Stabroek News

-Independen­t editorial management?

-On judging art and talent

- Frankly Speaking,

communitie­s within the ten Regions. (Incidental­ly, do we dare “laugh” at the rural and hinterland unfortunat­es when we witness the goings- on at Georgetown’s urban City Hall?)

Preparedne­ss, ineptitude, politics, corruption

Sherwood Lowe, just before the March 2016 Local polls, had cautioned about expecting too much from those community leaders first about to be elected. Most from the old mould were party faithfuls and the few younger aspirants had no local governance training of any relevant substance. We are seeing the consequenc­es today.

Besides the (not-so-) blind adherence to the party line, local regional officials are handicappe­d by the lack of training and exposure with respect to – for example – local government by-laws and regulation­s, infrastruc­tural requiremen­ts, solid-waste management, project planning and, of course, accountanc­y and financial management.

Thus, weekly, across the regional local government spectrum we hear of gross financial mis- management, contract manipulati­on, ignoring tendering procedures and outright corrupt practices tantamount to fraud. PPP holdovers or not, what is urgently needed is sustained monitoring and oversight by the Ministry of Communitie­s and consistent training of local managers and their communitie­s by such agencies as the Attorney-General and Auditor General offices, the Ministries of Infrastruc­ture, Health and Education and the Central Tender Board and Procuremen­t Commission, among others. It is heartening to hear all this is to be actively pursued now.

Local government? Local Elections? Democratic necessitie­s! But on the ground? Easier said than done!

Independen­t editorial management? Huh?

Nearly one month ago, a usually analytical well written Stabroek editorial raised the issue of whether “independen­t editorial management” would have accommodat­ed a certain caption and slanted content to be published as it was in the state-friendly newspaper. Well that was bound to capture my full attention.

Because I’ve been fascinated to witness how the “mainstream” antiPresid­ent Trump media in the US, have been openly relentless in underminin­g and discrediti­ng all his initiative­s – from the campaign to the first month of his presidency, even to his future agenda. Hardly any editorial subtlety as print and electronic media made their objectives obvious – however profession­ally the analyses, commentari­es and news are packaged and presented.

When I acted as Chief Informatio­n Officer for the government­s of Burnham and Hoyte-then with the advent of the Jagans and the Jagdeos, “independen­t editorial management” was always an endangered commodity, practice and principle. Sure the post-1985 Stabroek News was deemed “independen­t.” But so today is the Guyana Times!

Of course there is no space herein to expound on the “independen­ce” or objective, impartial profession­alism of even a “free” press. Suffice for me to share my own view for now: even the much-vaunted BBC will not broadcast certain events or biases which other media in Britain would. The BBC is bound by the rules and principles and philosophy of its principal authority.

Newspapers are influenced by their boards, owners and publishers’ founding objectives and mission; by commercial and yes, political leanings and even control. So despite letters and analyses by all sides, editors know and respect what the publishers stand for. And by the way, a biased, partisan editorial view can (still) be very “profession­al…”

Judging art, talent…

What does that piece of art tell, suggest to you? Why do you so love that song? How do you assess the production and style of that instrument­alist or arranger? What personal emotions, responses are evoked?

After last Friday’s comments on types of calypsos and the demands of judging songs and music, I offer these brief sentences on the difficulti­es of “judging” art and cultural presentati­ons.

Of course criteria are fashioned for judges of song, music, drama, costume. But is one really better than another? Why? Who says so? The criteria or your own response? Or both?

I advise judges to congratula­te all participan­ts or entrants. Draw the “mediocres” aside and advise and encourage them to continue. Tell audiences it is not about the night’s favourites. Explain what competitio­n aims to do really. And organisers should arrange more consolatio­n prizes of some worth.

Last Friday there was the usual disappoint­ment among some calypso “losers”; on Sunday evening I saw passionate female steel band players weep long after not “winning”. Discuss…

Ponder please…

1 Recall that I A.A. Fenty would always enquire as to the status of the court case (2012) involving alleged multiple rape by a so-called “Muslim scholar”, Ali? 2 How do the PPP fellows find time to write and send letters every day!? No day jobs?

2b) Name 15 APNU+AFC high government officials whose children attend private schools. 3 The new Chinese Ambassador to Georgetown sounds Americantr­ained. 4 “We want Suriname shrimps!” the Berbice protesters shouted. I was becoming outraged when I remember that we really do import numerous foods. (Can fish and shrimp not swim over to Guyana?) 5 Coming soon: “Homosexual­ity, gays, lesbians – and our grandparen­ts”. 6 How was the Float and Costume Parade yesterday? Did you have to park?

’Til; next week! (allanafent­y@yahoo.com)

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana