project is not intended to detract from or derail the efforts of those who seek a political solution to Guyana’s problems of ethno-political dominance. Such problems are rooted in the deep recesses of Guyana’s history. While one can envisage that the resources from oil, if spent wisely and equitably, may diminish the pain of majoritari­anism as applied in Guyana, it certainly will not heal the real and imaginary wounds that have been inflicted by a belief that one or the other ethnic group seeks, has sought, or has actually imposed ethnic dominance at specific periods in Guyana’s history. Wouldn’t it be a great day for Guyana if after such a report is made the major political parties join together in a structured way to oversee its recommenda­tions, as a prelude to resolving the governance issue?

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