Stabroek News

New advocacy group RISEs with focus on constituti­onal reform

-

Citing the need for urgent constituti­onal reform, RISE, a new advocacy group of free-thinking, post-racial individual­s was yesterday evening launched at Moray House before a sizable audience with the aim of bringing about such change.

RISE is an acronym for Reform, Inspire, Sustain and Educate, and its members, drawn from

civil society, include engineer, Marcel Gaskin, who in March of this year had filed an applicatio­n asking the court to review President David Granger’s eligibilit­y criteria for the Gecom chairmansh­ip; managing director of Camex Limited Terrence Campbell and Attorney Nadia Sagar. The group’s legal advisor is Attorney Timothy Jonas.

According to its brochure, RISE members are individual­s who have decided to put Guyana and Guyanese first, noting that constituti­onal reform was key to executive accountabi­lity, racial harmony and political, economic and social inclusivit­y.

Gaskin informed the gathering that RISE believes reform is necessary given the lack of accountabi­lity on the part of officials, the lack of separation of powers and the failure of the present Constituti­on to facilitate the ability of independen­t candidates to run for the presidency or membership of the National Assembly.

He added that the group is of the opinion that, “unless an external force is brought to bear the politician­s will continue to drag their feet and/or institute changes that do not wholly address the problem in its entirety. This is the reason why RISE was formed.”

He said the grouping will be examining the criticisms of the present Constituti­on with the hope of acting upon them. “There are many criticisms and each will be acted upon according to its merit,” he added. And while he noted that amendments have been made to the Constituti­on, “whether these go far enough is questionab­le,” he stated.

Campbell noted that, “the post 2020 oil economy is far too important to be left in the hands of any government… We feel that the current constituti­onal structure is too deficient to be left in the hands of any government whatsoever.”

Beginning in August, the group intends to start engaging with citizens, private sector groups, political parties and eventually the diaspora with a view of creating awareness on the need for constituti­onal reform. It has a broad wish list for constituti­onal change, which will impact electoral reform, transparen­cy in public procuremen­t, transforma­tion in education, social cohesion and accountabi­lity in the public sector.

Meanwhile, the advocacy group also believes consensus will be achieved through the involvemen­t of civil society as stated in the

United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) report on Guyana’s constituti­onal assessment.

The Constituti­onal Assessment Team from the UNDP and the United Nations Department of Political Affairs (DPA), which visited Guyana in February on an invitation from Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo, was tasked with advising on opportunit­ies, risks, and considerat­ions for UN constituti­onal support to the Government of Guyana and other stakeholde­rs in this process, including advice on possible programmat­ic support by the UN.

The UN team was the second to submit a report on the process of constituti­onal reform over the last two years. The first was the Steering Committee on Constituti­onal Reform, which submitted its report to Nagamootoo in April of 2016.

Not a third party

Meanwhile, the group dismissed rumours that it was a third political party. “We are not a political party, today is not the launching of a political party… but if through the process of finding out more on how constituti­onal reform can be achieved it is necessary to go the political route I think many of us in this group are prepared to do so,” a member of the group said in response to a question on whether they have any political ambitions.

The APNU+AFC government has come under increasing pressure over its failure to deliver on its manifesto promise of the appointmen­t of a commission within three months of taking office to amend the constituti­on. Two years have passed without this commission being establishe­d. More recently, the government had said that $80 million were set aside for consultati­ons countrywid­e this year. Half of the year has passed without any consultati­ons being held.

However, on Tuesday, government announced that the constituti­onal reform and consultati­ve bill would be laid in the National Assembly before the parliament­ary recess in August.

 ??  ?? A section of the crowd at the launch of RISE last evening
A section of the crowd at the launch of RISE last evening
 ??  ?? From right: Marcel Gaskin (at podium), Jainarine Singh, Ede Tyrell, Renata Chuck-A-Sang, Terrence Campbell, Nadia Sagar and Timothy Jonas at the launch of the advocacy group yesterday at Moray House
From right: Marcel Gaskin (at podium), Jainarine Singh, Ede Tyrell, Renata Chuck-A-Sang, Terrence Campbell, Nadia Sagar and Timothy Jonas at the launch of the advocacy group yesterday at Moray House

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana