Stabroek News Sunday

Early political publicatio­ns were civil compared to the sad state of discourse today

- Dear Editor,

In our preparatio­n of the opposition to the applicatio­n by attorneys for the NIS to delay payment of a NIS minimum pension to Mr. Shariff Zainul, a 73-yearold former carpenter, we sought informatio­n on the history of the National Insurance Scheme from the Frank Narain Parliament­ary Library (Parliament Library), the National Library, the Walter Rodney National Archives (National Archives) and the Cheddi Jagan Research Institute (CJRI).

Editor, we would like to acknowledg­e the support and assistance offered by these four repositori­es of historical informatio­n. At the end of the day, we did not achieve the result we sought – a copy of the 21 July 1969 debate on Bill No. 15, the National Insurance and Social Security Bill which gave birth to the National Insurance Scheme. That unavailabi­lity is a most regrettabl­e stain for which the post-Independen­ce parliament must accept primary responsibi­lity.

But to leave it there is a disservice to the four bodies, whose management and staff did their best at offering suggestion­s and possible alternativ­es. From the Parliament Library we obtained and subsequent­ly shared with the National Archives and the CJRI, the Minutes of the proceeding­s of that day. The National Library brought out a copy of the resulting NIS Act and the Speeches of

Dr. Cheddi Jagan in the National Assembly for that year. Strangely, despite the extensive amendments proposed by Dr. Jagan to the Bill, his contributi­on to that major piece of workingcla­ss legislatio­n is not included among his parliament­ary Speeches.

Without any intent at comparison, we cannot but draw attention to the exemplary support and assistance offered by the management and staff of the National Archives. While we were no more successful here than at the other places in our specific search, our experience at the Archives was reassuring and commendabl­e. Not having located the record we sought, they resourcefu­lly offered access to the newspapers of that year – the Guyana Graphic, the Chronicle, the PPP Mirror and the PNC New Nation, all of which contained informatio­n on the NIS.

I was impressed by the obvious dedication of the staff at the National Archives not only for going well beyond the call of duty, but for the meticulous care with which they handled the publicatio­ns and implored us to do likewise. Those records are delicate, worn out by more than fifty years in existence and use. The staff accorded to these records a respect and dignity which are usually reserved for the most precious.

But there was something else that struck me. Perhaps out of nostalgia (I was 23 at that time), for a while, I immersed myself in the Mirror and the New Nation of that year. The contents of those two political publicatio­ns reflect a level of discourse which was civil, respectful and informativ­e

and one cannot but contrast that with what currently takes place for journalism in this country. The editorial writers, columnists and letter writers in the publicly financed Chronicle, the NCN television network and the Department of Public Informatio­n would do well to spend some time reading those early days publicatio­ns, and to ask themselves why, when and how Guyana could have become so coarse, crude and uncivil in writings and rantings.

With an oasis or two, an important fabric of society has been stripped, shredded and strewn by the participan­ts themselves in their actual or self-appointed role as agents of the political class. The descent has been long and acute, and the real tragedy is that there is no sign of a reversal. That’s the sad state of journalism in Guyana. Sincerely,

Christophe­r Ram

Christophe­r Ram & Associates

Attorneys-at-law

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