Stabroek News Sunday

Revisiting the Rupununi uprising...

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in the operation included Col Ronald Pope, a British officer overseeing the Guyanese defence force, Col Cecil Martindale, Captain Vernon Williams and Lt Joseph Singh.

Then Prime Minister, Forbes Burnham, in an initial statement on the events in the Rupununi, said, “the evidence so far strongly suggests that the disorders were not spontaneou­s but mastermind­ed and planned by hostile elements in and outside Guyana.”

The opposition People’s Progressiv­e Party (PPP), in a release, stated that the involvemen­t of Venezuela in the uprising in the Rupununi area was to be strongly deplored, and expressed the hope that the Guyana government would take all necessary action to ensure the territoria­l integrity of this country. Then PPP General Secretary Janet Jagan noted however that there was “grave dissatisfa­ction among the Amerindian community in that and other areas and the frustratio­n of these indigenous people was a factor not to be ignored.”

Eusi Kwayana, then head of the African Society for Cultural Relations with Independen­t Africa ASCRIA), in a press release stated, “Guyana is indignant at the murderous attempts made by an aristocrat­ic clique of traitors in the Rupununi to seize power in the area on the orders of aggressive forces in Venezuela.” ASCRIA also called for military training of the youth and the establishm­ent of “new communitie­s in the interior in such a way as to enlarge the rights of Amerindian farmers and Guyanese pioneers”.

Uprising leaders

The leaders of the uprising were described as ranchers led by several prominent and wealthy families in the area, including the Harts and the Melvilles. The Christian Science Monitor described the Melvilles as “descendant­s of the original Scottish family that came out of then British Guiana at the turn of the century and began large-scale ranching in the Rupununi.”

One of the leaders of the revolt, Valerie Hart, speaking from Caracas where she had fled, told the foreign press of the key details of the operation. Hart said that the “rebels – between 40 and 50 men had planned to take over key points in the area quietly and then issue an ultimatum to the Burnham regime demanding independen­ce.” Hart and her followers were apparently intending to announce her as leader (President) of an “Essequibo Free State” in revolt against the Government of Guyana. A boasting Hart declared, “we controlled the area for 24 hours before the interventi­on of Government troops and the start of the fighting.” She subsequent­ly admitted, “we were not prepared to make a stand against the 200 troops sent by the government.” Hart, a candidate for the United Force in the 1968 general election was expelled by the party in the wake of the uprising and her declaratio­ns from Venezuela. In its press release, the United Force stated, “the executive of the United Force met this morning and categorica­lly

declared their complete condemnati­on of the subversive and treasonabl­e actions of the ranchers and others in the Rupununi district” and expelled “forthwith Mrs Valerie Hart for her involvemen­t.”

Meanwhile another leader, US citizen and Korean war veteran Jim Hart, who had fled into Venezuela after the revolt was put down, was still in a bravado state of mind and threatened to return to take Essequibo. On January 17, two weeks after the revolt, he insisted “we plan to return to Guyana because we have properties and families there. We will do so either peacefully or fighting, whichever way the Burnham government wants.”

The other leading member of the revolt Harold Melville also maintained that the revolt was not put down quickly as the government reported claiming that their (rebel) forces “struck in several points” blaming the failure of the revolt on a “radio message sent from Rupununi to Georgetown before the rebels had managed to secure all the strategic points.”

In his 2009 analysis, David Granger identified various factors contributi­ng to the conspiracy and subsequent rebellion, encompassi­ng economic, ethnic, political, legal, and strategic elements. Additional­ly, he highlighte­d Valerie Hart’s emphasis on the racial factor. According to Hart, the rebels aimed for “racial independen­ce” in response to what she described as the “despotic policies” of Forbes Burnham’s “central government”.

The Prime Minister, for his part, addressed the nation with more details on the context and form of the assault and the motives of the leadership whom he

described as “savannah aristocrat­s”. Notably he ascribed a linkage to Venezuela noting that “the Venezuelan press and radio were reporting an Amerindian uprising in the Rupununi and suggesting it arose out of the wish of these Guyanese citizens to come under the sovereignt­y of Venezuela.”

On January 9, the Guyana government sent a protest note to Venezuelan President Raul Leoni accusing his government of “iniquitous action” in what it deemed that country’s organisati­on of the Rupununi uprising with the object of advancing “its spurious territoria­l claims to the country.”

The accused

Twenty-two suspects implicated in the revolt were apprehende­d and formally charged with murder, a consequenc­e of the fatalities involving both police officers and local residents in the affected area. These individual­s constitute­d a portion of the approximat­ely 300 people who had been detained on suspicion of participat­ing in the uprising. Among the accused were two brothers connected to the “Melville clan”: Colin Melville who had surrendere­d to the security forces, and Keith Melville. They were named as “numbers one and two accused respective­ly.” The 22 accused were transporte­d to the capital where, as reported by the Graphic, “anxious crowds” had congregate­d both inside and outside the Georgetown magistrate­s court compound from around 8 am with the aim of getting a glimpse of “the largest single group of men ever accused in the country of a capital offence.” Later in the month, 18 of the 22 murder accused were freed. A year later, according to Granger, “charges against the suspects who were remanded for trial in the high court were dismissed.”

Meanwhile, the Graphic reported that many Amerindian­s who had fled across the border to Brazil as a result of the uprising have since returned. The newspaper estimated that 60 percent of the approximat­ely 13,000 Amerindian­s who had left their homes returned after the rebellion was suppressed. In addition, the District Commission­er for the Rupununi area, Motilal Persaud, who was compelled to join his staff and “lie prostrate on the ground outside his office after the ranchers had overrun the administra­tive centre,” indicated that “some Amerindian­s were brought to the border by the Brazilian army, and they were helped across the Takutu by our policemen.”

In the aftermath of the Rupununi rebellion, allegation­s of brutality by the GDF against residents surfaced. Three of the Hart brothers, who were actively involved in the revolt, asserted to reporters in the Venezuelan city of Bolivar that the GDF employed “brutal measures” to suppress the uprising. However, Col (Retired) Roberts, vehemently denied any accusation­s of atrocities occurring during the operation to put down the uprising.

In summary, the Rupununi uprising has left a legacy linked to the persistent Guyana-Venezuela border controvers­y. Additional­ly, its impact extends to the broader regional, ethnic, and political dynamics that have shaped the country since the event in 1969.

Timeline of events:

Jan 2 Rupununi uprising begins

Jan 3 Reports reach Guyana press. Prime Minister’s initial statement in parliament

Jan 4 Prime Minister Forbes Burnham addresses the nation on the “disturbanc­es” in the Rupununi savannah

Jan 5 Reports that ringleader­s of the uprising held; opposition PPP ‘strongly deplores” the events in Rupununi

Jan 6 Press reports that “uprising crushed, rebels flee”

Jan 6 United Force expels Valerie Hart while condemning the uprising

Jan 8 Protest note handed to Venezuela Jan 9 Charges laid on 22 revolt suspects Jan 10 Rupununi murder accused appear in Georgetown court charged with murder

Jan 11 Other rebels describe the government as “too brutal” in putting down the revolt

Jan 17 Rebel Jim Hart vows “we’ll fight” from Caracas

Jan 24 Eighteen Rupununi rebellion accused are freed

Sources:

Guyana Graphic, January 1969

David Granger, “The Rupununi Rebellion” Stabroek News, January 18, 2009

Col Desmond Roberts, letter to Stabroek News, 2005

Forbes Burnham, “Radio broadcast to the nation on disturbanc­es in the Rupununi savannahs, 4 January 1969” in Destiny to Mould (1970)

 ?? ?? Valerie Hart – a main leader of the revolt
Valerie Hart – a main leader of the revolt

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