Stabroek News

Gov’t wasting money on useless projects, citizens displeased

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Dear Editor,

Not having full time responsibi­lity of being the General Secretary of the PPP allows for travel extensivel­y in Guyana.

Not that such travels did not occur in the past, however, nowadays it is with greater ease such travels are done at one’s own leisure and unannounce­d.

The beauty of this activity is, as always, meeting and chatting with the ordinary Guyanese working man and woman in the natural environmen­t.

The stories they tell and experience­s they share make you ask yourself; why didn’t I think about that before?

The cane cutter/sugar worker has a wealth of experience of life in the cane fields, in his or her union, with GuySuCo officials, in the estate where they live and above all, family life and the difficulti­es of maintainin­g a reasonable standard of living.

They talk more openly, more freely. Mind you, this applies to both Afro and Indo Guyanese sugar workers.

Fishermen are equally vociferous in highlighti­ng their concerns especially with respect to piracy and the dangers at sea.

Their stories and experience­s cast in out-atsea drama can be nail-biting to say the least.

Farmers be they in rice, cash crops, cane or coconuts are a calculatin­g but conservati­ve lot, with a growing number of a more imaginativ­e and adventurou­s group working hard to keep up with modernised methods of agricultur­al production with a focus on yields per acre and marketable varieties of produce.

What is amazing is the fact that the majority of the toilers in the productive sector display a high degree of political consciousn­ess.

And springing from their socio-psychologi­cal frame of mind is a sense of alienation and marginaliz­ation suffered under the current APNU+AFC coalition administra­tion.

Many of the benefits/subsidies/concession­s they received under the PPP/C administra­tion that allowed production to surge impressive­ly have either been eliminated or replaced by more repressive taxation measures.

To vent their frustratio­n and opposition to these oppressive anti-productive sector measures farmers have resorted to protests in various parts of the country including the city of Georgetown and outside the Ministry of the Presidency.

One cannot help drawing certain conclusion­s, in respect to recent protests by the opponents of the parking meters, the imposition of VAT on private education, farmers mobilised by the Rice Producers’ Associatio­n and sugar workers organised by the Guyana Agricultur­al and General Workers’ Union.

From all appearance­s, the massive concrete wall built around the Ministry of the Presidency, was constructe­d as a security deterrent and no doubt, at a humungous cost with the protestors in mind.

This wasteful and unnecessar­y spending by the Granger administra­tion on projects which people can’t eat nor produce anything from is exemplifie­d in the D’Urban Park stadium

costing some $1b, the scandalous drugs bond costing $12.5m per month, the anticipate­d rental of the Lamaha and Camp streets building at a cost of US$28k per month, the anticipate­d constructi­on of a new headquarte­rs for the Guyana Revenue Authority projected to cost some $227m, not leaving out that the exorbitant costs to upgrade State House and the buildings in the compound are not going down well with the common man and woman irrespecti­ve of ethnicity. They view all these as wasteful prestige projects, the funding for which could have been better spent by reinstatin­g the social programmes initiated by the PPP/C administra­tion.

The solidarity and common cause between Afro and Indo Guyanese sugar workers at the grass root level is indeed remarkable.

The rice farmers feel a sense of betrayal by the AFC in particular who had promised them $9,000 a bag for paddy were they to assume office. Having assumed office, that promise never materializ­ed in fact, it turned out to be an anti-PPP ploy to dupe the farmers to gain votes.

But the political pendulum has since swung in the direction of the PPP. So much so that one letter writer called on the APNU+AFC to ‘prove that it is a caring government.’

And there have been several letters to the editor across the media spectrum describing the APNU+AFC coalition administra­tion as a ‘one term government.’

This evoked an aggressive, if not threatenin­g response from citizen Ogunseye demanding an end to the prediction of ‘one term government’ as if the handwritin­g on the wall can be erased by his written entreaties.

Everywhere, throughout the length and breadth of Guyana there is a call for the PPP/C to return to office. It is as if the removal of the PPP/C from government was a blessing in disguise.

The older folk had warned ‘those who don’t hear will have to feel.’

Those who mistakenly fell prey and became gullible to the anti- PPP/C propaganda calling for change have now come to their senses and realised that the bitter medicine they are experienci­ng today is beyond their wildest expectatio­ns.

One farmer in the perceptive manner typical of the peasantry expressed his fear of rigged elections in 2020.

He suggested that one way to avoid rigging is to have cameras placed at every polling station with offsite viewing. When confronted with the cost of such a venture his response was, why look at the cost of doing it? The Opposition should look at the cost of not doing it!

Rigging of the 2020 elections seems to be uppermost in the political consciousn­ess of Guyanese who want a change of government.

This thinking is also widespread among the Guyanese diaspora in Canada, the US and the U.K.

It is a deeply and justifiabl­y held suspicion based on past experience­s.

These experience­s must not be ignored after all, as the saying goes; ‘Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it.’

Yours faithfully, Clement J. Rohee

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